Jump to: Technical Note
About the Collection
Silver occurs naturally in the environment, but it is also used in various businesses and industries, particularly
photofinishing. There has long been concern about the effects of silver on aquatic organisms. Over the past decade,
significant advances have been made in the understanding of the environmental chemistry, toxicology, and biological
behavior of silver. The most recent findings promise to revolutionize scientific thinking not only with regard to
silver behavior, but for other metals in the environment as well. The scientific community has learned much new
information about sources, concentration levels in natural waters and biota, physico-chemical forms, adsorption and
desorption reactions, toxicology, bioaccumulation, influence of ligands, and transport and fate characteristics of silver.
The research findings have been made public through individually published peer-reviewed papers and the proceedings of
the international Argentum conferences.
UW Sea Grant Institute sponsored six international conferences on the "Transport, Fate, and Effects of Silver in the Environment", better known as Argentum I-VI. From 1993-1998, the conferences were held in Madison, Wisconsin; Washington, D.C.; and Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The proceedings of the first five conferences were published by UW Sea Grant and are reproduced here. SETAC (Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry) Press published the proceedings for the sixth conference.
Technical Note
Please note that full-text searching for the electronic-facsimile texts in our collections is based on uncorrected OCR (Optical Character Recognition) results. While such text is often highly accurate, it will contain errors that may affect your search results. In particular, texts with the following characteristics are particularly prone to error (in some cases, accuracy for such texts is so low that we have decided not to attempt to provide full-text searching):
- Hand-written texts;
- Texts that contain diacritics;
- Texts that contain non-Latin scripts;
- Texts that contain obsolete characters (including the "long S" [looks like an "f"]);
- Texts that are printed in a font in which the letters are difficult for the software to differentiate.
