Tags
Language
Tags
January 2025
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
29 30 31 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
Attention❗ To save your time, in order to download anything on this site, you must be registered 👉 HERE. If you do not have a registration yet, it is better to do it right away. ✌

( • )( • ) ( ͡⚆ ͜ʖ ͡⚆ ) (‿ˠ‿)
SpicyMags.xyz

Fundamentals of Geobiology (Repost)

Posted By: insetes
Fundamentals of Geobiology (Repost)

Fundamentals of Geobiology By
2012 | 478 Pages | ISBN: 1118280814 | PDF | 11 MB


2012 PROSE Award, Earth Science: Honorable Mention For more than fifty years scientists have been concerned with the interrelationships of Earth and life. Over the past decade, however, geobiology, the name given to this interdisciplinary endeavour, has emerged as an exciting and rapidly expanding field, fuelled by advances in molecular phylogeny, a new microbial ecology made possible by the molecular revolution, increasingly sophisticated new techniques for imaging and determining chemical compositions of solids on nanometer scales, the development of non-traditional stable isotope analyses, Earth systems science and Earth system history, and accelerating exploration of other planets within and beyond our solar system. Geobiology has many faces: there is the microbial weathering of minerals, bacterial and skeletal biomineralization, the roles of autotrophic and heterotrophic metabolisms in elemental cycling, the redox history in the oceans and its relationship to evolution and the origin of life itself..This book is the first to set out a coherent set of principles that underpin geobiology, and will act as a foundational text that will speed the dissemination of those principles. The chapters have been carefully chosen to provide intellectually rich but concise summaries of key topics, and each has been written by one or more of the leading scientists in that field..Fundamentals of Geobiology is aimed at advanced undergraduates and graduates in the Earth and biological sciences, and to the growing number of scientists worldwide who have an interest in this burgeoning new discipline.Additional resources for this book can be found at: http://www.wiley.com/go/knoll/geobiology.Content: Chapter 1 What is Geobiology? (pages 1–4): Andrew H. Knoll, Donald E. Canfield and Kurt O. KonhauserChapter 2 The Global Carbon Cycle: Biological Processes (pages 5–19): Paul G. FalkowskiChapter 3 The Global Carbon Cycle: Geological Processes (pages 20–35): Klaus Wallmann and Giovanni AloisiChapter 4 The Global Nitrogen Cycle (pages 36–48): Bess WardChapter 5 The Global Sulfur Cycle (pages 49–64): Donald E. Canfield and James FarquharChapter 6 The Global Iron Cycle (pages 65–92): Brian Kendall, Ariel D. Anbar, Andreas Kappler and Kurt O. KonhauserChapter 7 The Global Oxygen Cycle (pages 93–104): James F. Kasting and Donald E. CanfieldChapter 8 Bacterial Biomineralization (pages 105–130): Kurt Konhauser and Robert RidingChapter 9 Mineral–Organic–Microbe Interfacial Chemistry (pages 131–149): David J. Vaughan and Jonathan R. LloydChapter 10 Eukaryotic Skeletal Formation (pages 150–187): Adam F. Wallace, Dongbo Wang, Laura M. Hamm, Andrew H. Knoll and Patricia M. DoveChapter 11 Plants and Animals as Geobiological Agents (pages 188–204): David J. Beerling and Nicholas J. ButterfieldChapter 12 A Geobiological View of Weathering and Erosion (pages 205–227): Susan L. Brantley, Marina Lebedeva and Elisabeth M. HausrathChapter 13 Molecular Biology's Contributions to Geobiology (pages 228–249): Dianne K. Newman, Victoria J. Orphan and Anna?Louise ReysenbachChapter 14 Stable Isotope Geobiology (pages 250–268): D. T. Johnston and W. W. FischerChapter 15 Biomarkers: Informative Molecules for Studies in Geobiology (pages 269–296): Roger E. Summons and Sara A. LincolnChapter 16 The Fossil Record of Microbial Life (pages 297–314): Andrew H. KnollChapter 17 Geochemical Origins of Life (pages 315–332): Robert M. HazenChapter 18 Mineralogical Co?Evolution of the Geosphere and Biosphere (pages 333–350): Robert M. Hazen and Dominic PapineauChapter 19 Geobiology of the Archean Eon (pages 351–370): Roger BuickChapter 20 Geobiology of the Proterozoic Eon (pages 371–402): Timothy W. Lyons, Christopher T. Reinhard, Gordon D. Love and Shuhai XiaoChapter 21 Geobiology of the Phanerozoic (pages 403–424): Steven M. StanleyChapter 22 Geobiology of the Anthropocene (pages 425–436): Daniel P. Schrag