skip nav
The University of Queensland
UQ eSpace
UQ Home
Contacts
Study
Maps
News
Events
Library
my.UQ
Search Entry
LOGIN
UQ Staff and Students only
Home
Browse
Search
FAQs
About / Contact
Amelioration of cadmium contaminated soils using cation exchangers
Menzies, N.W., Snars, K.E., Kopittke, G.R. and Kopittke, P.M. (2009) Amelioration of cadmium contaminated soils using cation exchangers.
Journal of Plant Nutrition
,
32
8
:
1321
-
1335
.
Related Links
Link
Description
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01904160903006028
Go to link with your UQ access privileges
Full text from publisher
Author
Menzies, N.W.
Snars, K.E.
Kopittke, G.R.
Kopittke, P.M.
Title
Amelioration of cadmium contaminated soils using cation exchangers
Journal name
Journal of Plant Nutrition
(
ERA 2012 Listed
) (
ERA 2010 Rank C
)
Check publisher's open access policy
Publication date
2009
Sub-type
Article
Year available
2009
DOI
10.1080/01904160903006028
Volume number
32
Issue number
8
ISSN
0190-4167
Start page
1321
End page
1335
Total pages
5
Editor
Dr. Harry A Mills
Place of publication
United States
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Inc
Collection year
2010
Language
eng
Subject
C1
961208 Rehabilitation of Degraded Urban and Industrial Environments
050304 Soil Chemistry (excl. Carbon Sequestration Science)
Keyword
cadmium (Cd)
kaolin amorphous derivatives (KAD)
phytotoxicity
uptake
HEAVY-METALS
PLANTS
ACCUMULATION
GROWTH
MATTER
Q-Index Code
C1
Q-Index Status
Confirmed Code
Document type:
Journal Article
Sub-type:
Article
Collections:
2010 Higher Education Research Data Collection
School of Agriculture and Food Sciences
Versions
Version
Filter Type
Thu, 12 Nov 2009, 12:01:37 EST
Wed, 07 Apr 2010, 14:14:15 EST
Mon, 12 Apr 2010, 14:13:03 EST
Thu, 17 Jun 2010, 15:47:52 EST
Fri, 29 Jun 2012, 16:09:56 EST
Filtered
Full
Citation counts:
Cited
1
times in Thomson Reuters Web of Science
Article
|
Citations
Cited
0
times in Scopus
Article
Search Google Scholar
Access Statistics:
36 Abstract Views -
Detailed Statistics
Created:
Thu, 12 Nov 2009, 12:01:36 EST by
Mr Andrew Martlew
on behalf of School of Land, Crop and Food Sciences