Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica

Atmospheric aerosol samples were collected over the Southern Ocean (SO) and coastal East Antarctica (CEA) during the austral summer of 2010/11. Samples were analysed for trace elements, including Na, Mg, K, Al, Fe, Mn, Ni, Cd and Se, by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The mean...

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Main Authors: Guojie Xu, Yuan Gao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Norwegian Polar Institute 2014-11-01
Series:Polar Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/download/23973/pdf_1
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spelling doaj-244ef9a58b4f4d48a0b83241dd6d2f282020-11-24T21:43:13Zeng Norwegian Polar InstitutePolar Research1751-83692014-11-0133011610.3402/polar.v33.2397323973Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East AntarcticaGuojie Xu0Yuan Gao1Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ 07102, USADepartment of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University, Newark, NJ 07102, USAAtmospheric aerosol samples were collected over the Southern Ocean (SO) and coastal East Antarctica (CEA) during the austral summer of 2010/11. Samples were analysed for trace elements, including Na, Mg, K, Al, Fe, Mn, Ni, Cd and Se, by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The mean atmospheric concentrations over the SO were 1100 ng m−3 for Na, 190 ng m−3 for Mg, 150 ng m−3 for Al, 14 ng m−3 for Fe, 0.46 ng m−3 for Mn and 0.25 ng m−3 for Se. Over CEA, the mean concentrations were 990 ng m−3 for Na, 180 ng m−3 for Mg, 190 ng m−3 for Al, 26 ng m−3 for Fe, 0.70 ng m−3 for Mn and 0.29 ng m−3 for Se. Particle size distributions, enrichment factors (EFs) and correlation analysis indicate that Na, Mg and K mainly came from the marine source, while Al, Fe and Mn were mainly from the crustal source, which also contributed to Mg and K over CEA. High EFs were associated with Ni, Cd and Se, suggesting likely contributions from mixed sources from the Antarctic continent, long-range transport, marine biogenic emissions and anthropogenic emissions. Sea-salt elements (Na, Mg, K) were mainly accumulated in the coarse mode, and crustal elements (Al, Fe, Mn) presented a bimodal size distribution pattern. Bioactive elements (Fe, Ni, Cd) were enriched in the fine mode, especially with samples collected over the SO, possibly affecting biogeochemical cycles in this oceanic region.http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/download/23973/pdf_1Southern Oceancoastal East Antarcticatrace elementssize distributionsources
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guojie Xu
Yuan Gao
spellingShingle Guojie Xu
Yuan Gao
Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica
Polar Research
Southern Ocean
coastal East Antarctica
trace elements
size distribution
sources
author_facet Guojie Xu
Yuan Gao
author_sort Guojie Xu
title Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica
title_short Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica
title_full Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica
title_fullStr Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the Southern Ocean and coastal East Antarctica
title_sort atmospheric trace elements in aerosols observed over the southern ocean and coastal east antarctica
publisher Norwegian Polar Institute
series Polar Research
issn 1751-8369
publishDate 2014-11-01
description Atmospheric aerosol samples were collected over the Southern Ocean (SO) and coastal East Antarctica (CEA) during the austral summer of 2010/11. Samples were analysed for trace elements, including Na, Mg, K, Al, Fe, Mn, Ni, Cd and Se, by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The mean atmospheric concentrations over the SO were 1100 ng m−3 for Na, 190 ng m−3 for Mg, 150 ng m−3 for Al, 14 ng m−3 for Fe, 0.46 ng m−3 for Mn and 0.25 ng m−3 for Se. Over CEA, the mean concentrations were 990 ng m−3 for Na, 180 ng m−3 for Mg, 190 ng m−3 for Al, 26 ng m−3 for Fe, 0.70 ng m−3 for Mn and 0.29 ng m−3 for Se. Particle size distributions, enrichment factors (EFs) and correlation analysis indicate that Na, Mg and K mainly came from the marine source, while Al, Fe and Mn were mainly from the crustal source, which also contributed to Mg and K over CEA. High EFs were associated with Ni, Cd and Se, suggesting likely contributions from mixed sources from the Antarctic continent, long-range transport, marine biogenic emissions and anthropogenic emissions. Sea-salt elements (Na, Mg, K) were mainly accumulated in the coarse mode, and crustal elements (Al, Fe, Mn) presented a bimodal size distribution pattern. Bioactive elements (Fe, Ni, Cd) were enriched in the fine mode, especially with samples collected over the SO, possibly affecting biogeochemical cycles in this oceanic region.
topic Southern Ocean
coastal East Antarctica
trace elements
size distribution
sources
url http://www.polarresearch.net/index.php/polar/article/download/23973/pdf_1
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