Authors
Ilias G Kavouras, Vicken Etyemezian, David W DuBois, Jin Xu, Marc Pitchford
Publication date
2009/1/27
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Volume
114
Issue
D2
Description
Aerosol data from the Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) network, air mass backward trajectories, land use maps, soil characteristics maps, diagnostic ratios of elemental composition, and multivariate linear regression were utilized as part of a semiquantitative analysis. The purpose of the analysis was to determine the types of dust‐causing events that contribute to low visibility at a given site when the sum of extinction from coarse mass (CM) and fine soil (FS) was larger than any other aerosol component and the reconstructed aerosol extinction coefficient was among the 20% highest (calculated on a calendar year basis) for that site. For these “worst dust days,” the above tools were used to ascribe the cause of low visibility to one of the following types of events: (1) transcontinental transport of dust originating from Asia; (2) windblown dust events from sources located nearby the …
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