Doctoral studies

country
city
subject area
language
university type
university status
Found: 1144
de de
Vallendar, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Erlangen, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Berlin, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Bayreuth, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Mannheim, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Halle, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Magdeburg, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Hildesheim, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Passau, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Eichstätt, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Berlin, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Osnabrück, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Mainz, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Konstanz, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Paderborn, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Greifswald, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Hamburg, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Kaiserslautern, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Siegen, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Leipzig, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Frankfurt (Oder), Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Essen, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Weingarten, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Dresden, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Berlin, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Ilmenau, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Friedrichshafen, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
de de
Giessen, Germany
subject area: economy and administration
Previous
Next
Human activities have strongly modified the biogeochemical cycles of metallic trace elements (MTEs) increasing their fluxes towards and between surface environments. New isotope data has fostered better models of MTE sources, transfer and reactivities in dynamic and multi-sources systems, as required for targeting emission controlled strategies to combat origins and consequences of metal contamination.
Privacy Policy