How can fine dust particles from historic mining sites dissolve in the body and affect long-term human health?
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Rogelio Carrillo González is a biologist by the National University, Master in Science by the Colegio de Postgraduados, and Doctor of Philosophy by the University of Reading in the UK. He was a researcher at the Instituto de Ecología Alimentos (UAT). Nowadays, he is Professor at the Colegio de Postgraduados in Mexico; He was a visiting researcher at Texas A&M University. He is interested in biological approaches to reduce pollutant dispersion and remediate polluted water and soils, including the use of nanotechnology, as well as the biogeochemistry of essential nutrients. His h-inderx is 21 with 2438 citations to his research.
Rogelio Carrillo González is a biologist by the National University, Master in Science by the Colegio de Postgraduados, and Doctor of Philosophy by the University of Reading in the UK. He was a researcher at the Instituto de Ecología Alimentos (UAT). Nowadays, he is Professor at the Colegio de Postgraduados in Mexico; He was a visiting researcher at Texas A&M University. He is interested in biological approaches to reduce pollutant dispersion and remediate polluted water and soils, including the use of nanotechnology, as well as the biogeochemistry of essential nutrients. His h-inderx is 21 with 2438 citations to his research.
How can fine dust particles from historic mining sites dissolve in the body and affect long-term human health?