Study on metal elements in indoor particulate matter: a case study of rural residential environment in Northeast China
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Official Journal of the Society for Environmental Geochemistry and Health
The discipline of environmental geochemistry and health establishes and explains links between the natural or disturbed chemical composition of the earth’s surface and the health of plants, animals and people. Beneficial elements regulate or promote enzymatic and hormonal activity whereas other elements may be toxic. Bedrock geochemistry controls the composition of soil and hence that of water and vegetation. Environmental issues, such as pollution, arising from the extraction and use of mineral resources, are discussed. The effects of contaminants introduced into the earth’s geochemical systems are examined. Geochemical surveys of soil, water and plants show how major and trace elements are distributed geographically. Associated epidemiological studies reveal the possibility of causal links between the natural or disturbed geochemical environment and disease. Experimental research illuminates the nature or consequences of natural or disturbed geochemical processes.
Environmental Geochemistry and Health publishes original research papers, short communications, review papers, topical collections of papers and special issues across the broad field of environmental geochemistry. Papers may be theoretical, interpretative or experimental. Coverage includes papers that directly link health and the environment.
However, papers should not be submitted that are of local interest only and do not advance international knowledge on addressing environmental geochemistry and health issues. Articles that simply replicate known knowledge or techniques while researching a local geochemical problem will normally be rejected without review
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Environmental Geochemistry and Health enables and encourages the publication of Special Issues/Topical Collections. The guidelines for their preparation and publication can be found here
The special issue aims to assess and quantify the state of the art priorities and approaches related to coal mining, utilization, and environmental and health impacts. Hence, finding new strategic approaches and innovative regulatory measures on the "Environmental impacts and health risk assessment due to coal mining and utilization" will certainly have greater priority. To explore more in this topic, this special issue invites novel and high quality original research articles from scientists, researchers and practitioners for achieving environmental and resource sustainability in coal mining and utilization sectors.
The special issue will focus on the state-of-the-art approaches in environmental toxicology and pollutant analysis. Recent advances in environmental omics have resulted in new technologies that provide alternative or complementary methods to traditional bioassays. Furthermore, new approaches in pollutant analysis, such as non-targeted mass analysis, have revealed the fate and exposure of micropollutants that were difficult to cover by the traditional targeted approach. Related methodology developments or investigations fill the gaps in environmental toxicology and pollutant analysis; moreover, related reviews and discussions help integrate findings at different levels of biological organization in toxicology or dynamic ranges in individual analytical platforms. The objective of this special issue is to share articles, report on new findings and methodologies, and reviews to provide more comprehensive insights into the study areas. For the balance in knowledge acquisition, articles using traditional approaches, but filling critical knowledge gaps, will also be welcome. As a result, we expect that the special issue will contribute to accumulating valuable knowledge and meaningful discussions in environmental toxicology and pollutant analysis areas.
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