ISRIC - World Soil Information Database
© European Communities, 1995-2007 | Since its beginning in 1966, ISRIC - World Soil Information has built up a collection of more than 20.000 articles, country reports, books and maps with emphasis on the developing countries. The subject emphasis is on soils, but related geographic information on climate, geology, geomorphology, vegetation, land use, and land suitability is also important. The map collection contains over 6000, mainly small-scale (1:250.000 or smaller) maps. more... |
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Many of these maps are completed by reports and related thematic and derived maps.
The collection is housed at Duivendaal 9, 6701 AR Wageningen, The Netherlands and is publicly accessible. The references of all items in the collection are included in the ISRIC - World Soil Information Database. New items are added regularly.
The functionality of the ISRIC - World Soil Information Database is being improved in collaboration with Wageningen UR library. New Features include: on-line access to over 3600 digital maps that can be down-loaded at high resolution and viewed on screen with a zoom facility; over 600 full-text reports in PDF format; country-specific searches based on Google maps, as well as basic and advanced search facility.
The website of the ISRIC - World Soil Information Database provides access to links of databases, national and international organizations, electronic books, newsletters , journals, and reference materials related to soil science.
Five thousand maps in the ISRIC collection scanned as a foundation for the European Digital Archive of Soil Maps (EuDASM) are available through the website of the ISRIC - World Soil Database as well. | |
March 11, 2009
Hormones and Pharmaceuticals Generated by Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations: Transport in Water and Soil
This book examines how hormones, antibiotics and pharmaceuticals generated from concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) of cattle, poultry, swine and aquaculture are transported in water and soil. Little is known of the environmental fate of the tons of physiologically active steroid hormones released each year. In their own regard, in the last 20 years considerable attention has been given to a wide variety of natural and anthropomorphic agents known as endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs). Until the contribution of steroid hormones to the environment are better defined, it will be difficult to quantify the exact impact of EDCs. While some advances in the understanding of the fate of these compounds in water has been made, little is known about the processes that govern their transport in soil or how they eventually reach groundwater. As this book discusses extensively, it is somewhat of a mystery how steroids, with their lipophilic nature, strong binding to humic acids and extensive metabolism by soil bacteria, can be transported through even a few centimeters of soil, let alone 20 to 40 meters to the groundwater. With respect to antibiotics, the emphasis is on their fate and transport in the environment and on the emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria. Impacts on soil ecology, including the impact of antibiotics on the metabolism of other active agents, is also discussed.
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Reports and maps

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