Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




BLUE SKY
UH Professor Offers Insight Into Saharan Dust Migration
by Staff Writers
Houston TX (SPX) Sep 10, 2013


To determine the actual impact of the Saharan dust required scientific detective work.

Satellite pictures of Saharan dust clouds have been in the news all summer, but to Shankar Chellam, they have just raised more questions. How much impact did the Saharan dust have on Houston's air? Is it more toxic than our home-grown dust?

Chellam, a professor in the department of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Houston's Cullen College of Engineering, is searching for answers to those and other questions.

Clouds of African dust often migrate across the Atlantic Ocean during summer months, affecting Houston's air quality from mid-June through mid-September. Chellam said it's especially prevalent in late August and early September.

The dust, whipped up by sandstorms in northwest Africa and carried by trade winds across the Atlantic Ocean, takes about 10 days to two weeks to reach the United States and, ultimately, Houston.

Chellam said he collaborates on the project with Joseph Prospero, professor emeritus of marine and atmospheric chemistry at the University of Miami.

Chellam became interested after he noticed "the most curious coincidence" as he was collecting data on industrial air pollution outside plants along the Houston Ship Channel in 2008.

He began the project expecting that the plants would emit a constant amount of pollution, as measured from just beyond their property lines. But he discovered that on some days they emitted relatively little, while emissions were much higher on other days.

"What we quickly realized was that the impact of the refineries varied with time," he said. "We naively had gone into our research expecting that if we took three months of data, we would get an average."

A five-day period in July and August 2008 showed a large variation. That coincided with an influx of Saharan dust, Chellam said.

To determine the actual impact of the Saharan dust required scientific detective work. Chellam and his team determined the "fingerprint" of the African dust, allowing them to differentiate it from other types of pollutants in their samples: industrial dust, vehicle pollutants and smoke from wildfires, among other things.

"There are millions of sources of pollution," he said.

His lab works with African dust collected in Barbados, before it has picked up other contaminants along the route to the United States. Still, he said, the metals in the dust are distinct.

That finding allowed him to determine that a spike in pollution levels in the 2008 readings reflected the arrival of Saharan dust. A paper on those findings has been accepted for publication in in the journal Environmental Science and Technology. In addition to Prospero, his co-authors include Ayse Bozlaker, a post-doctoral researcher working with Chellam, and Matthew Fraser of Arizona State University.

Work by other scientists has linked the dust migration with coral reef stresses and other environmental problems, but the impact on human health is less clear.

Chellam, whose research does not extend into health impact, said he would expect it to affect people with asthma and other respiratory problems. "But clearly more research is needed," he said. "The composition of the dust is not the same" as other industrial and vehicle dust.

"And if the composition is different, the health impact may be different," he said.

.


Related Links
University of Houston
The Air We Breathe at TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








BLUE SKY
Flights over Pacific highest-producers of ozone
Cambridge, Mass. (UPI) Sep 5, 2013
Flights over the Pacific, specifically leaving and entering Australia and New Zealand, create the most ozone, a new study says. Conducted by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the study was published Thursday in IOP Publishing's journal, Environmental Research Letters. The study, which analyzed around 83,000 individual commercial flights, pinpointed a specific area over the P ... read more


BLUE SKY
Almost 20 percent of grain in China lost or wasted from field to fork

Indonesian farmers take legal action against president over haze

Overgrazing turning parts of Mongolian Steppe into desert

Certification of aquaculture critical to sustainable seafood production

BLUE SKY
Growing thin films of germanium

Shining a little light changes metal into semiconductor

Engineers improve electronic devices using molybdenum disulfide

China fire rattles world chip supply chain

BLUE SKY
Raytheon moves forward on DARPA Persistent Close Air Support program

USAF and Boeing Finalize KC-46A Tanker Aircraft Design

Boeing Forecasts China's Fleet to Triple Over Next 20 Years

BAE considers military refueling conversion for commercial jet

BLUE SKY
France's Renault teams up with electric car pioneer

McLaren roars into China luxury auto market

Tough traffic ban frustrates Baghdadis

Hong Kong launches electric bus in drive against pollution

BLUE SKY
Romania workers occupy site of contested gold mine project

Richemont sales growth hit by unfavourable exchange rates

Egypt violence stirs fears of Suez Canal terror

Multinationals to get equal treatment in China: premier

BLUE SKY
Uruguay going slow on pulp mill opposed by Argentinaw.lll

400-year study finds Northeast forests resilient, changing

New technique for measuring tree growth cuts down on research time

Northeastern US forests transformed by human activity over 400 years

BLUE SKY
Using digital SLRs to measure the height of Northern Lights

After a Fire, Before a Flood: NASA's Landsat Directs Restoration to At-Risk Areas

JIB Antennas Will Support Ship ID Capability Being Added to Canadas RADARSAT Constellation Mission

Reflecting on Earth's albedo

BLUE SKY
Researchers figure out how to 'grow' carbon nanotubes with specific atomic structures

Researchers produce nanostructures with potential to advance energy devices

Size Matters as Nanocrystals Go Through Phases

New breakthrough for structural characterization of metal nanoparticles




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement