Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

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Elsevier, Atmospheric Environment, 16(31), p. 2441-2451

DOI: 10.1016/s1352-2310(96)00178-1

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Source identification during the Great Dun Fell Cloud Experiment 1993

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A characterisation of the sources influencing the site for the final field campaign of the EUROTRAC subproject GCE (Ground-based Cloud Experiment) at Great Dun Fell, Cumbria, Great Britain in April–May 1993 is presented. The sources were characterised mainly by means of aerosol filter and cascade impactor data, single particle analysis, gas data, data on aromatic organic compounds, cloud water ionic composition, measurements of aerosol size distributions and hygroscopic properties and various meteorological information. Receptor models applied on the aerosol filter and impactor data sets separately revealed two major source types being a marine sea spray source and a long-range transported anthropogenic pollution source. The results of the receptor models were largely consistent with the other observations used in the source identification. Periods of considerable anthropogenic pollution as well as almost pure marine air masses were clearly identified during the course of the experiment.