Brian Jackson
Associate Professor
Department of Earth Sciences
Dartmouth College
United States of America
Biography
The broad theme of his research is the cycling of contaminant trace elements in the environment and the associated implications for human health. In particular he specialize in arsenic and mercury biogeochemistry and on developing analytical coupled methods to probe the speciation and partitioning of As and Hg in complex environmental systems. Current specific areas of interest are the potential role of climate change on the availability of mercury in estuarine and terrestrial systems and human exposure to arsenic through food.
Research Interest
Arsenic, Mercury, Speciation, Trace element analysis, Elemental spatial analysis, Biomarkers
Publications
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Jackson,B.P., Liba, A., Nelson, J. 2015. Advantages of reaction cell ICP-MS on doubly charged interferences for arsenic and selenium analysis in foods. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectroscopy. (30), 1179-1183.
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Buckman KL, Marvin-DiPasquale M, Taylor VF, Chalmers A, Broadley HJ, Agee J, Jackson BP, Chen CY. 2015. Influence of a chlor-alkali Superfund site on mercury bioaccumulation in periphyton and Low-trophic level fauna. Environ Toxicol Chem. 34(7),1649-1658.
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Jackson, BP. 2015. Fast Ion Chromatography-ICP-QQQ for arsenic speciation. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectroscopy. 30(6):1405-1407.