Articles | Volume 17, issue 18
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-11655-2017
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-11655-2017
Research article
 | 
28 Sep 2017
Research article |  | 28 Sep 2017

Impacts of large-scale circulation on urban ambient concentrations of gaseous elemental mercury in New York, USA

Huiting Mao, Dolly Hall, Zhuyun Ye, Ying Zhou, Dirk Felton, and Leiming Zhang

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Cited articles

Adler, F. R. and Tanner, C. J.: Urban Ecosystems: Ecological Principles for the Built Environment, 1st Edn., Cambridge University Press, 353 pp., 2013.
Bradbury, J. A., Keim, B. D., and Wake, C. P.: U.S. East Coast Trough Indices at 500 hPa and New England Winter Climate Variability, J. Climate, 15, 3509–3517, 2002.
Brown, R. J. C., Goddard, S. L., Butterfield, D. M., Brown, A. S., Robins, C., Mustoe, C. L., and McGhee, E. A.: Ten years of mercury measurement at urban and industrial air quality monitoring stations in the UK, Atmos. Environ., 109, 1–8, 2015.
Chen, L., Liu, M., Xu, Z., Fan, R., Tao, J., Chen, D., Zhang, D., Xie, D., and Sun, J.: Variation trends and influencing factors of total gaseous mercury in the Pearl River Delta – A highly industrialized region in South China influenced by seasonal monsoons, Atmos. Environ., 77, 757–766, 2013.
Cheng, I., Lu, J., and Song, X.: Studies of potential sources that contributed to atmospheric mercury in Toronto, Canada, Atmos. Environ., 43, 6145–6158, 2009.
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Short summary
Mercury (Hg) is a global pollutant hazardous to human and ecosystem health, and its emission control is imperative. Anthropogenic mercury emissions have been reduced by 78 % in the United States from 1990 to 2014. However, no clearly defined trend was observed in Hg concentrations at urban locations such as the one in this study. This indicates that other factors may have dominated over anthropogenic emission control. The implications of this study could hence be highly policy relevant.
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