Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 34
pro vyhledávání: '"Greg Bickerton"'
Autor:
Dale R. Van Stempvoort, John Spoelstra, Greg Bickerton, Geoff Koehler, Bernhard Mayer, Michael Nightingale, John Miller
Publikováno v:
Chemical Geology. 631:121510
Autor:
Ian G. Droppo, Mark E. McMaster, Joseph M. Culp, Greg Bickerton, Peter di Cenzo, Jane L. Kirk, Derek C. G. Muir, Yonas Dibike, Robert B. Brua, Spyros Beltaos, Alexa C. Alexander, Kerry Pippy, Patricia A. Chambers, Lucie Levesque, Joanne L. Parrott, Barrie Bonsal, Nancy E. Glozier, Donald J. Baird, Daniel L. Peters, James W. Roy
Publikováno v:
Environmental Reviews. 29:315-327
Oil sands development in the lower Athabasca River watershed has raised considerable public and scientific concerns regarding perceived effects on environmental health. To address this issue for tributaries and the mainstem of the Athabasca River in
Autor:
M. Norris, Joseph M. Culp, Yonas Dibike, Barrie Bonsal, Robert B. Brua, Christopher Spence, Greg Bickerton, Stephan Gruber, Daniel L. Peters, P.D. Morse, Stephen A. Wolfe, Rajesh R. Shrestha
Publikováno v:
Arctic Science, Vol 6, Iss 4, Pp 437-462 (2020)
This study developed and applied a framework for assessing the vulnerability of pan-Canadian water resources to permafrost thaw. The national-scale work addresses a key, but neglected, information gap, as previous research has focused on small scale
Autor:
John V. Headley, James W. Roy, Craig B. Milestone, Susan J. Brown, Amila DeSilva, L. Mark Hewitt, Jason M. E. Ahad, Alan G. Scarlett, Lee Grapentine, Steve Rowland, Charles E. West, Hooshang Pakdel, Christine Spencer, Kerry M. Peru, Richard A. Frank, Greg Bickerton
Publikováno v:
Environmental Science & Technology
The objective of this study was to advance analytical methods for detecting oil sands process-affected water (OSPW) seepage from mining containments and discriminating any such seepage from the natural bitumen background in groundwaters influenced by
The acute toxicity of bitumen-influenced groundwaters from the oil sands region to aquatic organisms
Autor:
Anthony E, Bauer, L Mark, Hewitt, James W, Roy, Joanne L, Parrott, Adrienne J, Bartlett, Patricia L, Gillis, Warren P, Norwood, Martina D, Rudy, Sheena D, Campbell, Maegan R, Rodrigues, Lisa R, Brown, Ruth, Vanderveen, Lorna E, Deeth, Emily A M, Holman, Joseph, Salerno, Julie R, Marentette, Christine, Lavalle, Cheryl, Sullivan, Kallie, Shires, Melissa, Galicia, Julian, Rubino, Mitra, Brown, Alicia, O'Neill, Greg, Bickerton, D George, Dixon, Richard A, Frank
Publikováno v:
Science of The Total Environment. 848:157676
The extraction of surface mined bitumen from oil sands deposits in northern Alberta, Canada produces large quantities of liquid tailings waste, termed oil sands process-affected water (OSPW), which are stored in large tailings ponds. OSPW-derived che
Publikováno v:
Canadian Water Resources Journal / Revue canadienne des ressources hydriques. 44:205-211
Autor:
Craig B. Milestone, L. Mark Hewitt, Chenxing Sun, James W. Roy, Jonathan W. Martin, Greg Bickerton, Richard A. Frank
Publikováno v:
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry
Rationale The objective of this study was to identify unique chemical tracers of oil sands process-affected water (OSPW) to enable definitive discrimination of tailings pond seepage from natural bitumen-influenced waters from the Canadian Alberta McM
Publikováno v:
Limnologica. 68:115-129
While the discharge of groundwater contaminated with volatile organic compounds to surface waters is widely reported, assessments of its ecological threat are rare in the scientific literature, largely being restricted to comparisons of riparian grou
Autor:
Anthony E. Bauer, Dayue Shang, Suzanne P. Batchelor, Martina D. Rudy, Andrea J. Farwell, John V. Headley, L. Mark Hewitt, Greg Bickerton, Kerry M. Peru, Richard A. Frank, Milestone Craig Brennan, Ruth Vanderveen, Sophie E. Barrett, D. George Dixon, James W. Roy, Pamela Brunswick
Publikováno v:
Science of The Total Environment. 777:146022
Recent analytical advances have provided evidence that groundwater affected by oil sands process-affected water (OSPW) is reaching the Athabasca River at one location. To understand and discriminate the toxicological risks posed by OSPW-influenced gr
Publikováno v:
Groundwater. 54:545-559
The potential discharge of groundwater contaminated by oil sands process-affected water (OSPW) is a concern for aquatic ecosystems near tailings ponds. Groundwater in the area, but unaffected by OSPW, may contain similar compounds, complicating the a