Search Results - "Vanlierde, E."

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  1. 1

    Ferrihydrite precipitation in groundwater-fed river systems (Nete and Demer river basins, Belgium): Insights from a combined Fe-Zn-Sr-Nd-Pb-isotope study by Dekov, V.M., Vanlierde, E., Billström, K., Garbe-Schönberg, C.-D., Weiss, D.J., Gatto Rotondo, G., Van Meel, K., Kuzmann, E., Fortin, D., Darchuk, L., Van Grieken, R.

    Published in Chemical geology (29-10-2014)
    “…Two groundwater-fed river systems (Nete and Demer, Belgium) carry red suspended material that settles on the river bed forming red sediments. The local aquifer…”
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    Journal Article
  2. 2

    Quantitative clay mineralogy as provenance indicator for recent muds in the southern North Sea by Adriaens, R., Zeelmaekers, E., Fettweis, M., Vanlierde, E., Vanlede, J., Stassen, P., Elsen, J., Środoń, J., Vandenberghe, N.

    Published in Marine geology (01-04-2018)
    “…The origin of recent mud deposits as well as the coastal turbidity maximum in the French-Belgian-Dutch nearshore area of the southern North Sea is still under…”
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    Journal Article
  3. 3

    Ferrihydrite precipitation in goundwater-fed river systems (Nete and Demer river basins, Belgium): Insights from a combined Fe-Zn-Sr-Nd-Pb-isotope study by Dekov, Vesselin, Vanlierde, E., Billström, Kjell, Garbe-Schönberg, C-D., Weiss, D.J., Gatto Rotondo, G., Van Mee, K., Kuzmann, E., Fortin, D., Darchuk, L., Van Grieken, R.

    Published in Chemical geology (2014)
    “…Two groundwater-fed river systems (Nete and Demer, Belgium) carry red suspended material that settles on the river bed forming red sediments. The local aquifer…”
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    Journal Article
  4. 4

    Estimating and modeling the annual contribution of authigenic sediment to the total suspended sediment load in the Kleine Nete Basin, Belgium by Vanlierde, Elin, De Schutter, Jan, Jacobs, Patric, Mostaert, Frank

    Published in Sedimentary geology (15-11-2007)
    “…In the Nete basin (Flanders, Belgium) chemical precipitates derived from groundwater-associated Fe 2+ seeping into the overlying surface water significantly…”
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    Journal Article