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Title: Chemical and Physical Signatures for Microbial Forensics

Abstract

Chemical and physical signatures for microbial forensics John Cliff and Helen Kreuzer-Martin, eds. Humana Press Chapter 1. Introduction: Review of history and statement of need. Randy Murch, Virginia Tech Chapter 2. The Microbe: Structure, morphology, and physiology of the microbe as they relate to potential signatures of growth conditions. Joany Jackman, Johns Hopkins University Chapter 3. Science for Forensics: Special considerations for the forensic arena - quality control, sample integrity, etc. Mark Wilson (retired FBI): Western Carolina University Chapter 4. Physical signatures: Light and electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, gravimetry etc. Joseph Michael, Sandia National Laboratory Chapter 5. Lipids: FAME, PLFA, steroids, LPS, etc. James Robertson, Federal Bureau of Investigation Chapter 6. Carbohydrates: Cell wall components, cytoplasm components, methods Alvin Fox, University of South Carolina School of Medicine David Wunschel, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chapter 7. Peptides: Peptides, proteins, lipoproteins David Wunschel, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chapter 8. Elemental content: CNOHPS (treated in passing), metals, prospective cell types John Cliff, International Atomic Energy Agency Chapter 9. Isotopic signatures: Stable isotopes C,N,H,O,S, 14C dating, potential for heavy elements. Helen Kreuzer-Martin, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Michaele Kashgarian, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Chapter 10. Extracellular signatures: Cellular debris, heme, agar, headspace, spent media,more » etc Karen Wahl, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chapter 11. Data Reduction and Integrated Microbial Forensics: Statistical concepts, parametric and multivariate statistics, integrating signatures Kristin Jarman, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory« less

Authors:
ORCiD logo [1];  [1]; ORCiD logo [1]; ORCiD logo [1]
  1. BATTELLE (PACIFIC NW LAB)
Publication Date:
Research Org.:
Pacific Northwest National Lab. (PNNL), Richland, WA (United States)
Sponsoring Org.:
USDOE
OSTI Identifier:
1033054
Report Number(s):
PNNL-SA-62125
TRN: US201202%%556
DOE Contract Number:  
AC05-76RL01830
Resource Type:
Book
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Subject:
59 BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES; 60 APPLIED LIFE SCIENCES; AGE ESTIMATION; ATOMIC FORCE MICROSCOPY; CARBOHYDRATES; CELL WALL; CYTOPLASM; EDUCATIONAL FACILITIES; ELECTRON MICROSCOPY; GRAVIMETRY; HEME; IAEA; LIPIDS; LIPOPROTEINS; MEDICINE; MORPHOLOGY; PEPTIDES; PHYSIOLOGY; PROTEINS; QUALITY CONTROL; STABLE ISOTOPES; STATISTICS; STEROIDS; microbial forensics

Citation Formats

Cliff, John B., Kreuzer, Helen W., Ehrhardt, Christopher J., and Wunschel, David S. Chemical and Physical Signatures for Microbial Forensics. United States: N. p., 2012. Web. doi:10.1007/978-1-60327-219-3.
Cliff, John B., Kreuzer, Helen W., Ehrhardt, Christopher J., & Wunschel, David S. Chemical and Physical Signatures for Microbial Forensics. United States. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-219-3
Cliff, John B., Kreuzer, Helen W., Ehrhardt, Christopher J., and Wunschel, David S. 2012. "Chemical and Physical Signatures for Microbial Forensics". United States. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-219-3.
@article{osti_1033054,
title = {Chemical and Physical Signatures for Microbial Forensics},
author = {Cliff, John B. and Kreuzer, Helen W. and Ehrhardt, Christopher J. and Wunschel, David S.},
abstractNote = {Chemical and physical signatures for microbial forensics John Cliff and Helen Kreuzer-Martin, eds. Humana Press Chapter 1. Introduction: Review of history and statement of need. Randy Murch, Virginia Tech Chapter 2. The Microbe: Structure, morphology, and physiology of the microbe as they relate to potential signatures of growth conditions. Joany Jackman, Johns Hopkins University Chapter 3. Science for Forensics: Special considerations for the forensic arena - quality control, sample integrity, etc. Mark Wilson (retired FBI): Western Carolina University Chapter 4. Physical signatures: Light and electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, gravimetry etc. Joseph Michael, Sandia National Laboratory Chapter 5. Lipids: FAME, PLFA, steroids, LPS, etc. James Robertson, Federal Bureau of Investigation Chapter 6. Carbohydrates: Cell wall components, cytoplasm components, methods Alvin Fox, University of South Carolina School of Medicine David Wunschel, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chapter 7. Peptides: Peptides, proteins, lipoproteins David Wunschel, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chapter 8. Elemental content: CNOHPS (treated in passing), metals, prospective cell types John Cliff, International Atomic Energy Agency Chapter 9. Isotopic signatures: Stable isotopes C,N,H,O,S, 14C dating, potential for heavy elements. Helen Kreuzer-Martin, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Michaele Kashgarian, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Chapter 10. Extracellular signatures: Cellular debris, heme, agar, headspace, spent media, etc Karen Wahl, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Chapter 11. Data Reduction and Integrated Microbial Forensics: Statistical concepts, parametric and multivariate statistics, integrating signatures Kristin Jarman, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory},
doi = {10.1007/978-1-60327-219-3},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1033054}, journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Tue Jan 03 00:00:00 EST 2012},
month = {Tue Jan 03 00:00:00 EST 2012}
}

Book:
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