Abstract

This paper documents the atmospheric mercury concentrations above anthropogenically contaminated and naturally enriched sites in central western Nevada. Atmospheric mercury concentrations were measured at five representative regional sites (1.2−7.5 ng/m3) and two anthropogenically contaminated areas (13−866 ng/m3) in the Carson River Superfund Site. The highest regional concentrations were measured at the Steamboat Geothermal area, where mercury mineralization occurs naturally. Concurrent with atmospheric sampling, environmental conditions were monitored to assess their covariance with mercury concentrations. Atmospheric mercury concentrations were influenced by multiple factors with dominance exerted by substrate mercury concentration, site surface characteristics, and local and synoptic scale air masses. A mercury flux of 5−125 (±50%) μg of mercury m-2 h-1 was estimated via modified K-theory for a contaminated location. This flux was scaled up to estimate the contribution of atmospheric mercury from min...

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