A Compendium of Geochemistry: From Solar Nebula to the Human Brain

Hardback

Main Details

Title A Compendium of Geochemistry: From Solar Nebula to the Human Brain
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Yuan-Hui Li
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:440
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 152
ISBN/Barcode 9780691009384
ClassificationsDewey:551.9
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Illustrations 164 line illus., 84 tables

Publishing Details

Publisher Princeton University Press
Imprint Princeton University Press
Publication Date 22 October 2000
Publication Country United States

Description

An ever-increasing concern over environmental degradation, together with recent technological advances, has spawned an explosion of chemical data for a wide variety of matter found on earth and in the solar system. Yuan-Hui Li's book offers professionals and students alike an indispensable up-to-date guide to geochemistry, bringing together new information on topics ranging from nucleosynthesis to crystal chemistry, from the systematics of chemical variation in the earth's core to the composition of complex organics. The objective is to illustrate the physicochemical principles and various natural processes that can explain observed compositional changes in natural substances. A general understanding of these principles and processes (including those pertaining to cosmology, geology, and biology) is essential, maintains the author, for deciphering and predicting transport pathways and final sinks of anthropogenic pollutants in our environment. The book focuses on compositional data and related references for such substances as solar photosphere, meteorites, igneous rocks, soils, sedimentary rocks, surficial waters, marine and terrestrial organisms (including humans), and aerosols. It emphasizes the use of original raw data as much as possible, and applies the statistical technique of factor analysis to elucidate any underlying interrelationships among chemical elements and given sample sets. Whenever applicable, simple chemical thermodynamic models are introduced to explain the observed partitioning of elements among different phases.

Author Biography

Yuan-Hui Li is Professor of Oceanography at the University of Hawaii. His research interests include the study of biogeochemical cycles of elements and environmental pollution by trace metals and radionuclides.

Reviews

"Li includes a more diverse range of topics than does any remotely comparable work, and stresses the importance of cosmological, geological, and biological processes in understanding Earth's environment ... A timely addition to the geochemical literature and the best available compilation of data in recent decades."--Choice