INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)

Air monitoring of POPs and Hg has taken place at Alert, Nunavut, Canada and Ny Ålesund, Norway since the 1990s under the Northern Contaminants Program (NCP) of Canada and the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), respectively. Through the International Polar Year (IPY) INCATPA project,...

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Main Authors: Hayley Hung, Alexandra Steffen, Amanda Cole, Ashu Dastoor, Ed Sverko, Jianmin Ma, John Norman Westgate, Tom Harner, Yi-Fan Li
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
IPY
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1dad0bdd2433bddc23356bb801549f1075edb04eba223b5f84aa9a02ee2704b1
id dataone:sha256:1dad0bdd2433bddc23356bb801549f1075edb04eba223b5f84aa9a02ee2704b1
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:1dad0bdd2433bddc23356bb801549f1075edb04eba223b5f84aa9a02ee2704b1 2024-10-03T18:45:34+00:00 INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA) Hayley Hung Alexandra Steffen Amanda Cole Ashu Dastoor Ed Sverko Jianmin Ma John Norman Westgate Tom Harner Yi-Fan Li BEGINDATE: 2007-04-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2011-03-31T00:00:00Z 2012-10-17T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1dad0bdd2433bddc23356bb801549f1075edb04eba223b5f84aa9a02ee2704b1 unknown PCBs Circumpolar region Mercury Atmosphere Arctic Persistent organic pollutants Pesticides Dataset 2012 dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS 2024-10-03T18:09:03Z Air monitoring of POPs and Hg has taken place at Alert, Nunavut, Canada and Ny Ålesund, Norway since the 1990s under the Northern Contaminants Program (NCP) of Canada and the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), respectively. Through the International Polar Year (IPY) INCATPA project, stations on both sides of the Pacific Ocean have been initiated for air sampling of POPs and mercury (Hg). These include Little Fox Lakes, Yukon (POPs and Hg); Valkarkai, Russia (POPs); Dillingham and Fairbanks, Alaska (POPs); Barrow, Alaska (Hg); Waliguan, Wudalianchi and Xuancheng, China (POPs); Mt. Changbai, China (Hg); Hedo, Japan (POPs); and Ba Vi, Vietnam (POPs). All IPY sampling activities were completed in spring 2010. A few stations continue to operate, supported by other programs, as a legacy of IPY. We continue Hg measurements in air at Whistler, B.C.; Barrow, Alaska; Amderma, Russia; and Mt. Changbai, China. At Little Fox Lakes, Yukon, Hg measurements continue under NCP. Pumped air measurements of POPs at this site completed in October 2009 and a new flowthrough-type air sampler, which can operate without electricity, was installed in an attempt to catch trans-Pacific transport in spring 2010. Mercury modelling transport studies have shown that Asia is the single greatest source of atmospheric mercury in the Arctic, contributing ~30% of the mercury input. This information is useful to policy makers at the international negotiating table striving to achieve the appropriate restrictions on release of pollutants of concern for the Arctic environment. Measurement results show that a gr oup of toxic combustion by-product, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), detected in Yukon air was related to sources in North America, Asia and northern Europe, e.g. from wildfires in California and Asia, and oil and gas production platforms throughout the Arctic. Mercury deposition from air at Alert has changed between 1995 and 2007. This change shows a complex relationship with local temperature and wind direction. A warming Arctic may also release POPs previously deposited in ice/snow and oceans back into the air, making them once again available for circulation around the globe, altering human and wildlife exposures. The influence of climate change must be considered to reduce the exposure to toxic chemicals in the Arctic. Dataset AMAP Amderma Arctic Barrow Climate change International Polar Year IPY Nunavut Ny Ålesund Ny-Ålesund Alaska Yukon Unknown Amderma ENVELOPE(61.666,61.666,69.758,69.758) Arctic Canada Fairbanks Little Fox Lakes ENVELOPE(-135.654,-135.654,61.345,61.345) Norway Nunavut Ny-Ålesund Pacific Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:BOREALIS
language unknown
topic PCBs
Circumpolar region
Mercury
Atmosphere
Arctic
Persistent organic pollutants
Pesticides
spellingShingle PCBs
Circumpolar region
Mercury
Atmosphere
Arctic
Persistent organic pollutants
Pesticides
Hayley Hung
Alexandra Steffen
Amanda Cole
Ashu Dastoor
Ed Sverko
Jianmin Ma
John Norman Westgate
Tom Harner
Yi-Fan Li
INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)
topic_facet PCBs
Circumpolar region
Mercury
Atmosphere
Arctic
Persistent organic pollutants
Pesticides
description Air monitoring of POPs and Hg has taken place at Alert, Nunavut, Canada and Ny Ålesund, Norway since the 1990s under the Northern Contaminants Program (NCP) of Canada and the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), respectively. Through the International Polar Year (IPY) INCATPA project, stations on both sides of the Pacific Ocean have been initiated for air sampling of POPs and mercury (Hg). These include Little Fox Lakes, Yukon (POPs and Hg); Valkarkai, Russia (POPs); Dillingham and Fairbanks, Alaska (POPs); Barrow, Alaska (Hg); Waliguan, Wudalianchi and Xuancheng, China (POPs); Mt. Changbai, China (Hg); Hedo, Japan (POPs); and Ba Vi, Vietnam (POPs). All IPY sampling activities were completed in spring 2010. A few stations continue to operate, supported by other programs, as a legacy of IPY. We continue Hg measurements in air at Whistler, B.C.; Barrow, Alaska; Amderma, Russia; and Mt. Changbai, China. At Little Fox Lakes, Yukon, Hg measurements continue under NCP. Pumped air measurements of POPs at this site completed in October 2009 and a new flowthrough-type air sampler, which can operate without electricity, was installed in an attempt to catch trans-Pacific transport in spring 2010. Mercury modelling transport studies have shown that Asia is the single greatest source of atmospheric mercury in the Arctic, contributing ~30% of the mercury input. This information is useful to policy makers at the international negotiating table striving to achieve the appropriate restrictions on release of pollutants of concern for the Arctic environment. Measurement results show that a gr oup of toxic combustion by-product, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), detected in Yukon air was related to sources in North America, Asia and northern Europe, e.g. from wildfires in California and Asia, and oil and gas production platforms throughout the Arctic. Mercury deposition from air at Alert has changed between 1995 and 2007. This change shows a complex relationship with local temperature and wind direction. A warming Arctic may also release POPs previously deposited in ice/snow and oceans back into the air, making them once again available for circulation around the globe, altering human and wildlife exposures. The influence of climate change must be considered to reduce the exposure to toxic chemicals in the Arctic.
format Dataset
author Hayley Hung
Alexandra Steffen
Amanda Cole
Ashu Dastoor
Ed Sverko
Jianmin Ma
John Norman Westgate
Tom Harner
Yi-Fan Li
author_facet Hayley Hung
Alexandra Steffen
Amanda Cole
Ashu Dastoor
Ed Sverko
Jianmin Ma
John Norman Westgate
Tom Harner
Yi-Fan Li
author_sort Hayley Hung
title INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)
title_short INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)
title_full INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)
title_fullStr INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)
title_full_unstemmed INterContinental Atmospheric Transport of anthropogenic Pollutants to the Arctic (INCATPA)
title_sort intercontinental atmospheric transport of anthropogenic pollutants to the arctic (incatpa)
publishDate 2012
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:1dad0bdd2433bddc23356bb801549f1075edb04eba223b5f84aa9a02ee2704b1
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 2007-04-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2011-03-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(61.666,61.666,69.758,69.758)
ENVELOPE(-135.654,-135.654,61.345,61.345)
geographic Amderma
Arctic
Canada
Fairbanks
Little Fox Lakes
Norway
Nunavut
Ny-Ålesund
Pacific
Yukon
geographic_facet Amderma
Arctic
Canada
Fairbanks
Little Fox Lakes
Norway
Nunavut
Ny-Ålesund
Pacific
Yukon
genre AMAP
Amderma
Arctic
Barrow
Climate change
International Polar Year
IPY
Nunavut
Ny Ålesund
Ny-Ålesund
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet AMAP
Amderma
Arctic
Barrow
Climate change
International Polar Year
IPY
Nunavut
Ny Ålesund
Ny-Ålesund
Alaska
Yukon
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