Abstract

The sources of PM10 in the Tahunanui airshed of Nelson, New Zealand were investigated using positive matrix factorization (PMF) on elemental data obtained from filters collected from September 2008-September 2009. Also, the source(s) of peak, non-winter PM10 concentrations that exceeded the National Environmental Standard for PM10 were investigated using PM10 and meteorological data from 2007–2012 and the PMF results. Seven PM10 sources were identified: biomass burning, motor vehicles, secondary sulfate, marine aerosol, crustal matter, protective coating activities and fertilizer. Overall, biomass burning was the dominant source contributor (35% of PM10). Analyses of PM10 concentration dependences on meteorological variables showed that peak, non-winter PM10 concentrations that occurred under moderate-to-high wind speeds from the southwest were the result of vehicular movements on unsealed roads in an industrial area. From this information, it is possible for Nelson City Council, who manages air quality at Tahunanui, to formulate mitigation strategies to reduce the impact of biomass burning and industrial vehicles on local air quality.

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