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      Biological nitrogen fixation in forest ecosystems: foundations and applications 

      Taxonomy and distribution of non-legume nitrogen-fixing systems

      other
      Springer Netherlands

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          Extraterrestrial cause for the cretaceous-tertiary extinction.

          Platinum metals are depleted in the earth's crust relative to their cosmic abundance; concentrations of these elements in deep-sea sediments may thus indicate influxes of extraterrestrial material. Deep-sea limestones exposed in Italy, Denmark, and New Zealand show iridium increases of about 30, 160, and 20 times, respectively, above the background level at precisely the time of the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinctions, 65 million years ago. Reasons are given to indicate that this iridium is of extraterrestrial origin, but did not come from a nearby supernova. A hypothesis is suggested which accounts for the extinctions and the iridium observations. Impact of a large earth-crossing asteroid would inject about 60 times the object's mass into the atmosphere as pulverized rock; a fraction of this dust would stay in the stratosphere for several years and be distributed worldwide. The resulting darkness would suppress photosynthesis, and the expected biological consequences match quite closely the extinctions observed in the paleontological record. One prediction of this hypothesis has been verified: the chemical composition of the boundary clay, which is thought to come from the stratospheric dust, is markedly different from that of clay mixed with the Cretaceous and Tertiary limestones, which are chemically similar to each other. Four different independent estimates of the diameter of the asteroid give values that lie in the range 10 +/- 4 kilometers.
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            Soil Development in Relation to Vegetation and Surface Age at Glacier Bay, Alaska

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              Occurrence of Beijerinckia Species in the ‘Phyllosphere’

              J. RUINEN (1956)
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                1983
                : 55-87
                10.1007/978-94-009-6878-3_3
                27db2ba1-6505-44bc-a410-ce419982b2f8
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