Abstract

Concentrations of sulfate and trace elements measured in high-volume air samples collected at sites in New York State during the summers of 1981, 1982 and 1983 are reported. The sites include Mayville in the westernmost corner of the state, West Haverstraw just north of the metropolitan New York area, and Whiteface Mountain in the Adirondacks. The elemental compositions of the aerosols at these sites are compared. The composition of regional aerosols is investigated using backward-in-time air trajectories to classify samples from Mayville and West Haverstraw into six regions: I, southern Ontario; II, Great Lakes; III, Ohio River Valley; IV, central Pennsylvania; V, western New York; and VI, East Coast urban. Region VI was characterized by high concentrations of V and Sb and relatively low concentrations of the other elements and sulfate. Region III had the highest concentrations of sulfate (28 μg m −3) and Se (5 ng m −3); both were around 7.5 times higher than for region VI. Crustal elements and bromine were comparable for all regions varying by a factor of two or less. Elemental ratios were explored as tracers for the various regions and the data are also used to test some of the basic assumptions in a proposed multi-element tracer system.

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