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Dispersion of Smoke Plumes over South America

Authors :
Mark R. Jury
América R. Gaviria Pabón
Source :
Earth Interactions. 25:1-14
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2021.

Abstract

Satellite and reanalysis products are used to study the atmospheric environment, aerosols, and trace gases in smoke plumes over South America in the period 2000–18. Climatic conditions and fire density maps provide context to link biomass burning across the southern Amazon region (5°–15°S, 50°–70°W) to thick near-surface plumes of trace gases and fine aerosols. Intraseasonal weather patterns that underpin greater fire emissions in the dry season (July–October) are exacerbated by high pressure over a cool eastern Pacific Ocean, for example in September 2007. Smoke-plume dispersion simulated with HYSPLIT reveals a slowing of westward transport between sources in eastern Brazil and the Andes Mountains. During cases of thick smoke plumes over southern Amazon, an upper ridge and sinking motions confine trace gases and fine aerosols below 4 km. Long-term warming, which tends to coincide with the zone of biomass burning, is +0.03°C yr−1 in the air and +0.1°C yr−1 at the land surface. Our study suggests that weather conditions promoting fire emissions also tend to limit dispersion.

Details

ISSN :
10873562
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Earth Interactions
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c0b482d806564e8f772ea891f3321125
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1175/ei-d-20-0004.1