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Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere.

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Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere. / Halsall, Crispin J.; Bailey, R.; Stern, G. A. et al.
In: Environmental Pollution, Vol. 102, No. 1, 07.1998, p. 51-62.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Halsall, CJ, Bailey, R, Stern, GA, Barrie, LA, Muir, DCG, Fellin, P, Rosenberg, B, Rovinski, FY, Kononov, EY & Pastukhov, BV 1998, 'Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere.', Environmental Pollution, vol. 102, no. 1, pp. 51-62. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0269-7491(98)00074-8

APA

Halsall, C. J., Bailey, R., Stern, G. A., Barrie, L. A., Muir, D. C. G., Fellin, P., Rosenberg, B., Rovinski, F. Y., Kononov, E. Y., & Pastukhov, B. V. (1998). Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere. Environmental Pollution, 102(1), 51-62. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0269-7491(98)00074-8

Vancouver

Halsall CJ, Bailey R, Stern GA, Barrie LA, Muir DCG, Fellin P et al. Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere. Environmental Pollution. 1998 Jul;102(1):51-62. doi: 10.1016/S0269-7491(98)00074-8

Author

Halsall, Crispin J. ; Bailey, R. ; Stern, G. A. et al. / Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere. In: Environmental Pollution. 1998 ; Vol. 102, No. 1. pp. 51-62.

Bibtex

@article{c29a699ef8854f30889a7a666667120a,
title = "Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere.",
abstract = "Atmospheric measurements of organohalogen pesticides (OCs) have been made in both the Canadian and Russian Arctic. A full quality-controlled database of weekly samples is now available for the years 1992–94. Hexachlorobenzene (HCB) and the hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs) were the most predominant compounds in the atmosphere, followed by the chlordanes and endosulfan. Evidence of a seasonality in air concentrations was apparent particularly for the pesticide metabolites, compounds such as oxychlordane, heptachlor epoxide and dieldrin showing a significant positive correlation with temperature (p<0.01). An exception to this was p, p′-DDE which showed elevated levels during the winter. Large spatial differences in mean annual concentrations of most OCs were not evident; however, spatial differences were apparent in α/γ-HCH ratios between the high Arctic site of Alert and the Yukon site of Tagish. The influence of both the European sector and the regional effect of the Arctic Ocean on the high Arctic probably accounted for this difference. A decline in the trans-chlordane/cis-chlordane ratio compared to studies during the 1980s may indicate a more weathered source of chlordane to be present in the Arctic by the mid-1990s. Slopes generated from plots of partial pressure (ln P) versus 1/T for selected compounds were considerably less steep than those derived from temperate studies. It is inferred here that long-range transport has a large influence on contaminant levels in the arctic atmosphere.",
keywords = "Artic atmosphere, Pesticides, POPs, Long-range transport",
author = "Halsall, {Crispin J.} and R. Bailey and Stern, {G. A.} and Barrie, {L. A.} and Muir, {D. C. G.} and P. Fellin and B. Rosenberg and Rovinski, {F. Y.} and Kononov, {E. Y.} and Pastukhov, {B. V.}",
year = "1998",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1016/S0269-7491(98)00074-8",
language = "English",
volume = "102",
pages = "51--62",
journal = "Environmental Pollution",
issn = "0269-7491",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Multi-year observations of organohalogen pesticides in the arctic atmosphere.

AU - Halsall, Crispin J.

AU - Bailey, R.

AU - Stern, G. A.

AU - Barrie, L. A.

AU - Muir, D. C. G.

AU - Fellin, P.

AU - Rosenberg, B.

AU - Rovinski, F. Y.

AU - Kononov, E. Y.

AU - Pastukhov, B. V.

PY - 1998/7

Y1 - 1998/7

N2 - Atmospheric measurements of organohalogen pesticides (OCs) have been made in both the Canadian and Russian Arctic. A full quality-controlled database of weekly samples is now available for the years 1992–94. Hexachlorobenzene (HCB) and the hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs) were the most predominant compounds in the atmosphere, followed by the chlordanes and endosulfan. Evidence of a seasonality in air concentrations was apparent particularly for the pesticide metabolites, compounds such as oxychlordane, heptachlor epoxide and dieldrin showing a significant positive correlation with temperature (p<0.01). An exception to this was p, p′-DDE which showed elevated levels during the winter. Large spatial differences in mean annual concentrations of most OCs were not evident; however, spatial differences were apparent in α/γ-HCH ratios between the high Arctic site of Alert and the Yukon site of Tagish. The influence of both the European sector and the regional effect of the Arctic Ocean on the high Arctic probably accounted for this difference. A decline in the trans-chlordane/cis-chlordane ratio compared to studies during the 1980s may indicate a more weathered source of chlordane to be present in the Arctic by the mid-1990s. Slopes generated from plots of partial pressure (ln P) versus 1/T for selected compounds were considerably less steep than those derived from temperate studies. It is inferred here that long-range transport has a large influence on contaminant levels in the arctic atmosphere.

AB - Atmospheric measurements of organohalogen pesticides (OCs) have been made in both the Canadian and Russian Arctic. A full quality-controlled database of weekly samples is now available for the years 1992–94. Hexachlorobenzene (HCB) and the hexachlorocyclohexanes (HCHs) were the most predominant compounds in the atmosphere, followed by the chlordanes and endosulfan. Evidence of a seasonality in air concentrations was apparent particularly for the pesticide metabolites, compounds such as oxychlordane, heptachlor epoxide and dieldrin showing a significant positive correlation with temperature (p<0.01). An exception to this was p, p′-DDE which showed elevated levels during the winter. Large spatial differences in mean annual concentrations of most OCs were not evident; however, spatial differences were apparent in α/γ-HCH ratios between the high Arctic site of Alert and the Yukon site of Tagish. The influence of both the European sector and the regional effect of the Arctic Ocean on the high Arctic probably accounted for this difference. A decline in the trans-chlordane/cis-chlordane ratio compared to studies during the 1980s may indicate a more weathered source of chlordane to be present in the Arctic by the mid-1990s. Slopes generated from plots of partial pressure (ln P) versus 1/T for selected compounds were considerably less steep than those derived from temperate studies. It is inferred here that long-range transport has a large influence on contaminant levels in the arctic atmosphere.

KW - Artic atmosphere

KW - Pesticides

KW - POPs

KW - Long-range transport

U2 - 10.1016/S0269-7491(98)00074-8

DO - 10.1016/S0269-7491(98)00074-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 102

SP - 51

EP - 62

JO - Environmental Pollution

JF - Environmental Pollution

SN - 0269-7491

IS - 1

ER -