T
Timothy I. Eglinton
Researcher at ETH Zurich
Publications - 390
Citations - 24120
Timothy I. Eglinton is an academic researcher from ETH Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Organic matter & Total organic carbon. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 362 publications receiving 20513 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy I. Eglinton include University of Salamanca & École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne.
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Journal Article
Metaphors we live by
George Lakoff,Mark Johnson,Timothy I. Eglinton,Dorian Q. Fuller,Joel E. Johnson,Pushpendra Kumar,Timothy S. Collett +6 more
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Seasonal and Annual Fluxes of Nutrients and Organic Matter from Large Rivers to the Arctic Ocean and Surrounding Seas
Robert M. Holmes,James W. McClelland,Bruce J. Peterson,Suzanne E. Tank,Ekaterina Bulygina,Timothy I. Eglinton,Viacheslav Gordeev,Tatiana Yu. Gurtovaya,Peter A. Raymond,Daniel J. Repeta,Robin Staples,Robert G. Striegl,Alexander V. Zhulidov,Sergey A. Zimov +13 more
TL;DR: In this article, seasonal and annual constituent fluxes have been determined using consistent sampling and analytical methods at the pan-Arctic scale and consequently provide the best available estimates for constituent flux from land to the Arctic Ocean and surrounding seas.
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Molecular proxies for paleoclimatology
TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarize the applications of molecular proxies in paleoclimatology and discuss two types of proxy; those of terrigenous and those of aquatic origin, and exemplify their application in the study of marine sediments through the medium of ten case studies based in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Pacific Oceans.
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A reassessment of the sources and importance of land-derived organic matter in surface sediments from the gulf of mexico
TL;DR: In this article, molecular and isotopic analyses of surface sediments from two onshore-offshore transects in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico were characterized by a variety of techniques, including elemental, stable carbon, radiocarbon, and molecular-level analyses.
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Evaluation of a protocol for the quantification of black carbon in sediments
Örjan Gustafsson,Thomas D. Bucheli,Zofia Kukulska,Mette Andersson,Claude Largeau,Jean-Noël Rouzaud,Christopher M. Reddy,Timothy I. Eglinton +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the operating range and applicability of a commonly used chemothermal oxidation (CTO) method is evaluated using putative black carbon (BC) standards, potentially interfering substances, and natural matrix standards.