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Cadmium and lead: Determination in organic matrices with electrothermal furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry.
(International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1987)
Experience has
shown
that
atomic
absorption
analyses
of
lead
and
cadmium
with
pulsed-type
graphite
furnaces
such
as
the
Massmann
design
(Massmann,
1968)
often
are
subject
to
various
kinds
of
s ...
Trace metals in sea water: Sampling and storage methods.
(International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1987)
Sampling
procedures
for
dissolved
trace
metals
in
sea
water
have
progressed
to
the
extent
that
it
is
now
possible
to
describe
reliable
methods
for
the
collection,
preservation,
and
storage
of ...
Cadmium in marine sediments: Determination by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy.
(International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1987)
Cadmium
is
one
of
the
most
important
toxic
elements
to
be
determined
in
environmental
samples.
Cd
has
proved,
however,
to
be
a
difficult
element
to
determine
with
good
precision
and
relative ...
Control procedures: Good laboratory practice and quality assurance.
(International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1987)
Good
Laboratory
Practice
(GLP)
is
one
of
the
manifestations
of
the
increased
attention
being
paid
to
quality
control
measures
in
general.
It
provides
a
framework
designed
to
bring
the
quality ...
Primary production: Guidlines for measurement by 14C incorporation.
(International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1987)
In
the
years
intervening
between
the
preparation
and
publication
of
this
do-
cument,
at
least
two
other
manuals
for
use
in
making
primary
production
de-
terminations
have
been
introduced
(Nie ...
Lipophilic organic material: An apparatus for extracting solids used for their concentration from sea water.
(International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES), Copenhagen, Denmark, 1987)
Lipophilic
organic
substances,
whether
man-made,
mobilized
by
human
activities,
or
of
recent
natural
origin,
are
usually
dissolved
in
sea
water
at
such
minute
concentrations
that
the
chemical
c ...