Ammonium in Antarctic Aerosol: Marine Biological Activity Versus Long‐Range Transport of Biomass Burning


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Rolf.Weller [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

Year-round records of the ionic composition of Antarctic aerosol were obtained at the inland Dome C (DC) and coastal Neumayer (NM) sites, with additional observations of black carbon (BC) at NM. Discussions focus on the origin of ammonium in Antarctica. This first Antarctic atmospheric study of several species emitted by biomass burning (BB) indicates that BC and oxalate reach a maximum in October in relation to BB activity in the southern hemisphere. Ammonium reaches a maximum 2 months later, suggesting that BB remains a minor ammonium source there. The ammonium maximum in December coincides with the occurrence of diatom blooms in the austral ocean, suggesting that oceanic ammonia emissions are the main source of ammonium in Antarctica. The ammonium to sulfur-derived biogenic species molar ratio of 0.15 in summer suggests far lower ammonia emissions from the Antarctic oceans than midlatitude southern oceans.



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ISI/Scopus peer-reviewed
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Published
Eprint ID
53606
DOI https://www.doi.org/10.1029/2021gl092826

Cite as
Legrand, M. , Weller, R. , Preunkert, S. and Jourdain, B. (2021): Ammonium in Antarctic Aerosol: Marine Biological Activity Versus Long‐Range Transport of Biomass Burning , Geophysical Research Letters, 48 (11), e2021GL092826 . doi: https://www.doi.org/10.1029/2021gl092826


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