Madeleine Bohlin
Visiting researcher at Department of Earth Sciences; Palaeobiology
- E-mail:
- madeleine.bohlin@geo.uu.se
- Visiting address:
- Geocentrum, Villavägen 16
752 36 Uppsala - Postal address:
- Villavägen 16
752 36 UPPSALA
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Short presentation
I am an isotope geochemist studying the cycling of elements in the Earth’s 'critical zone'. To understand the complex interactions between rock, water, soil, air and organisms I study rivers in the Himalayan mountains and Ganges floodplain, which form some of the largest continental conveyor belts of nutrients and sediments to the ocean.To decipher the processes controlling the river chemistry I use a combination of non-traditional stable isotopes (Li, Mg and Ni) and reactive transport modelling
Publications
Recent publications
- Controls on Li partitioning and isotopic fractionation in inorganic calcite (2024)
- Animal origins (2022)
- Variability in the Concentration of Lithium in the Indo-Pacific Ocean (2022)
- A rapid method of simultaneous chromatographic purification of Li and Mg for isotopic analyses using MC-ICP-MS (2022)
- Temperature dependent lithium isotope fractionation during glass dissolution (2021)
All publications
Articles
- Controls on Li partitioning and isotopic fractionation in inorganic calcite (2024)
- Animal origins (2022)
- Variability in the Concentration of Lithium in the Indo-Pacific Ocean (2022)
- A rapid method of simultaneous chromatographic purification of Li and Mg for isotopic analyses using MC-ICP-MS (2022)
- Temperature dependent lithium isotope fractionation during glass dissolution (2021)
- Ni isotope fractionation during coprecipitation of Fe(III)(oxyhydr)oxides in Si solutions (2021)
- The reactive transport of Li as a monitor of weathering processes in kinetically limited weathering regimes (2019)
- Diffusive processes in aqueous glass dissolution (2019)
- High-precision determination of lithium and magnesium isotopes utilising single column separation and multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (2018)
- Genetic assimilation in the fossil record: phenotypic plasticity and later accommodation in Cambrian arthropods