Cadmium in marine sediments: Determination by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy.
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Date
1987Author
Rantala, R. T. T.
Loring, D. H.
Status
PublishedPages
9pp.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Cadmium
is
one
of
the
most
important
toxic
elements
to
be
determined
in
environmental
samples.
Cd
has
proved,
however,
to
be
a
difficult
element
to
determine
with
good
precision
and
relative
accuracy.
This
is
shown
by
the
results
of
recent
intercalibration
exercises.
(a)
In
the
Baltic
Sediment
Intercalibration
Exercise,
Brtigmann
and
Niemisto
(1987)
found
deviations
in
reported
Cd
results
unacceptable.
Relative
standard
deviations
(rsd's)
were
48
%
and
63
%
for
for
the
two
intercalibration
samples.
(b)
In
the
National
Research
Council
of
Canada
(NRCC)
intercalibration
(NRC
MS1/TM),
Berman
and
Boyko
(1985)
found
that
less
than
one-third
of
the
35
laboratories
submitting
Cd
values
appeared
competent
in
handling
samples
at
the
0.6
mg/kg
level.
(c)
In
the
ICES
First
Intercalibration
Exercise
on
the
Trace
Metals
in
Marine
Sediments
(1/TM/MS)
report,
Loring
(1987.....
Resource URL
Publisher: http://ices.dk/publications/library/Publisher
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES)Copenhagen, Denmark
Series;Nr
ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences; 3Document Language
enSustainable Development Goals (SDG)
14.1Best Practice Type
Standard Operating ProcedureGuide
ISSN
0903–2606Citation
Rantala, R. T. T. and Loring, D. H. (1987) Cadmium in marine sediments: Determination by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy. ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences, No. 3, 9pp. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-265Collections