17 results match your criteria: "Centre des Sciences de la Terre[Affiliation]"
J Environ Radioact
January 2009
UMR 5594 CNRS-Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, ARTéHIS, Bat. Gabriel, F-21000 Dijon, France.
An 80-year soil archive, the 42-plot experimental design at the INRA in Versailles (France), is used here to study long-term contamination by 137Cs atmospheric deposition and the fate of this radioisotope when associated with various agricultural practices: fallow land, KCl, NH4(NO3), superphosphate fertilizers, horse manure and lime amendments. The pertinence of a simple box model, where radiocaesium is supposed to move downward by convectional mechanisms, is checked using samples from control plots which had been neither amended, nor cultivated since 1928. This simple model presents the advantage of depending on only two parameters: alpha, a proportional factor allowing the historical atmospheric 137Cs fluxes to be reconstructed locally, and k, an annual loss coefficient from the plow horizon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemosphere
September 2007
Microbiologie et Géochimie des Sols, UMR 1229, INRA-Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre 6 Bd Gabriel 21000 Dijon, France.
In a sandy agricultural soil of south-west of France, continuously cultivated with maize and amended with sewage-sludge over 20 years, the behavior of three trace metals (Cu, Pb, and Zn) was studied during the sludge applications (1974-1993) and after its cessation (1993-1998). Using the delta13C analysis, the dynamics of different sources of organic matter were followed in order to elucidate the influence of the sludge-derived organic matter on the fate of trace metals in the soil and its particle size fractions. This study revealed that sludge-derived organic matter contributed to the formation of macroaggregates through the binding of preexisting microaggregates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFC R Biol
February 2007
UMR-CNRS 5561, Biogéosciences et Laboratoire EPHE, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, Université de Bourgogne, 6, bd Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
The cranial morphology of 28 specimens of night monkeys (genus Aotus) was examined using three-dimensional geometrical morphometrics. New results of the morphological differences between two populations of Aotus infulatus from both banks of the Rio Tocantins are proposed. These morphological results totally agree with the genetic distinction of these populations proposed by Schneider -- and Sampaio --, and probably point out recent rapid evolutive changes for this species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2006
UMR Microbiologie et Géochimie des Sols INRA, Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, 6 Bd Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
The carbon isotopic composition (delta13C) of plants can reveal the isotopic carbon content of the atmosphere in which they develop. The delta13C values of air and plants depend on the amount of atmospheric fossil fuel CO2, which is chiefly emitted in urban areas. A new indicator of CO2 pollution is tested using the delta13C variation in a C4 grass: Eleusine indica.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
December 2006
UMR 1229 Microbiologie et Géochimie des Sols, INRA-Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, 6 Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
Microbial transformations of nitrification and denitrification are the main sources of nitrous oxide (N2O) from soils. Relative contributions of both processes to N2O emissions were estimated on an agricultural soil using 15N isotope tracers (15NH4+ or 15NO3-), for a 10-day batch experiment. Under unsaturated and saturated conditions, both processes were significantly involved in N2O production.
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March 2006
UMR 1229 Microbiologie et Géochimie des Sols, INRA-Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, 6, boulevard Gabriel, 21 000 Dijon, France.
Field studies monitoring herbicide pollution in the vineyards of Burgundy (France) have revealed that drinking water reservoirs are contaminated with several pre-emergence herbicides. An assessment of the leaching of two such herbicides, diuron and oryzalin, was therefore performed using lysimeters, under outdoor conditions, from May 2001 to May 2002. Four vineyard soils from Vosne-Romanée (Burgundy) were chosen along a topolithosequence: a rendosol and three calcosols.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
November 2005
UMR INRA 1229 Microbiologie-Géochimie des Sols, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, Université de Bourgogne, 6 Bd Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
The herbicide diuron is frequently applied to vineyard soils in Burgundy, along with repeated treatments with Bordeaux mixture (a blend of copper sulfate and calcium hydroxide) that result in elevated copper concentrations. Cu could in principle affect the fate and transport of diuron or its metabolites in the soil either directly by complexation or indirectly by altering the populations or activity of microbes involved in their degradation. To assess the effect of high Cu concentrations on diuron transport, an experiment was designed with ten undisturbed columns of calcareous and acidic soils contaminated with 17--509 mg kg(-1) total Cu (field-applied).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Pollut
November 2005
UMR 1229 INRA/Université de Bourgogne, Microbiologie et Géochimie des sols, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, Université de Bourgogne, 6 bd Gabriel 21000 Dijon, France.
Some drinking water reservoirs under the vineyards of Burgundy are contaminated with herbicides. Thus the effectiveness of alternative soil management practices, such as grass cover, for reducing the leaching of glyphosate and its metabolite, AMPA, through soils was studied. The leaching of both molecules was studied in structured soil columns under outdoor conditions for 1 year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemosphere
October 2004
UMR 1229 INRA/Université de Bourgogne, Géosol, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, Université de Bourgogne, 6 boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
Field studies monitoring pesticide pollution in the Morvan region (France) have revealed surface water contamination by some herbicides. The purpose of this study was to investigate in greater detail the transport of two herbicides, used in Christmas tree production in the Morvan, under controlled laboratory conditions. Thus, the leaching of hexazinone (3-cyclohexyl-6-dimethyl-amino-1-methyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4 (1H,3H) dione) and glyphosate (N-(phosphono-methyl-glycine)) through structured soil columns was studied using one loamy sand and two sandy loams from sites currently under Christmas tree cultivation in the Morvan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Qual
May 2004
UMR GéoSol-Microbiologie des Sols INRA A111, Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, 6, boulevard Gabriel, 21 000 Dijon, France.
Atrazine (6-chloro-N2-ethyl-N4-isopropyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine) is frequently detected at high concentrations in ground water. Bentazone [3-isopropyl-1H-2,1,3-benzothiadiazin-4(3H)-one 2,2-dioxide] plus alachlor (2-chloro-2',6'-diethyl-N-methoxymethylacetanilide) is a potential herbicide combination used as a substitute for atrazine. Thus, the objective of this study was to assess the environmental risk of this blend.
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February 2004
Centre des Sciences de la Terre, Université de Bourgogne, UMR GéoSol--Microbiologie des Sols INRA A111, 6, Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
The leaching of diuron and oryzalin through undisturbed soil columns was studied in the laboratory using three vineyard soils from Vosne-Romanée (Burgundy): a rendosol, a calcosol and a vegetated calcosol. After 845 mm of simulated rainfall in 15 days, soil leachates contained higher amounts of diuron (3.2%, 11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Bioanal Chem
May 2003
Microbiologie et Géochimie des Sols, Centre des Sciences de la Terre 6, UMR INRA 111, Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
On an acid sandy soil contaminated with trace metals (Fe, Mn, Cu, Pb and Zn), three sequential extraction procedures were compared to determine the efficiency of the reagents used and the effects of the step order on the fractionation of metal species. In all cases, a magnesium nitrate solution (MgNIT) was previously used to extract exchangeable forms. In the first procedure (I), the next extraction step was performed with sodium acetate buffer (NaOAc), as used on calcareous soils, to dissolve active calcium carbonate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
January 2003
Microbiologie et Géochimie des Sols, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, INRA-Université de Bourgogne, 6 Boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France.
A novel fossil fuel pollution indicator based on the 13C/12C isotopic composition of plants has been designed. This bioindicator is a promising tool for future mapping of the sequestration of fossil fuel CO2 into urban vegetation. Theoretically, plants growing in fossil-fuel-CO2-contaminated areas, such as major cities, industrial centers, and highway borders, should assimilate a mixture of global atmospheric CO2 of delta13C value of -8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
May 2002
UMR GéoSol-Microbiologie des Sols INRA A111, Université de Bourgogne, Centre des Sciences de la Terre, Dijon, France.
The transfer of organic pollutants was studied through soil columns using 13[C]-labelled pentachlorophenol (PCP) as a model compound. The organic carbon content and the 13[C]/12[C] ratio were measured in two soil sections, 0-3 cm and 3-6 cm, and in percolated water using an Elemental Analyser coupled with a Magnetic Mass Sector. The mass balance of carbon was evaluated and the amount of PCP was calculated in each compartment of the soil-water systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFC R Acad Sci III
June 2000
UMR CNRS 5561 Biogéosciences, Centre des sciences de la terre, Dijon, France.
Although it is universally accepted that the Indridae family is monophyletic, there is no such unanimity about how the extant species of the Indrinae sub-family are related. Cranium and mandible disparity among Indri indri, Propithecus diadema, Propithecus verreauxi and Avahi laniger is analysed by geometrical morphometric methods and interpreted in adaptive terms. We compare results obtained by two techniques: Procrustes superimpositions for skulls and elliptical Fourier analysis for jawbones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFC R Acad Sci III
February 2000
UMR CNRS 5561 Biogéosciences, Université de Bourgogne, Centre des sciences de la terre, Dijon, France.
A comparative study of the cranial morphologies of cetaceans and of rodents that use their incisors for burrowing brings out morphological convergences concerning the supra-occipital bone. These phyletically very remote groups are both subject to the same mechanical constraint, viz. the need for the spinal column to be aligned with the anteroposterior axis of the skull.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFC R Acad Sci III
June 1999
UMR CNRS 5561, université de Bourgogne, Centre des sciences de la Terre, Dijon, France.
A study of voles (Arvicolidae, Rodentia) from Gansu (China) designed to identify a potential host of Echinococcus multilocularis, responsible for human alveolar echinococcosis, leads to a general analysis of Microtus limnophilus population karyotypes, M1 of M. oeconomus populations from all of Eurasia and of M. limnophilus of Mongolia.
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