000 01575 a2200457 4500
005 20250517081808.0
264 0 _c20161230
008 201612s 0 0 eng d
022 _a1879-1026
024 7 _a10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.02.018
_2doi
040 _aNLM
_beng
_cNLM
100 1 _aDavis, Harley T
245 0 0 _aPotential sources and racial disparities in the residential distribution of soil arsenic and lead among pregnant women.
_h[electronic resource]
260 _bThe Science of the total environment
_cMay 2016
300 _a622-30 p.
_bdigital
500 _aPublication Type: Journal Article; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
650 0 4 _aArsenic
_xanalysis
650 0 4 _aBlack People
650 0 4 _aEnvironmental Exposure
_xstatistics & numerical data
650 0 4 _aFemale
650 0 4 _aHumans
650 0 4 _aLead
_xanalysis
650 0 4 _aMothers
650 0 4 _aPoverty
650 0 4 _aPregnancy
650 0 4 _aSocial Class
650 0 4 _aSocioeconomic Factors
650 0 4 _aSoil Pollutants
_xanalysis
650 0 4 _aSouth Carolina
650 0 4 _aUnited States
650 0 4 _aWhite People
650 0 4 _aBlack or African American
700 1 _aAelion, C Marjorie
700 1 _aLiu, Jihong
700 1 _aBurch, James B
700 1 _aCai, Bo
700 1 _aLawson, Andrew B
700 1 _aMcDermott, Suzanne
773 0 _tThe Science of the total environment
_gvol. 551-552
_gp. 622-30
856 4 0 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.02.018
_zAvailable from publisher's website
999 _c25752725
_d25752725