Abstract
Abstract. The characteristics of urban dust aerosols and the contributions
of their natural and anthropogenic sources are of scientific interest as well
as being of substantial sociopolitical and economic concern. Here we present
a comprehensive study of dust flux, magnetic parameters, magnetic
particulate morphology, and elemental compositions of atmospheric dustfall
originating from natural dust sources in East Asia and local anthropogenic
sources in Xi'an, China. The results reveal a significant inverse
relationship between seasonal variations of dust flux and magnetic
susceptibility (χ). By comparing dust flux and χ records, the
relative contributions of dust from local anthropogenic sources are
estimated. Analyses using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) combined with
energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) indicate that magnetic particulate from
different sources has distinct morphological and elemental characteristics.
Detrital magnetic particles originating from natural sources are
characterized by relatively smooth surfaces with Fe and O as the major
elements and a minor contribution from Ti. The anthropogenic particles have
angular, spherical, aggregate, and porous shapes with distinctive
contributions from marker elements, including S, Cr, Cu, Zn, Ni, Mn, and Ca.
Our results demonstrate that this multidisciplinary approach is effective in
distinguishing dust particles derived from distant natural sources and local
anthropogenic sources and for the quantitative assessment of contributions from
the two end-members.
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