:Talk:Europium anomaly

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We need a graph of REE abundances from somewhere, showing the typical Eu anomalies of a range of different basalts. It's on my TODO list but I'm making a note here in case anyone else wants to try beating me to it :-) Jon (talk) 15:23, 15 July 2012 (UTC)

For instance: A graph of basalt REE abundance

Or, perhaps, we can flog the image from this paper{{Cite journal

| title = Sources of Extraterrestrial Rare Earth Elements: To the Moon and Beyond

| author = Claire L. McLeod 1, Mark. P. S. Krekeler

| journal = Resources

| publisher = MDPI

| volume = 6

| issue = 3

| date = August 2017

| accessdate = 2018-03-09

| url = http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/6/3/40/htm

| doi = 10.3390/resources6030040

}} since the MDPI open access licence allows it under CC-BY/4: http://www.mdpi.com/resources/resources-06-00040/article_deploy/html/images/resources-06-00040-g006.png

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Wiki Education assignment: Biogeochemical Cycles

{{dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment | course = Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/Georgia_Institute_of_Technology/Biogeochemical_Cycles_(Spring_2025) | assignments = Cbravo7 | reviewers = Bigmonstereatbeans | start_date = 2025-01-06 | end_date = 2025-04-21 }}

— Assignment last updated by MethanoJen (talk) 14:31, 10 January 2025 (UTC)

The article is short and covers a bit of magma chemistry related to the anomaly and the application of the anomaly on the moon. The chemistry is appropriate and explains why there is a preferential take up of Europium but it needs some better connection to where and when these processes happen. The only example of the anomaly is based around the moon. The moon could have its section. More sections could exist for the chemistry, methods of determining the anomaly, and several applications of the technique. I can do more work connecting this article to rare earth element topics and the cerium anomaly.--Cbravo7 (talk) 04:52, 27 January 2025 (UTC)