2006
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2006.02.045
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The use of biota sampling for environmental contaminant analysis for characterization of benthic communities in the Aleutians

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Cited by 15 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…1, 51°N lat; 179°E long) and Kiska Island (51°N lat; 177°E long) in the Aleutian Chain of Alaska. Amchitka contains important ecological resources (Merritt and Fuller 1977;Burger et al , 2006a, and Kiska had the same benthic environments as Amchitka (Burger et al 2006b). Amchitka is the only island where the USA detonated underground nuclear weapons tests (Long Shot in 1965, Milrow in 1969, and Cannikin in 1971.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…1, 51°N lat; 179°E long) and Kiska Island (51°N lat; 177°E long) in the Aleutian Chain of Alaska. Amchitka contains important ecological resources (Merritt and Fuller 1977;Burger et al , 2006a, and Kiska had the same benthic environments as Amchitka (Burger et al 2006b). Amchitka is the only island where the USA detonated underground nuclear weapons tests (Long Shot in 1965, Milrow in 1969, and Cannikin in 1971.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Amchitka is the only island where the USA detonated underground nuclear weapons tests (Long Shot in 1965, Milrow in 1969, and Cannikin in 1971. Amchitka is unusual among Department of Energy sites because of its remoteness, depth below ground surface of the radionuclide contamination, and the importance of its ecological resources and seafood productivity (Burger et al 2006b). Kiska was occupied briefly by the Japanese military occupation during the Second World War, but has not been occupied since then.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Amchitka is the only island where the USA detonated underground tests (Long Shot in 1965, Milrow in 1969, Cannikin in 1971. It is unusual among DOE-contaminated sites because of its remoteness, depth below ground surface of the contamination, and the importance of its ecological resources and seafood productivity that could be at risk if there were significant seepage of radionuclides from Amchitka tests to the marine environment (Burger et al 2006b). Kiska (51° N lat; 177° E long) had military occupation during the Second World War, but has not been occupied since.…”
Section: Study Sitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kiska (51° N lat; 177° E long) had military occupation during the Second World War, but has not been occupied since. It contains many of the same terrestrial and benthic environments as Amchitka (Burger et al 2006b). …”
Section: Study Sitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although it did not experience any underground nuclear tests, both the Japanese and later the U.S. occupied the island during World War II. The marine benthic resources around Kiska Island have not been described extensively (Burger et al, 2006a). Both islands are bordered on the south by the North Pacific and on the north by the Bering Sea (Fig.…”
Section: Study Sitementioning
confidence: 99%