Abstract

Abstract. Black carbon (BC), water-insoluble organic carbon (OC), and mineral dust are important particles in snow and ice which significantly reduce albedo and accelerate melting. Surface snow and ice samples were collected from the Karakoram–Himalayan region of northern Pakistan during 2015 and 2016 in summer (six glaciers), autumn (two glaciers), and winter (six mountain valleys). The average BC concentration overall was 2130 ± 1560 ng g−1 in summer samples, 2883 ± 3439 ng g−1 in autumn samples, and 992 ± 883 ng g−1 in winter samples. The average water-insoluble OC concentration overall was 1839 ± 1108 ng g−1 in summer samples, 1423 ± 208 ng g−1 in autumn samples, and 1342 ± 672 ng g−1 in winter samples. The overall concentration of BC, OC, and dust in aged snow samples collected during the summer campaign was higher than the concentration in ice samples. The values are relatively high compared to reports by others for the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau. This is probably the result of taking more representative samples at lower elevation where deposition is higher and the effects of ageing and enrichment are more marked. A reduction in snow albedo of 0.1–8.3 % for fresh snow and 0.9–32.5 % for aged snow was calculated for selected solar zenith angles during daytime using the Snow, Ice, and Aerosol Radiation (SNICAR) model. The daily mean albedo was reduced by 0.07–12.0 %. The calculated radiative forcing ranged from 0.16 to 43.45 W m−2 depending on snow type, solar zenith angle, and location. The potential source regions of the deposited pollutants were identified using spatial variance in wind vector maps, emission inventories coupled with backward air trajectories, and simple region-tagged chemical transport modeling. Central, south, and west Asia were the major sources of pollutants during the sampling months, with only a small contribution from east Asia. Analysis based on the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF-STEM) chemical transport model identified a significant contribution (more than 70 %) from south Asia at selected sites. Research into the presence and effect of pollutants in the glaciated areas of Pakistan is economically significant because the surface water resources in the country mainly depend on the rivers (the Indus and its tributaries) that flow from this glaciated area.

Highlights

  • Carbon is an essential component of atmospheric aerosols, where it appears in the form of black carbon (BC, known as elemental carbon, EC), and organic carbon (OC)

  • The lowest Black carbon (BC) (82 ng g−1) and OC (128 ng g−1) concentrations were observed in summer samples collected from the Gulkin and Sachin glaciers, respectively

  • The average concentration of BC in surface samples from the Sachin glacier was higher in autumn than in summer; the BC values in summer snow samples collected from the Sachin and Gulkin glaciers were much higher than those in ice

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Summary

Introduction

Carbon is an essential component of atmospheric aerosols, where it appears in the form of black carbon (BC, known as elemental carbon, EC), and organic carbon (OC). C. Gul et al.: Impacts of light-absorbing particles in western Himalayan snow surfaces, BC particles significantly reduce the snow albedo (hemispheric reflectance) in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum, cause snow albedo feedback (Doherty et al, 2013), enhance solar radiation absorption (Warren and Wiscombe, 1980), and accelerate snow melting (Hansen and Nazarenko, 2004). The exact amount of albedo reduction depends on the refractive index, grain size, solar zenith angle (SZA), snow density, dust particle size and concentration, particle morphology, surface roughness, snow depth, liquid water content, snow shape, and topography (Warren and Wiscombe, 1985). Studies conducted in Greenland showed that at visible wavelengths, 10 ng g−1 coarse-grained BC particles in aged snow and 40 ng g−1 BC particles in new snow can reduce snow albedo by around 1 to 3 % (Warren and Wiscombe, 1985)

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