Atmospheric transport of pollutants from North America to the North Atlantic Ocean

Ground-based measurements strongly support the hypothesis that pollutant materials of anthropogenic origin are being transported over long distances in the midtroposphere and are a significant source of acid rain, acid snow, trace metal deposition, ozone and visibility-reducing aerosols in remote oc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Harriss, R. C., Browell, E. V., Sebacher, D. I., Gregory, G. L., Hinton, R. R., Beck, S. M., Mcdougal, D. S., Shipley, S. T.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1984
Subjects:
45
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19840049858
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Summary:Ground-based measurements strongly support the hypothesis that pollutant materials of anthropogenic origin are being transported over long distances in the midtroposphere and are a significant source of acid rain, acid snow, trace metal deposition, ozone and visibility-reducing aerosols in remote oceanic and polar regions of the Norhern Hemisphere. Atmospheric sulphur budget calculations and studies of acid rain on Bermuda indicate that a large fraction of pollutant materials emitted into the atmosphere in eastern North America are advected eastwards over the North Atlantic Ocean. The first direct airborne measurements of the vertical distribution of tropospheric aerosols over the western North Atlantic is reported here. A newly developed airborne differential adsorption lidar system was used to obtain continuous, remotely sensed aerosol distributions along its flight path. The data document two episodes of long-distance transport of pollutant materials from North America over the North Atlantic Ocean.