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Oxford University Press: New
York, 1997. Cloth: ISBN 0-195-10208-8. $65.00. Paper:
ISBN 0-195-10209-6. $45.00.
In this useful new volume, Donald MacAlady of
the Colorado School of Mines has gathered together 20
contributions from experts in diverse aspects of
environmental chemistry. Although the topics cover a broad range, this is
no elementary textbook suitable for lower-level
undergraduates. Authors or teams review their own interdisciplinary
research area and give some of their ideas on the most important
areas in the field for the future. Thus, this book is suitable
for upper-level undergraduate and beginning graduate
students in the environmental sciences and as a general or
supplemental text in environmental chemistry taught at these levels. In
most cases, no background in the area is assumed, but readers
are quickly and intensely brought to the frontiers of each
subject in two dozen pages or so.
Part I, "Environmental Chemistry of Condensed
Phases", includes extensive discussions of colloids, trace metals,
organic contaminants (including natural ones), the solid-water
interface, and microbiologically mediated reactions in water
systems. Part II, "Atmospheric Environmental Chemistry",
contains three chapters on stratospheric processes, two on
processes in the troposphere, and one each on carbon dioxide
and chemical transport models. The final part, entitled
"Applied Environmental Chemistry", covers sample collection,
passive bioremediation, and metal-phytoplankton and
atmosphere-water-rock interactions.
Each chapter begins with an abstract, ends with an
extensive list of references, and contains many of the sort
of informal diagrams and summary tables that are so helpful
to the novice in a field and signal the book's origin as
papers from an ACS symposium of a few years ago. In form,
the chapters have some of the character of lectures from an
intensive short course and some of those of a review article.
The book contains a tremendous amount of
knowledge about research in environmental chemistry packed into
its five hundred heavily illustrated pages. On the negative
side, there are no exercises or problems for students to try,
and few chapters have suggestions for further reading. Overall,
it fulfills its stated objectives for advanced-level students
as stated in the first paragraph of this review.
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