ORNL-EIS-74-68 ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSPORT of CHEMICALS BIBLIOGRAPHY •j.' < J:' p . ' It • * OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY OPERATED BY UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION FOR THE. U,S ATOMIC ENERGY' COMMISSION NOTICE This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by tfotf United Stutes Government. Neither the United States nor the United States Atomic Energy Commission, nor nny of their employees, nor any of their contractors, subcontractors, or their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, com- ORNL-EIS-74-68 pleteness or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSPORT OF CHEMICALS BIBLIOGRAPHY Benita K. Wilkinson, Lydia S. Corrill and Emily D. Copenhaver Toxic Materials Information Center Environmental Information System Office and Ecology and Analysis of Trace Contaminants Program Work Supported By Environmental Protection Agency *iPA Agreement No. EPA-1AG-185 (D) and National Science Foundation NSF Interagency Agreement No, AG-389 MAY 1974 Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830 operated by UNION CARBIDE CORPORATION for the U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION Contract No. W-7405-eng-26 DISTRIBUTION OF THIS DOCUMENT IS ONOHtTfli iii CONTENTS Introduction . • v Bibliography . • . » • . * . « « t Author Index . • . , » 103 Keyword Index 133 V rwaooucTioa This selected annotated bibliography 1s a by-product of the blblio- graphic data base created and used by the Toxic Materials Information Center* Environmental Information System Office* GaK Ridge National laboratory, in providing Information retrieval and document acquisition services to the Environmental Protection Agency-Atomic Energy Commission Study on Environmental Transport of Chemicals* The documents cited here have been acquired and constitute the literature being evaluated by ecologists engaged in the assessment of a strategy of experimental testing for environmental transport that is reasonably predictive of real situations, The ultimate product of the study will be a vritten report evaluating the merits of the test methods Identified through the literature search and consultation with other scientists 1« the appropriate disciplines. This 1s an almost infinitely complex task which must provide Information on the usefulness of tests In extrapolating data to real ecosystems, the ease, practicality* and costs of conducting the tests,, special equipment arid expertise required, and lastly the utility of the test procedures in constructing standardized testing strategies for evaluating environmental transport of chemicals* In constructing, these strategies numerous factors must be considered such as the ability of the tests to duplicate such processes as percolation* adsorption, biological accumulation and magnification* and chemical trans* formations. The usefulness of the scheme for testing various classes of chemicals* degrees of persistences* and routes and rates of entry of chemicals Into the environment also must be considered. This study* under the direction of John w* Mitherspoon* project officer, is being conducted in the Environmental Sciences Division of Oak Ridge National laboratory under an interagency agreement with the Office of Toxic Substances* Environmental Protection Agency* Washinoton* DC. Of necessity* this bibliography is much broader than the documents selected from this data base pertinent to the assessment of testing protocols. Thus it <teats with environmental transport of chemicals In general with no restrictions on the type of chemical substance or type of study being reported (experimental,,modeling* analysis, etc.)* The Toxic Materials Information Center*operated primarily as a support information systen for the NSF-RANN supported Ecology and Analysis of Trace Contaminants Program, has found sufficient demand for Information in this area of concern to make this data collection available in bibliographic form* He would like to acknowledge the contributions of several persons to the preparation of this bibliography: John ttitherspoon and his staff of ecologlsts who guided us in preparing our literature search strategies; Opal Russell and others of the ORNt Central Research library who assisted us in the acquisition of the thousand documents required; the Computer vi Sciences Division for development and execution of the computer PUBLISH Programs; and Sharon K. Smith, TMIC, and the EISO Central Services Staff who assisted with the copious details of cataloging and processing the items making up this collection. 1 1 \ 7 Soil-floisture and Irrigation Studies. IT. nicrocon studies on Estuarlne Haters. II. Tho effect's of Single Doses of Nitrate and phosphate Part of Proceedings of a PanoI on the Use of Abbott, W. Hucltiar Techniques In soil PhysicB una Irrigation Studion Organised by tha Joint PAO/I ABA Division jr. UPCP, 39(1), 113-122; 1967, January of Atoaic Energy in Pood and Agriculture, International Atoaic Bnorgy Agency, Vienna, 1973; HOLISTIC ECOLOGY; ALGAE; ANAEROBIOSXS; 19?3 ORIHOfHOSPHATEj NITRATES; PHOSPHATES; SEWAGE; INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATERS; HXCROCOSflS; ESTUARIES SOILS; MOISTURE; IRRIGATION; RECLAnATtOR; NATER B 2 ntcrocoa* Studies on Satuarlne Maters I. Tha * Cat« of Reaeatch in Aquatic Post Control and Roflinability of nicrocosss PontieU« Residue in Aquatic Znvisonaonta Abbott, it. : O.S, Sovironaental Protection Agency, office of water Frogman, Rural tfaatea ararvch jr. WPCP, 38(2}, 256-70; 1966, Feb. f*«sstic£<5e Study Series 1, pp.; 1472, flay WXCRCCOSHS; ftODKL; TfiOPHODfHAWIC STUDIES; BOO; CARSOV flXCROCOSHS; DIVERGENCY, BSTttAFICS; *IES»<H»CHI PSStTCtORS; AQUATIC SCCM5TBHS; PA TB; SAITMATSR 9 Effect of tho Canal Irrigation Jyatea Osed in the 2in*iranft<«at*l toxicology ol Pesticides OAR en the Parniatenco of Soil XnseeticlAo Abdel>cavaad, A.A.; itaead, I.A.; El~Gayar, P.M.; P* .lainunura, f.1. itoofth, T. fiioato <ed.| • Plant Protect. Dep., High Inst, cotton Affairs, Aea4«*lc Prswsn, t»*jt# *ock and London: 197J Alexandria* t!A!t t<JJ£tC05.0nt J PSSTTCmS fat. (est Contr. (XPCWAX) 15JO), 0-10, 28; 1971 I8tlX«ATI0N; P8R3IST£»C£; SNSECiriCIOES; H PP 211; (012) DtfONATS; N(018) ENDRXN; «<02«) CttlOd&ECONE; s SOILS; nUEAKDOHN PRODUCTS; LSACKiftG; CHLOBINATCD !fer<ir>i4*tian of synthetic o^atvic ttolectttoA In tho H*C«OCAaBO«; OilCANOPHOSPMOSUS INSECTICIDES; nittftph^r^t jtfttuea't Pessticidai, and *»rloa« other OKONATS; SNDNIN; CHIOBDECOSE aw-Jtadfc C«»po»ft4r* j tonal Acaita*? ni ttanhin^on, DC 10 J»to«*»«>Hn>}n of a Oonffttrttnea San fraaetsco, CA, Effect of Caleiue Chloride on Proastryno and S«m, 4»n«* riuotttttucon Adsorption in Soil MwasntiAmj.? mscrKim: t*«rctici»«$: Afeernatlty, 4.ft.; OavidaoR^ J.B. fWISTP-V m«WKWS*?!OSI; at?; 608; tsn-PBmt, t-t, i-mcntQaorrdvt.s»s; mm Scl. 19S17-521; B71 LlffDS tte«t»ICI9SS; SOILS; CALCIOf! CHLORIDE; PROItFTRVNE; rL«0)?«fas<»» A6SOSPTIOS «*•. in the A«f«i*tle fsvlton, 'At 11 Mnatztan mobility vend Adsorption in Twelve Illinois* 5oil» <»4», 4 %ys3»*i>sitt« S$tf»tv«or*?4 fey this revision fit Ch<»airttr? a* the J.R.; Uax, L.ii.; »«p. A^ron., tlniv. s.h« African thesicai se«iet.y, ins Illinei^, Urbana, Itt A«<»*t4»» €*llf.# «*«th 1*71; H7J sci. (WECSA6) 21(31, 22®-227; 1971 mttcmss ASMJATIC EcosmEnr.: PSSTICI&ES it£*TAZ0«; IO» £XCMA»G£ tESXW; HE«S{CIDSS; AOSOffTIONj "toaiLTTt; T9I.NSP03T; SOFLS •ft, Pr*4letl«» for Sttostltta-SO an* 0»si»»~iJ? i 4ft Hw»»n Pm4 Chain 12 A. CodlstIllation of 0!T ui:th «.itor Aet»c, r., 4r.: serosa, n.: sovaan, «.c. «*.»$« h ffcy*., SS"5"***; mi A^ticaUttcal and Pood Cljesifitry 11, 278-2S0; 1963 RWKt; STi»0*Tias c»r.?»i» m: j»,sjjt*»$i CM* I* COM StlLLATIOj*; 0»T; 8ASSOU-SCMOLT2X* E09ATIOS; 154 13 159 Factors Influencing Soil Adsorption and Long-Lived Pollutants in Sedinents from the Bioaetivity of Pesticides Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, Texas Adaas, R.S. Ahr, H.M.; Dep. Geol., Texas ASK Univ., College Station, TX Residue Re*. 07, 1-54; 1973 Geol. Soc. Aaer. Bull. (BUGNAF) 84(8), 2511-2515; ADSORPTION; PESTICIDES; CLAY CONTENT; MOLECULAR 1973 STRUCTURE; WATER; SOLUBILITY; COLLIODAL NATDRB; CHGAKTC HATTER; FIELD MOISBTRE CAPACITY DDT; SEDIMENTS; SOILS; LEAD; ARSENIC; ORGANCCHLORINB; INSECTICIDES 14 Effect of Soil Organic Natter on the Hoveaent and 19 Activity of Pesticides in the Environment Relative Exchange Capacity of Ion Exchanger Depended on pH During the Sorption of Organic Ions Adaas, R.S.; Soil Sci. Dep., Univ. Minnesota. St. Paul, Minn. Al'Tshuler, G.N.; Savel'Ev, E.A.; Novokozn^tsk. Hauchno-issled. Khia.-Fara. Inst., Novokuznetsk, ; 1912 USSR MOVEMENT; REVIEW; PESTICIDES; SOILS; Zh. Fiz. Khin* (ZFKHA9), 46 (10), 2577-9; 1972 CRGANOCHLORINE; INSECTICIDES; TRAIZINE; HERBICIDES; ORGANIC EXCHANGE CAPACITY; PH; SORPTION; ION EXCHANGE; ORGANIC; IONS 15 A Note on Resolving Soil cation Exchange capacity 20 into Mineral and Organic Fractions Fate of DDT in Severn Estuary Sediients Addiacott, T.d. Alfcone, E.S.; Eglinton, G.; Evans, N.C.; Hunter, J.M.; Ahead, m.M.; Sch. chei., Univ. Bristol, J. Agr. Sci. 75(2), 365-367; 1970 Bristol, Engl. niSfcCALS; ORGANIC; DETERMINATION; CATION; Environ. Sci. Technol. (ESTHAG) 6 (10) 9H*~19; eitCHANOE CAPACITY 1*72 DDT; DEGRADATION; BACTERIA; SEDIMENTS; ORGANOCHLORINE; ESTUARIES; HODS 16 nitrate and Salt in Soils and Ground Haters froa Land Disposal of Dairy Manure 21 Adriano, D.C.; Pratt, P.P.; Bishop, S.E. Characteristics and Quantitative Prediciton of the Accumulation of strontiun-90 in Woody Plants Soil
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