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Snowpack chemistry can deplete ozone.


After the long, dark polar winter, the sun returns to shine on the high-latitude snows. Simultaneously, the concentration of ozone at low altitudes begins to drop. In research conducted on the Arctic snowpack snow·pack  
n.
An area of naturally formed, packed snow that usually melts during the warmer months.



snowpack  

1.
 last spring, scientists used sunlamps to illuminate some of the chemistry of this phenomenon.

The experiment showed that pollutants trapped in Arctic snow, when energized by sunlight, can escape the snowpack and deplete ozone in the lower atmosphere, says Jan W. Bottenheim, a senior scientist at the Meteorological Service of Canada The Meteorological Service of Canada (MSC) is a division of Environment Canada, which primarily provides public meteorological information and weather forecasts and warnings of severe weather and other environmental hazards.  in Toronto, Ontario.

The artificial light stimulated production of nitrous acid and organic chemicals such as formaldehyde in the upper layers of the snowpack. These chemicals, as well as snowbound snow·bound  
adj.
Confined in one place by heavy snow.


snowbound
Adjective

shut in or blocked off by snow

Adj. 1.
 chlorine and bromine bromine (brō`mēn, –mĭn) [Gr.,=stench], volatile, liquid chemical element; symbol Br; at. no. 35; at. wt. 79.904; m.p. –7.2°C;; b.p. 58.78°C;; sp. gr. of liquid 3.12 at 20°C;; density of vapor 7.  derived from sea salt, then took part in reactions that consumed ozone within the snow, adds Bottenheim.

Chlorine and bromine driven from the snow by the spring sun also remove industrial mercury emissions from the atmosphere, says Leonard A. Barrie, an atmospheric scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is one of nine United States Department of Energy (DOE) multiprogram national laboratories. The laboratory
PNNL is located in Richland, Washington, and operates a marine research facility in Sequim, Washington.
 in Richland, Wash. Measurements taken last spring by aircraft flying over the Canadian Arctic showed there was almost no mercury vapor in the lowest 1,500 feet of altitude.

This news isn't as good as it seems because the reactions are depositing the mercury on the snowpack. From there, the toxin wends Wends or Sorbs, Slavic people (numbering about 60,000) of Brandenburg and Saxony, E Germany, in Lusatia. They speak Lusatian (also known as Sorbic or Wendish), a West Slavic language with two main dialects: Upper Lusatian, nearer to Czech, and  its way into the food chain. About half the samples of some types of fish caught in Canadian lakes exceed that nation's recommended levels of mercury, Barrie points out. Much of the contamination probably stems from the 50 tons of mercury removed annually from the atmosphere by the sunlight driven reactions.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:S.P.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 6, 2001
Words:269
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