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Modeling the global atmospheric transport and deposition of mercury to the Great Lakes

Abstract

Mercury contamination in the Great Lakes continues to have important public health and wildlife ecotoxicology impacts, and atmospheric deposition is a significant ongoing loading pathway. The objective of this study was to estimate the amount and source-attribution for atmospheric mercury deposition to each lake, information needed to prioritize amelioration efforts. A new global, Eulerian version of the HYSPLIT-Hg model was used to simulate the 2005 global atmospheric transport and deposition of mercury to the Great Lakes. In addition to the base case, 10 alternative model configurations were used to examine sensitivity to uncertainties in atmospheric mercury chemistry and surface exchange. A novel atmospheric lifetime analysis was used to characterize fate and transport processes within the model. Model-estimated wet deposition and atmospheric concentrations of gaseous elemental mercury (Hg(0)) were generally within ~10% of measurements in the Great Lakes region. The model overestimated non-Hg(0) concentrations by a factor of 2–3, similar to other modeling studies.

Citations

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Authors (21)

  • Photo of  Mark Cohen

    Mark Cohen

    • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Maryland, USA
  • Photo of  Roland R. Draxler

    Roland R. Draxler

    • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Maryland, USA
  • Photo of  Richard S. Artz

    Richard S. Artz

    • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Maryland, USA
  • Photo of  Pierrette Blanchard

    Pierrette Blanchard

  • Photo of  Thomas M. Holsen

    Thomas M. Holsen

  • Photo of  Daniel A. Jaffe

    Daniel A. Jaffe

  • Photo of  Paul Kelley

    Paul Kelley

  • Photo of  Hang Lei

    Hang Lei

  • Photo of  Christopher P. Loughner

    Christopher P. Loughner

  • Photo of  Winston T. Luke

    Winston T. Luke

  • Photo of  Seth N. Lyman

    Seth N. Lyman

  • Photo of  David Niemi

    David Niemi

  • Photo of  Martin Pilote

    Martin Pilote

  • Photo of  Laurier Poissant

    Laurier Poissant

  • Photo of  Dominique Ratte

    Dominique Ratte

  • Photo of  Xinrong Ren

    Xinrong Ren

  • Photo of  Frits Steenhuisen

    Frits Steenhuisen

    • Arctic Centre University of Groningen
  • Photo of  Alexandra Steffen

    Alexandra Steffen

  • Photo of  Rob Tordon

    Rob Tordon

  • Photo of  Simon J. Wilson

    Simon J. Wilson

    • Artic Monitoring and Assessment programme Norway

Keywords

Details

Category:
Articles
Type:
publikacja w in. zagranicznym czasopiśmie naukowym (tylko język obcy)
Published in:
Elementa-Science of the Anthropocene no. 4, pages 1 - 25,
ISSN: 2325-1026
Language:
English
Publication year:
2016
Bibliographic description:
Cohen M., Draxler R., Artz R., Blanchard P., Holsen T., Jaffe D., Kelley P., Lei H., Loughner C., Luke W., Lyman S., Niemi D., Pacyna J., Pilote M., Poissant L., Ratte D., Ren X., Steenhuisen F., Steffen A., Tordon R., Wilson S.. Modeling the global atmospheric transport and deposition of mercury to the Great Lakes. Elementa-Science of the Anthropocene, 2016, Vol. 4, , s.1-25
DOI:
Digital Object Identifier (open in new tab) 10.12952/journal.elementa.000118
Verified by:
Gdańsk University of Technology

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