Publications and Presentations
Publications:
Parr, J.F. and Sullivan, L.A., 2011, Phytolith occluded carbon and silica variability in wheat cultivars. Plant and Soil, 342 (1-2)165171.
Parr, J.F., Sullivan, L.A., Chen, B., Ye, G. and Zheng, W., 2010. Carbon bio-sequestration within the Phytoliths of economic bamboo species. Global Change Biol, 16(10): 2661-2667.
Parr, J.F., Sullivan, L.A. and Quirk, R., 2009. Sugarcane Phytoliths: Encapsulation and Sequestration of a Long-lived Carbon Fraction. Sugar Tech, 11(1): 17-21.
Parr, J.F. and Sullivan, L.A., 2005. Soil carbon sequestration in Phytoliths. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 37(1): 117-124.
Parr, J.F., 2006. Effect of Fire on Phytolith Coloration. Geoarchaeology, 21(2): 171-185.
Parr, J.F., 2004. Morphometric and visual fossil phytolith identification using a regionally specific digital database. Phytolitharian, 16(2): 2-10.
Refereed Conference Preceedings:
Parr, J.F., Sullivan, L.A. and Quirk, R., 2008. Sugarcane Phytoliths: Encapsulation of a Long-Lived Carbon Fraction. In: Y.-R. Li, M.I. Nasr, S. Solomon and G.P. Rao (Editors), Proceedings of the International Conference IS-2008. Engineering House Press Co. Egypt, Egypt.
Sullivan, L.A. and Parr, J.F., 2006. Phytolith-Occluded Carbon and the Long-Term Soil Organic Carbon Sequestration Potential, National Soils Conference, Adelaide.
Sullivan, L.A. and Parr, J.F., 2007. Green’ geosequestration: Secure carbon sequestration via plant silica biomineralisation. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 71(15):A985-A985.
Presentations
:
Parr and Sullivan -
Carbon Sequestration in Plantstones
(3.5MB)
Sullivan and Parr - National Soils Conference in Adelaide (1.2MB)
Sullivan a
nd Parr
-
The Potential of Soil to Securely Sequestrate Carbon: Expanding the Horizon
(2.82MB)
Parr and Sullivan -
Carbon Sequestration in Plantstones
(1.73MB)
Sullivan and
Parr -
Increasing Long Term Carbon Sequestrat
ion in Agr
iculture and Forestry:
The
role of Phytoliths (2.6MB)
Sullivan and
Parr - ‘Green’ geosequestration: secure carbon
sequestration via plant silica biomineralisation (1.3MB)
Parr and Sullivan - Deposition of plant silica: a long-lived soil fraction
containing easily quantifiable carbon (1.6MB)