Steve Roberts presented a lecture on the
Superfund Basic Research Program (SBRP) at UF.
For more information on the
Superfund Basic Research Program see: http://www-apps.niehs.nih.gov/sbrp/
He has served on the National Advisory Environmental Health Sciences Council, Comparative Medicine Study Section, and has most recently chaired the 15-year external review panel of the
Superfund Basic Research Program for the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
It is a time of new beginnings for the
Superfund Basic Research Program, a university-based grants program established in 1987.
The use of community wells that tap these deeper aquifers has been extensive in 50 villages of Araihazar upazila, where health, Earth, and social scientists of Columbia University have been conducting basic research with support from the Superfund Basic Research Program (van Geen et al.
He is also professor of pharmacology at Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons, and director of the Columbia University Superfund Basic Research Program. His research is focused on the health effects of exposure to metals.
The proposed strategy grew out of field work and a well survey conducted through the university's NIEHS
Superfund Basic Research Program, of which Graziano is director.
Joshua Hamilton, program director of the Dartmouth College
Superfund Basic Research Program, and colleagues published papers on the latter topic in the March 2001 issue of EHP and the August 2004 issue of Chemical Research in Toxicology.
Now Littleton, Colorado-based ADA Technologies, through funding from the NIEHS
Superfund Basic Research Program, the U.S.
This article is based on a presentation at the conference "Bioremediation and Biodegradation: Current Advances in Reducing Toxicity, Exposure and Environmental Consequences" (http://www-apps.niehs.nih.gov/sbrp/ bioremediation.html) held 9-12 June 2002 in Pacific Grove, California, and sponsored by the NIEHS
Superfund Basic Research Program. The overall focus of this conference was on exploring the research interfaces of toxicity reduction, exposure assessment, and evaluation of environmental consequences in the context of using state-of-the-art approaches to bioremediation and biodegradation.
niehs.nih.gov/sbrp/bioremediation.html) held 9-12 June 2002 in Pacific Grove, California, and sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Superfund Basic Research Program. The overall focus of this conference was on exploring the research interfaces of toxicity reduction, exposure assessment, and evaluation of environmental consequences in the context of using state-of-the-art approaches to bioremediation and biodegradation.
The
Superfund Basic Research Program (SBRP) is pleased to announce that Anne Spuches of Dartmouth College is the recipient of the seventh annual Karen Wetterhahn Memorial Award.