Dmg mercury3/5/2023 ![]() Ulrich Mayer (University of British Columbia, Canada) ![]() Tracking Diverse Minerals, Hungry Organisms and Dangerous Contaminants Using Reactive Transport Models Kate Maher (Stanford University, USA) and K.This issue brings together diverse contributions highlighting the unique role that reactive transport models have played in advancing our understanding of Earth’s shallow crustal environments and human interactions with them. This process-based approach has enabled us to gain new understanding of a diverse array of earth processes, from biogeochemical cycles in marine sediments and the factors that control soil formation, to the evolution of contaminated groundwater systems and the engineered containment of nuclear waste. Reactive transport modeling, or computer simulations of the transfer of mass and energy through the subsurface, has become a central tool for understanding how Earth’s unique chemical environments are formed, how they function today, and how they might behave in the future. Ulrich Mayer (University of British Columbia, Canada) ![]() GUEST EDITORS: Kate Maher (Stanford University, USA) and K.
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