TY - JOUR ID - iiasa13475 UR - https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/13475/ IS - 3 A1 - Wright, R.F. A1 - Larssen, T. A1 - Camarero, L. A1 - Cosby, B.J. A1 - Ferriere, R.C. A1 - Helliwell, R. A1 - Forsius, M. A1 - Jenkins, A. A1 - Kopacek, J. A1 - Majer, V. A1 - Moldan, F. A1 - Posch, M. A1 - Rogora, M. A1 - Schöpp, W. Y1 - 2005/02/01/ N2 - Twenty years after acid rain captured headlines and forced governments to act, acid deposition has now declined by ?60% in Europe. Some lakes and streams have even begun to recover. Richard F. Wright and 13 colleagues from research institutes in Europe and the United States use models of 12 acid-sensitive regions to predict the continuing effect of declining acid deposition. Will all waters recover, or do acid-rain-causing emissions need to be reduced even more? And how long will the recovery take? PB - American Chemical Society (ACS) JF - Environmental Science & Technology VL - 39 SN - 1520-5851 TI - Recovery of acidified: European surface waters SP - 64A AV - none EP - 72A ER -