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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Observations of Atmospheric Chemical Deposition to High Arctic Snow

Katrina M. MacdonaldSangeeta SharmaDesiree ToomAlina ChivulescuSarah HannaAllan BertramAndrew PlattMike ElsasserLin HuangNathan ChellmanJoseph R. McconnellHeiko BozemDaniel KunkelYing Duan LeiGreg J. EvansJonathan P. D. Abbatt

subject

13. Climate actionhuman activities

description

Abstract. Rapidly rising temperatures and loss of snow and ice cover have demonstrated the unique vulnerability of the high Arctic to climate change. There are major uncertainties in modelling the chemical depositional and scavenging processes of Arctic snow. To that end, fresh snow samples collected on average every four days at Alert, Nunavut, from September 2014 to June 2015 were analyzed for black carbon, major ions, and metals, and their concentrations and fluxes reported. Comparison with simultaneous measurements of atmospheric aerosol mass loadings yields effective deposition velocities which encompass all processes by which the atmospheric species are transferred to the snow. It is inferred from these values that dry deposition is the dominant removal mechanism for several compounds over the winter while wet deposition increased in importance in the fall and spring, probably due to enhanced scavenging by mixed-phase clouds. Black carbon aerosol was the least efficiently deposited species to the snow. These measurements are a unique data set for comparison to models that incorporate deposition to high Arctic snow.

https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2016-944