Jie Huang , Yi Zhang , Shichang Kang , Wenjun Tang , Jinling Liu , Kaiyun Liu , Long Wang , Junming Guo , Lekhendra Tripathee , Wanglin Zhao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Situated in the south edge of the Tibetan Plateau, the Himalayas is expected to receive direct anthropogenic Hg perturbations from South Asia, yet the measurements of atmospheric Hg deposition in the Himalayan region remain scarce. Here we report wet Hg deposition measured in the Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon of the Eastern Himalayas, which is the deepest and longest canyon on earth. The precipitation Hg concentration (56.3 ng L−1) and wet Hg deposition flux (84.7 μg m−2 yr−1) from the Motuo station were observed among the highest ever reported for the Tibetan Plateau. Together with analysis of principal component suggesting Hg was mainly clustered with anthropogenic ions and backward trajectories indicating 88.8% of air masses came from South Asia, our results show that transboudary pollution influences from South Asia could be largely responsible for the unexpectedly high levels of wet Hg deposition. Moreover, the wet Hg flux measurements (84.7 μg m−2 yr−1) are found an order of magnitude (∼13 times) higher than the GEOS-Chem estimates (6.8 μg m−2 yr−1), most likely due to the underestimation of transboundary Hg pollution influence by this model. Our study has important implications for better understanding Hg dynamics and verifying atmospheric Hg models in the Tibetan Plateau and Himalayas region.
期刊介绍:
Applied Geochemistry is an international journal devoted to publication of original research papers, rapid research communications and selected review papers in geochemistry and urban geochemistry which have some practical application to an aspect of human endeavour, such as the preservation of the environment, health, waste disposal and the search for resources. Papers on applications of inorganic, organic and isotope geochemistry and geochemical processes are therefore welcome provided they meet the main criterion. Spatial and temporal monitoring case studies are only of interest to our international readership if they present new ideas of broad application.
Topics covered include: (1) Environmental geochemistry (including natural and anthropogenic aspects, and protection and remediation strategies); (2) Hydrogeochemistry (surface and groundwater); (3) Medical (urban) geochemistry; (4) The search for energy resources (in particular unconventional oil and gas or emerging metal resources); (5) Energy exploitation (in particular geothermal energy and CCS); (6) Upgrading of energy and mineral resources where there is a direct geochemical application; and (7) Waste disposal, including nuclear waste disposal.