Sulfate and nitrate concentrations in snow from South Greenland 1895-1978

An understanding of the phenomenon of acid rain requires the identification of the sources of the species affecting the pH of rainwater, both natural and anthropogenic, and their temporal and spatial development. The scant data concerning the historical development of the acidity in precipitation ar...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature
Main Authors: Neftel, A., Beer, J., Oeschger, H., Zürcher, F., Finkel, R.C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 1985
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/314611a0
Description
Summary:An understanding of the phenomenon of acid rain requires the identification of the sources of the species affecting the pH of rainwater, both natural and anthropogenic, and their temporal and spatial development. The scant data concerning the historical development of the acidity in precipitation are from urban regions or their vicinity, where local effects dominate and obscure the hemispherical pattern 1 . The Greenland ice sheet allows us to trace the evolution of the acid rain in a remote location that is free from local effects. Sulphuric and nitric acids are the two species that dominate the acidity in precipitation 2-4 . We report here measurements of [SO 4 2- ] and [NO 3 - ] in firn samples spanning the period 1895-1978. Samples, each covering 1 yr, were taken from a 70-m core drilled at Dye 3, South Greenland; [NO 3 - ] and [SO 4 2- ] both increased by a factor of ̃2 during the period. By comparing the recent concentrations of nitrate and sulphate with those resulting from natural sources, we conclude that anthropogenic emissions of the precursors (NO x , SO 2 ) had already surpassed natural sources in the late 1950s.