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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Water, air & soil pollution 85 (1995), S. 2113-2118 
    ISSN: 1573-2932
    Keywords: 210Pb ; wet deposition ; organic matter ; soil complex terrain
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract The radionuclide210Pb derived from gaseous222Rn is present in particle form in the atmosphere attached to the same aerosols which contain the bulk of the pollutant sulphur and nitrogen. When scavenged from the atmosphere by precipitation, the210Pb is readily attached to organic matter in the surface horizons of soil. The inventory of210Pb in soil can be used to measure the spatial variation in wet (or cloud) deposition within a region due to orography or land use, averaged over several decades (half life of210Pb is 22.3 years). Measurements of soil210Pb inventories along a transect through complex terrain in north Britain were made to quantify the orographic enhancement of wet deposition, at Great Dun Fell in Cumbria. At the hill summit (∼800m asl) precipitation of approximately 2000 mm year−1 exceeds that on the low ground upwind by a factor of 2.0. The inventory of210Pb increases along the same transect by a factor of 3.3, due to seeder-feeder scavenging of orographic cloud. The measurements show that the average ratio of concentrations in scavenged orographic cloud to rain upwind of the hills is 2.2. These data are entirely consistent with the studies of the variation in major ion concentration with altitude at Great Dun Fell and elsewhere. The modelling procedures developed to provide estimates of wet deposition throughout the UK uplands are shown to be consistent with these new field data.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-2932
    Keywords: wet deposition ; orographic enhancement ; seeder-feeder
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract Continuous monitoring of cloud and rain samples at three mountain sites in the UK has allowed consideration of the long term impact of the enhancement of the wet deposition of pollutants by orographie effects, specifically the scavenging of cap cloud droplets by rain falling from above (the seeder-feeder effects). The concentration of the major pollutant ions in the cloud water is related to the relative proximity of each site to marine and anthropogenic sources of aerosol. In general, the concentrations of major ions in precipitation at summit sites exceed those in precipitation to low ground nearby by 20% to 50%. Concentrations in orographie cloud exceed those in upwind rain by between a factor of five and ten. The results are consistent with seeder-feeder scavenging of hill cloud by falling precipitation in which the average concentration of ions in scavenged hill cloud exceed those in precipitation upwind by a factor of 1.7 to 2.3 for sulphate and nitrate respectively at Dunslair Heights and 1.5 to 1.8 for sulphate and nitrate at Holme Moss. The results suggest that the parameterisation of this relationship with scavenged feeder cloud water concentrations assumed to exceed those in seeder rain by a factor of two for the production of predictive maps of wet deposition in mountainous regions of the U.K. is satisfactory.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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