Abstract

Abstract. Regional and local sources contributing to gaseous elemental mercury (GEM), gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM), and particle-bound mercury (PBM) at an urban coastal site in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada were investigated using the Concentration-Weighted Trajectory model (CWT) and Conditional Probability Function. From 2010–2011, GEM, GOM, and PBM concentrations were 1.67 ± 1.01 ng m−3, 2.07 ± 3.35 pg m−3, and 2.32 ± 3.09 pg m−3, respectively. Seasonal variability was observed, with statistically higher GEM and PBM concentrations in winter and spring and higher GOM in spring. In the CWT, concentrations are the weighting factors for the trajectory residence time in modeled grid cells, which results in the identification of source areas based on the CWT values in the grid cells. Potential source areas were identified in regions with known industrial Hg sources particularly in the fall season, but also in regions without these sources (e.g. Atlantic Ocean, northern Ontario and Quebec). CWTs for GOM and PBM that were associated with ≥ 5 kg industrial Hg emissions from 2010–2011 were statistically larger than those with zero Hg emissions, despite a lack of strong correlations. A large proportion of elevated CWTs (85–97%) was in regions with zero industrial Hg sources indicating the potential role of non-point sources, natural emissions, and residential-scale combustion. Analysis of wind data suggests that a commercial harbor and vehicular traffic were potential local sources. Evaluating modeled source areas against Hg emissions inventories was not an ideal method for assessing the CWT model accuracy because of insufficient data on Hg emissions at more precise locations.

Highlights

  • Some of the source areas were associated with known industrial sources and fossil fuel power plants, which were typically located in southern Quebec and Ontario, and in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia, and Maryland

  • There were modeled source areas that are in regions with no known industrial Hg sources, such as the Atlantic Ocean and northern parts of Ontario, Quebec, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine

  • Analysis of wind speeds and wind direction found that local marine transportation, shipping ports, and traffic on the Halifax harbor bridges were in the wind directions coinciding with elevated gaseous elemental mercury (GEM), gaseous oxidized mercury (GOM), and particle-bound mercury (PBM) concentrations

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Summary

Objectives

The objective of this study was to identify regional source areas contributing to speciated atmospheric Hg measurements at an urban site in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada by applying the Concentration-Weighted Trajectory (CWT) model

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