RT @BronGillanders: @B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change…
RT @jonathanjtyler: Congrats Briony @B_Chamberlayne on her first paper! On bivalve geochemistry from museum specimens
RT @BronGillanders: @B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change…
RT @BronGillanders: @B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change…
Congrats Briony @B_Chamberlayne on her first paper! On bivalve geochemistry from museum specimens
RT @BronGillanders: @B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change…
👀👀 @ellenlaaker @FulweilerLab
RT @BronGillanders: @B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change…
RT @BronGillanders: @B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change…
@B_Chamberlayne PhD paper out in latest issue of Estuaries and Coasts. Using #bivalves to record environmental change https://t.co/g7kNPuy30a https://t.co/wYMUnsTzmf
https://t.co/YI7umBviVz Environmental Controls on the Geochemistry of a Short-Lived Bivalve in Southeastern Australian Estuaries Abstract Geochemical signals in bivalve carbonate hold the potential to record environmental change over timescales from mont