Atmospheric Environment. Part A. General Topics
Volume 27, Issues 17–18, December 1993, Pages 2739-2749
Trajectory analysis of source regions influencing the south Greenland Ice Sheet during the Dye 3 Gas and Aerosol Sampling Program
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Cited by (38)
Aerosols and their sources at Summit Greenland - First results of continuous size- and time-resolved sampling
2012, Atmospheric EnvironmentCitation Excerpt :The difficulty with this approach is that only unusually large and significant events, such as volcanic eruptions, can be known without monitoring to detect their occurrence. Analysis of events fortuitously detected in short-term measurement campaigns (e.g. Davidson et al., 1993c) has also been useful to recognize transport events and diagnose transport pathways. This history reflects the difficult logistics of sampling in the Arctic, but has generated a reasonable process-level understanding of air–snow interactions and provided a broad outline of the character of Greenland aerosols, their seasonality, and major source areas involved in transport to Greenland.
Mineral particles content in recent snow at Summit (Greenland)
2002, Atmospheric EnvironmentSeasonal variations in the origin of lead in snow at Dye 3, Greenland
1998, Earth and Planetary Science LettersSources of pollution aerosol at Dye 3, Greenland
1997, Atmospheric EnvironmentAir-to-snow mineral transfer - crustal elements in aerosols, fresh snow and snowpits on the Greenland ice sheet
1997, Atmospheric Environment
Copyright © 1993 Published by Elsevier Ltd.