210 Pb and 137 Cs in air and soils measure the rate and vertical profile of aerosol scavenging
1986; American Geophysical Union; Volume: 91; Issue: D13 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1029/jd091id13p14355
ISSN2156-2202
AutoresW. C. Graustein, Karl K. Turekian,
Tópico(s)Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
ResumoWe have determined the deposition rates of 210 Pb and 137 Cs from the atmosphere to the landscape of the eastern and mid‐western United States by measuring their inventories in core samples of undisturbed soils. The mean inventories in lowland sites are 27.7 dpm cm −2 for 210 Pb and 21.8 dpm cm −2 for 137 Cs as of January 1984. The mean annual concentration of 210 Pb in surface air at the 9 sites of the SURE network decreases smoothly from about 0.060 dpm m −3 near the Mississippi River to about 0.030 near the Atlantic coast. The ratio of deposition rate to surface air concentration is 0.62 ± 0.03 cm s −1 for 210 Pb and 1.36 ± 0.08 cm s −1 for 137 Cs. Using the activity vs. altitude profiles of Moore, et al. [1973], for 210 Pb and the fission product nuclide, 90 Sr, we calculate tropospheric aerosol mean residence times for 210 Pb and 137 Cs, of 4.8 and 5.5 days, respectively. This near equality precludes a rapid decrease of the aerosol scavenging rate constant in the mid‐troposphere. The 137 Cs/ 210 Pb ratios in soils from elevations above 1000 m in the Appalachian Mountains are lower than those in adjacent lowland soils, indicating the preferential removal of aerosols from the lower layer of the troposphere, presumably by cloud droplet impaction or by seeder‐feeder clouds.
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