Standout Papers

Biomass burning as a source of atmospheric gases CO, H2, N2O, NO, CH3Cl and COS 1979 2026 1994 2010 584
  1. Biomass burning as a source of atmospheric gases CO, H2, N2O, NO, CH3Cl and COS (1979)
    Paul J. Crutzen, L. E. Heidt et al. Nature
  2. Tropospheric chemical composition measurements in Brazil during the dry season (1985)
    Paul J. Crutzen, A. C. Delany et al. Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry

Immediate Impact

62 by Nobel laureates 68 from Science/Nature 85 standout
Sub-graph 1 of 17

Citing Papers

Reducing food’s environmental impacts through producers and consumers
2018 StandoutScience
Climate-smart soils
2016 StandoutNature
2 intermediate papers

Works of L. E. Heidt being referenced

Carbon trace gas fluxes along a successional gradient in the Hudson Bay lowland
1994
Biomass burning as a source of atmospheric gases CO, H2, N2O, NO, CH3Cl and COS
1979 StandoutNatureNobel

Author Peers

Author Last Decade Papers Cites
L. E. Heidt 3505 2910 226 283 52 4.0k
D. M. Cunnold 3403 2662 237 435 81 3.8k
D. M. Cunnold 2167 1659 209 314 30 2.7k
F. N. Alyea 2548 1910 236 364 46 3.0k
W. H. Pollock 2155 1818 134 272 32 2.7k
D. F. Hurst 3305 3121 197 127 86 3.7k
S. Schauffler 2610 1923 174 460 60 2.9k
J. F. de Haan 2499 2429 81 209 63 3.1k
A. Tabazadeh 2783 1878 101 222 61 3.1k
J. Huang 2158 1588 266 381 50 3.0k
D. W. Toohey 3472 2208 419 676 99 4.0k

All Works

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2026