RSC Publishing


Publishing

 

Cover image for Journal of Environmental Monitoring, select for current issue

Journal of Environmental Monitoring

Cutting-Edge Research on Environmental Processes & Impacts



Cover Gallery 2005


Journal of Environmental Monitoring cover images from 2005 are available to browse here

Cover Gallery



Cover image for Issue 12, 2005

Issue 12, 2005

Sunset on Devon Ice Cap, Nunavut.   Field work by the GCS (NRCan) attending an automatic weather station at 1600m above sea level in April, 2002.  Image reproduced by permission of Roy Koerner


DOI: 10.1039/B515468P

Cover image for Issue 11, 2005

Issue 11, 2005

Venting a landfill site prevents the accumulation of explosive gasses, but new research indicate that they may be releasing new forms of organotin. Image reproduced by permission of Jörg Feldmann


DOI: 10.1039/B511767D

Cover image for Issue 10, 2005

Issue 10, 2005

Salmon smolt gills before (left) and after (right) a sea-salt episode. The blue staining indicates aluminium - a major stressor to fish in acidified water. Image reproduced by permission of Hans-Christian Teien.
DOI: 10.1039/B507086D


Cover image for Issue 9, 2005

Issue 9, 2005

The image depicts the earth on fire as a representation of the possible effects of climate change.


DOI: 10.1039/b504683a

Cover image for Issue 8, 2005

Issue 8, 2005

In the largest European disused asbestos mine (Balangero, Piedmont - Italy), the lichen Candelariella Vitellina preferentially colonizes chrysotile asbestos fibres protruding from serpentinite rocks. Image reproduced by permission of Bice Fubini.


DOI: 10.1039/b507569f

Cover image for Issue 7, 2005

Issue 7, 2005

Photograph depicts a bridge spanning the Pearl River Delta. This area is one of the most important economic zones in China and has been undergoing rapid expansion and development for the past two decades. Image reproduced by permission of Tingping Ouyang.
DOI: 10.1039/b504475h


Cover image for Issue 6, 2005

Issue 6, 2005

Photograph depicts the River Plym, taken near Cadover Bridge on South Dartmoor, UK. Image reproduced by permission of Steve J. Hill.
DOI: 10.1039/b415287e

Cover image for Issue 5, 2005

Issue 5, 2005

A typical view of aluminium smelter pot rooms. Image reproduced with permission from B Höflich.
DOI: 10.1039/B501302J

Cover image for Issue 4, 2005

Issue 4, 2005

A biomaterial produced from dried water hyacinth roots can remove more than 90% arsenic from a solution containing 200µg As l-1. Image reproduced from the Californian department of water resources.
DOI: 10.1039/B500932D


Cover image for Issue 3, 2005

Issue 3, 2005

Image depicts the Asian clam, Carbicula fluminea, in its natural habitat. The suitability of this organism as a biomonitor for tin and arsenic has been studied, for the first time, in freshwater ecosystems. Image reproduced by permission of Katherina Friederike Ettwig
DOI: 10.1039/B410717A

Cover image for Issue 2, 2005

Issue 2, 2005

An adult bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncates) in Sarasota Bay, Florida. He is a member of a long-term resident community of dolphins that has been under study in the bay since 1970. Image supplied by Randall S. Wells (2005).
DOI: 10.1039/B410494C

Cover image for Issue 1, 2005

Issue 1, 2005

Europe's largest open-cast mine, Corta Atalaya, located in the Iberian Pyrite Belt at the Riotinto mines in Huelva (Southwest Spain).
DOI: 10.1039/B411316K