Atmospheric mercury concentrations observed at ground-based monitoring sites globally distributed in the framework of the GMOS network


Autoria(s): Sprovieri, Francesca; Pirrone, Nicola; Bencardino, Mariantonia; D'Amore, Francesco; Carbone, Francesco; Cinnirella, Sergio; Mannarino, Valentino; Landis, Matthew; Ebinghaus, Ralf; Weigelt, Andreas; Brunke, Ernst-gunther; Labuschagne, Casper; Martin, Lynwill; Munthe, John; Wangberg, Ingvar; Artaxo, Paulo; Morais, Fernando; Jorge Barbosa, Henrique De Melo; Brito, Joel; Cairns, Warren; Barbante, Carlo; Del Carmen Dieguez, Maria; Elizabeth Garcia, Patricia; Dommergue, Aurelien; Angot, Helene; Magand, Olivier; Skov, Henrik; Horvat, Milena; Kotnik, Joze; Read, Katie Alana; Neves, Luis Mendes; Gawlik, Bernd Manfred; Sena, Fabrizio; Mashyanov, Nikolay; Obolkin, Vladimir; Wip, Dennis; Bin Feng, Xin; Zhang, Hui; Fu, Xuewu; Ramachandran, Ramesh; Cossa, Daniel; Knoery, Joel; Marusczak, Nicolas; Nerentorp, Michelle; Norstrom, Claus
Data(s)

01/09/2016

Resumo

Long-term monitoring of data of ambient mercury (Hg) on a global scale to assess its emission, transport, atmospheric chemistry, and deposition processes is vital to understanding the impact of Hg pollution on the environment. The Global Mercury Observation System (GMOS) project was funded by the European Commission (http://www.gmos.eu) and started in November 2010 with the overall goal to develop a coordinated global observing system to monitor Hg on a global scale, including a large network of ground-based monitoring stations, ad hoc periodic oceanographic cruises and measurement flights in the lower and upper troposphere as well as in the lower stratosphere. To date, more than 40 ground-based monitoring sites constitute the global network covering many regions where little to no observational data were available before GMOS. This work presents atmospheric Hg concentrations recorded worldwide in the framework of the GMOS project (2010–2015), analyzing Hg measurement results in terms of temporal trends, seasonality and comparability within the network. Major findings highlighted in this paper include a clear gradient of Hg concentrations between the Northern and Southern hemispheres, confirming that the gradient observed is mostly driven by local and regional sources, which can be anthropogenic, natural or a combination of both.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00353/46439/46183.pdf

DOI:10.5194/acp-16-11915-2016

http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00353/46439/

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Copernicus Gesellschaft Mbh

Relação

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/265113/EU//GMOS

Direitos

Author(s) 2016. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

restricted use

Fonte

Atmospheric Chemistry And Physics (1680-7316) (Copernicus Gesellschaft Mbh), 2016-09 , Vol. 16 , N. 18 , P. 11915-11935

Tipo

text

Publication

info:eu-repo/semantics/article