African dust particles over the western Caribbean – Part I: Impact on air quality over the Yucatán Peninsula
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Published:2021-01-12
Issue:1
Volume:21
Page:239-253
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Ramírez-Romero Carolina, Jaramillo AlejandroORCID, Córdoba María F., Raga Graciela B.ORCID, Miranda Javier, Alvarez-Ospina HarryORCID, Rosas Daniel, Amador Talib, Kim Jong Sung, Yakobi-Hancock Jacqueline, Baumgardner DarrelORCID, Ladino Luis A.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. On a global scale, African dust is known to be one of the major
sources of mineral dust particles, as these particles can be efficiently transported to
different parts of the planet. Several studies have suggested that the
Yucatán Peninsula could be influenced by such particles, especially in July,
associated with the strengthening of the Caribbean low-level jet. Although
these particles have the potential to significantly impact the local air quality, as shown elsewhere (especially with respect to particulate matter, PM), the
arrival and impact of African dust in Mexican territory has not been
quantitatively reported to date. Two short-term field campaigns were conducted to confirm the arrival of
African dust on the Yucatán Peninsula in July 2017 and July 2018 at the
Mérida atmospheric observatory (20.98∘ N, 89.64∘ W). Aerosol particles
were monitored at ground level using different online and off-line
sensors. Several PM2.5 and PM10 peaks were observed during both
sampling periods, with a relative increase in the PM levels ranging between
200 % and 500 % with respect to the normal background conditions. Given that these
peaks were found to be highly correlated with supermicron particles and
chemical elements typically found in mineral dust particles, such as Al, Fe,
Si, and K, they are linked with African dust. This conclusion is supported
by combining back trajectories with vertical profiles from radiosondes,
reanalysis, and satellite images to show that the origin of the air masses
arriving at Mérida was the Saharan Air Layer (SAL). The good agreement found
between the measured PM10 concentrations and the estimated dust mixing
ratio content from MERRA-2 (Version 2 of the Modern-Era Retrospective
analysis for Research and Applications) corroborates the conclusion that the
degradation of the local (and likely regional) air quality in Mérida is a
result of the arrival of African dust.
Funder
Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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