Title of article :
Chemical composition of arctic snow: concentration levels and
regional distribution of major elements
Author/Authors :
Patrice de Caritata، نويسنده , , *، نويسنده , , Gwendy Hallb، نويسنده , , Sigurdur G?`slasonc، نويسنده , , William Belseyd، نويسنده , , Marlene Braune، نويسنده , , Natalia I. Goloubevaf، نويسنده , , Hans Kristian Olseng، نويسنده , , Jon Ove Scheieh، نويسنده , , Judy E. Vaiveb، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
At the end of the northern winter 1996/1997, 21 snow samples were collected from 17 arctic localities in Norway, Sweden,
Finland, Svalbard, Russia, Alaska, Canada, Greenland and Iceland. Major element concentrations of the filtered (0.45 Am)
melted snow indicate that most samples are consistent with a diluted seawater composition. Deviations from this behaviour
indicate additional SO4
2 and Cl relative to seawater, suggesting a minor contribution from (probably local) coal combustion
emissions (Alaska, Finland, Sweden, Svalbard). The samples with the highest Na and Cl content (Canada, Russia) also have
higher Na/SO4
2 and Cl /SO4
2 ratios than seawater, suggesting a slight contamination from (probably local) deicing activities.
Local soil or rock dust inputs in the snow are indicated by ‘excess’ Ca contents (Alaska, Svalbard, Greenland, Sweden). No
overall relationship was found between pH (range: 4.6–6.1) and total or non-seasalt SO4
2 (NSS), suggesting that acidification
due to long-range transport of SO2 pollution is not operating on an arctic-wide scale. In a few samples (Alaska, Finland,
Sweden, Svalbard), a significant proportion (>50%) of SO4
2 is non-marine in origin. Sources for this non-marine SO4
2 need
not all be found in long-range atmospheric transport and more likely sources are local industry (Finland, Sweden), road traffic
(Alaska) or minor snow-scooting traffic (one Svalbard locality). A few samples from northern Europe show a relatively weak
trend of decreasing pH with increasing NO3 .
Keywords :
Snow chemistry , Pollution , Acidification , contamination , Long-range transport
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment