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Showing papers by "Leonard A. Barrie published in 1984"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the temporal variation of SO 2, SO 4 2− and V concentrations in the North American and Norwegian Arctic is analyzed using a Lagrangian transport model. But, the authors do not consider photochemical oxidation mechanisms at least when reactive hydrocarbons are ignored.

102 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 1984-Tellus B
TL;DR: In this article, the mean annual concentration and deposition of H +, SO 4 NO -4 and NH + ions in precipitation in North America during 1980, the first year that a reasonably compatible merger of US and Canadian federal network data was possible.
Abstract: Observations are presented of the mean annual concentration and deposition of H + , SO 4 NO - 4 and NH + ions in precipitation in North America during 1980, the first year that a reasonably compatible merger of US and Canadian federal network data was possible. The maximum concentration and wet deposition of H + , SO = 4 and NO - 3 occurred in-and south of-the great lakes region near maximum anthropogenic emissions of sulphur and nitrogen oxides. The NH + 4 maximum, however, was located in the north central US where American livestock feedlots are concentrated. Peak H* concentrations were 60-80 μmole l -1 . In the region of maximum emissions, 1980 observations of H + , SO = 4 and NO - 3 wet deposition are within 25% of the 5-year mean for 1977-1981. The respective fraction of anthropogenic sulphur and nitrogen oxides released in eastern North America that are wet deposited in the same area is 24 ± 6 and 25 ± 6%. On a smaller scale, in the high sulphur and nitrogen oxide emissions area of the northeastern US. the deposition was 13 and 18% of emissions, respectively. Trends in emissions as well as in SO = 4 and NO - 3 concentrations in precipitation support the conclusion that a real increase in acidity of precipitation of 30-37 μmol l -1 has occurred in the southeastern US since 1955/56 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0889.1984.tb00253.x

86 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a chemical survey of the snowpack in Eastern Canada, conducted in late January 1981, yielded the concentration and total deposition of major ions and several trace metals and found that the hydrogen ion concentration ranged from 12.6 (pH 4.90) to 85.0 (pHO 4.07) μmole l−1.

44 citations