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Modeling the global atmospheric transport and deposition of mercury to the Great Lakes

Authors :
Mark D. Cohen
Roland R. Draxler
Richard S. Artz
Pierrette Blanchard
Mae Sexauer Gustin
Young-Ji Han
Thomas M. Holsen
Daniel A. Jaffe
Paul Kelley
Hang Lei
Christopher P. Loughner
Winston T. Luke
Seth N. Lyman
David Niemi
Jozef M. Pacyna
Martin Pilote
Laurier Poissant
Dominique Ratte
Xinrong Ren
Frits Steenhuisen
Alexandra Steffen
Rob Tordon
Simon J. Wilson
Source :
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
BioOne, 2016.

Abstract

Abstract Mercury contamination in the Great Lakes continues to have important public health and wildlife ecotoxicology impacts, and atmospheric deposition is a significant ongoing loading pathway. The objective of this study was to estimate the amount and source-attribution for atmospheric mercury deposition to each lake, information needed to prioritize amelioration efforts. A new global, Eulerian version of the HYSPLIT-Hg model was used to simulate the 2005 global atmospheric transport and deposition of mercury to the Great Lakes. In addition to the base case, 10 alternative model configurations were used to examine sensitivity to uncertainties in atmospheric mercury chemistry and surface exchange. A novel atmospheric lifetime analysis was used to characterize fate and transport processes within the model. Model-estimated wet deposition and atmospheric concentrations of gaseous elemental mercury (Hg(0)) were generally within ∼10% of measurements in the Great Lakes region. The model overestimated non-Hg(0) concentrations by a factor of 2–3, similar to other modeling studies. Potential reasons for this disagreement include model inaccuracies, differences in atmospheric Hg fractions being compared, and the measurements being biased low. Lake Erie, downwind of significant local/regional emissions sources, was estimated by the model to be the most impacted by direct anthropogenic emissions (58% of the base case total deposition), while Lake Superior, with the fewest upwind local/regional sources, was the least impacted (27%). The U.S. was the largest national contributor, followed by China, contributing 25% and 6%, respectively, on average, for the Great Lakes. The contribution of U.S. direct anthropogenic emissions to total mercury deposition varied between 46% for the base case (with a range of 24–51% over all model configurations) for Lake Erie and 11% (range 6–13%) for Lake Superior. These results illustrate the importance of atmospheric chemistry, as well as emissions strength, speciation, and proximity, to the amount and source-attribution of mercury deposition.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23251026
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5a06bdc90d4e490cbcdee65a1feb6146
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.12952/journal.elementa.000118