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Index
Cover image Title page Table of Contents Inside Front Cover Copyright page Authors Preface to the Second Edition Preface to the First Edition Part One: Basic Concepts for Earth System Science
Chapter 1: Introduction: Biogeochemical Cycles as Fundamental Constructs for Studying Earth System Science and Global Change
1.1 Introduction 1.2 History 1.3 Evidence for the Coupled Nature of the Earth System 1.4 Philosophy of Using the Cycle Approach to Describe Natural Systems on Earth 1.5 Reservoir Models and Cycles – Some Definitions 1.6 The Philosophy of Integration as a Basis for Understanding the Earth System 1.7 The Limitations and Challenges of Understanding Earth Systems
Chapter 2: The Origin and Early Evolution of the Earth
2.1 Introduction 2.2 Pre-Solar Evolution: The Origin of the Elements 2.3 The Origin of the Solar System 2.4 Condensation 2.5 Accretion of the Planets 2.6 Early Evolution of the Earth 2.7 Earth and the Development of Life
Chapter 3: Evolution and the Biosphere
3.1 The Origin of Life on Earth 3.2 The Machinery of Life 3.3 Evolutionary Mechanisms 3.4 The Diversity of Living Organisms 3.5 The Ecological Organization of the Living World 3.6 The Impact of Life on Biogeochemical Cycles 3.7 How Biogeochemical Cycles Affect Life
Chapter 4: Modeling Biogeochemical Cycles
4.1 Introductory Remarks 4.2 Time Scales and Single Reservoir Systems 4.3 Coupled Reservoirs 4.4 Fluxes Influenced by the Receiving Reservoir 4.5 Coupled Cycles 4.6 Forward and Inverse Modeling 4.7 High-Resolution Models 4.8 Transport Processes 4.9 Time Scales of Mixing in the Atmosphere and Oceans Acknowledgement.
Chapter 5: Equilibrium, Rate, and Natural Systems
5.1 Introduction 5.2 Thermodynamics 5.3 Oxidation and Reduction 5.4 Chemical Kinetics 5.5 Non-Equilibrium Natural Systems 5.6 Summary
Part Two: Properties of and Transfers between the Key Reservoirs
Chapter 6: Water and the Hydrosphere
6.1 Introduction 6.2 Global Water Balance 6.3 Hydrologic Variability 6.4 Water and Climate 6.5 Water and Biogeochemical Cycles 6.6 Water and the Tectonic Cycles 6.7 Anthropogenic Influences 6.8 Conclusion
Chapter 7: The Atmosphere
7.1 Definition 7.2 The Vertical Structure of the Atmosphere 7.3 Vertical Motions, Relative Humidity, and Clouds 7.4 The Ozone Layer and the Stratosphere 7.5 Horizontal Motions, Atmospheric Transport, and Dispersion 7.6 Composition 7.7 Atmospheric Water and Cloud Microphysics 7.8 Trace Atmospheric Constituents 7.9 Chemical Interactions of Trace Atmospheric Constituents 7.10 Physical Transformations of Trace Substances in the Atmosphere 7.11 Influence of Atmospheric Composition on Climate 7.12 Chemical Processes and Exchanges at the Lower and Upper Boundaries of the Atmosphere
Chapter 8: Soils, Watershed Processes, and Marine Sediments
8.1 Introduction 8.2 Weathering 8.3 Soils 8.4 Watershed Processes 8.5 Marine Sediments 8.6 Soils, Weathering, and Global Biogeochemical Cycles Questions
Chapter 9: Tectonic Processes and Erosion
9.1 Introduction 9.2 Erosion, a Capsule Summary 9.3 Soils and the Local Weathering Environment 9.4 Slope Processes and the Susceptibility of Lithologies to Erosion 9.5 Landforms, Tectonism, Sea Level, and Erosion 9.6 Erosion in Tectonically Active Areas 9.7 Erosion of the Cratons 9.8 The Effects of Transients: Continental Ice Sheets and Human Technology 9.9 Conclusion Questions
Chapter 10: The Oceans
10.1 What is the Ocean? 10.2 Ocean Circulation 10.3 Biological Processes 10.4 Chemistry of the Oceans Questions
Part Three: Biogeochemical Cycles
Carbon Nitrogen Sulfur Phosphorus Trace Metals Chapter 11: The Global Carbon Cycle
11.1 Introduction 11.2 The Isotopes of Carbon 11.3 The Major Reservoirs of Carbon 11.4 Fluxes of Carbon between Reservoirs 11.5 Models of the Carbon Cycle 11.6 Trends in the Carbon Cycle
Chapter 12: The Nitrogen Cycle
12.1 Introduction 12.2 Chemistry 12.3 Biological Transformations of Nitrogen 12.4 Anthropogenic Nitrogen Fixation 12.5 Atmospheric Chemistry 12.6 The Global Nitrogen Cycle 12.7 Human Impacts
Chapter 13: The Sulfur Cycle
13.1 Introduction 13.2 Oxidation States of Sulfur 13.3 Sulfur Reservoirs 13.4 The Atmospheric Cycle of Sulfur 13.5 Hydrospheric Part of the Cycle of Sulfur
Chapter 14: The Phosphorus Cycle
14.1 Occurrence of Phosphorus 14.2 Sub-Global Phosphorus Transfers 14.3 The Global Phosphorus Cycle
Chapter 15: Trace Metals
15.1 Introduction 15.2 Metals and Geochemistry 15.3 An Overview of Metal Ion Chemistry 15.4 Observations on Metals in Natural Systems 15.5 Examples of Global Metal Cycling 15.6 Summary Questions
Part Four: Integration
Chapter 16: The Acid—Base and Oxidation—Reduction Balances of the Earth
16.1 Introduction 16.2 A Hierarchy of Acid-Base Balances 16.3 Oxidation-Reduction Balances of the Earth System 16.4 Conclusion
Chapter 17: The Coupling of Biogeochemical Cycles and Climate: Forcings, Feedbacks, and Responses
17.1 The Climate System 17.2 The Dynamics of the Climate System: Forcings, Feedbacks, and Responses 17.3 Forcings of Climate 17.4 Feedbacks 17.5 Climatic States and Responses
Chapter 18: Ice Sheets and the Ice-Core Record of Climate Change
18.1 Introduction 18.2 Quaternary Climate Change 18.3 Ice Sheets as Paleoclimate Archives 18.4 Some Lessons in Environmental History
Chapter 19: Human Modification of the Earth System: Global Change
19.1 Global Climate Change 19.2 Acid Precipitation 19.3 Food Production 19.4 Stratospheric Ozone Depletion 19.5 Large-scale Eutrophication 19.6 Oxidative Capacity of the Global Troposphere 19.7 Life and Biogeochemical Cycles 19.8 Conclusion
Answers Index International Geophysics Series Inside Back Cover
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