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Precipitation chemistry in central Amazonia

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TLDR
In this paper, rain samples from three sites in central Amazonia were collected over a period of 6 weeks during the 1987 wet season and analyzed for ionic species and dissolved organic carbon.
Abstract
Rain samples from three sites in central Amazonia were collected over a period of 6 weeks during the 1987 wet season and analyzed for ionic species and dissolved organic carbon. A continuous record of precipitation chemistry and amount was obtained at two of these sites, which were free from local or regional pollution, for a time period of over 1 month. The volume-weighted mean concentrations of most species were found to be about a factor of 5 lower during the wet season compared with previous results from the dry season. Only sodium, potassium, and chloride showed similar concentrations in both seasons. When the seasonal difference in rainfall amount is taken into consideration, the deposition fluxes are only slightly lower for most species during the wet season than during the dry season, again with the exception of chloride, potassium, and sodium. Sodium and chloride are present in the same ratio as in sea salt; rapid advection of air masses of marine origin to the central Amazon Basin during the wet season may be responsible for the observed higher deposition flux of these species. Statistical analysis suggests that sulfate is, to a large extent, of marine (sea salt and biogenic) origin, but that long-range transport of combustion-derived aerosols also makes a significant contribution to sulfate and nitrate levels in Amazonian rain. Organic acid concentrations in rain were responsible for a large fraction of the observed precipitation acidity; their concentration was strongly influenced by gas/liquid interactions.

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Biological invasions by exotic grasses, the grass/fire cycle, and global change

TL;DR: Biological invasions into wholly new regions are a consequence of a far reaching but underappreciated component of global environmental change, the human-caused breakdown of biogeographic barriers to species dispersal.
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Biomass Burning in the Tropics: Impact on Atmospheric Chemistry and Biogeochemical Cycles

TL;DR: Widespread burning of biomass serves to clear land for shifting cultivation, to convert forests to agricultural and pastoral lands, and to remove dry vegetation in order to promote agricultural productivity and the growth of higher yield grasses, but it may also disturb biogeochemical cycles, especially that of nitrogen.
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Saharan dust in the Amazon Basin

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that part of the productivity of the Amazon rain forest is dependent upon critical trace elements contained in the soil dust originating in the Sahara/Sahel, and they conclude that the major ionic composition of rain water in the CAB wet season may be strongly influenced by inputs of material originating on the African continent nearly 5000 km away.
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Carboxylic acids in the troposphere, occurrence, sources, and sinks: A review

TL;DR: In this paper, a synthesis of low molecular weight carboxylic acids in tropospheric aqueous and gaseous phases and in aerosol particles for different environments is presented.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Measurement of Dissolved Organic and Particulate Carbon in SEAWATER1

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for the rapid determination of dissolved organic carbon in seawater in concentrations between 0.1 and 20 mg/liter was described, which was carried out in sealed glass ampoules using K 2 S 2 O 8 as an oxidizing agent after the sample has been freed of inorganic carbon.
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Nitrogen oxides in the troposphere: Global and regional budgets

TL;DR: The cycle of nitrogen oxides in the troposphere from both global and regional perspectives is discussed in this article, where estimates for the rate of removal of NOx based on recent atmospheric and precipitation chemistry data are consistent with global source strengths derived here.
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The composition of precipitation in remote areas of the world

TL;DR: The Global Precipitation Chemistry Project collects precipitation by event to determine composition and processes controlling it in five remote areas as mentioned in this paper, including Bermuda, Australia, Poker Flat, Alaska, and Amsterdam Island.
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Soot Carbon and Excess Fine Potassium: Long-Range Transport of Combustion-Derived Aerosols

TL;DR: During a cruise from Hamburg to Montevideo, aerosol samples representing air masses from Europe, the Sahara, tropical Africa, South America, and open oceanic regions were collected and the ratio of soot carbon to fine carbon suggests that most of the particulate organic carbon over the Atlantic is of continental origin.
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Biomass‐burning emissions and associated haze layers over Amazonia

TL;DR: The characteristics of haze layers, which were visually observed over the central Amazon Basin during many of the Amazon Boundary Layer Experiment 2A flights in July/August 1985, were investigated by remote and in situ measurements, using a broad range of instrumentation and sampling equipment on board the Electra aircraft as discussed by the authors.
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