Publication | Open Access
Mercury in smoke from biomass fires
141
Citations
13
References
2001
Year
EngineeringAir QualityGreen VegetationOrganic GeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryMercury BiogeochemistryPublic HealthChemical EmissionBiogeochemistryEnvironmental PollutionBiomass FiresTrace MetalEcotoxicologyMercury ChemistryBiomass BurningEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental ToxicologyAir PollutionAtmospheric Mercury Budget
Litter and green vegetation were collected in 7 locations in the contiguous United States, analyzed for mercury, and burned under controlled conditions at the US Forest Service Fire Science laboratory in Missoula, MT. Among fuels, leaf and 3needle litter contained the highest concentration (up to 71ng/g on dry weight) of mercury. The combustion of litter and green vegetation resulted in essentially complete release of mercury stored in the fuel. Mercury is emitted primarily as elemental mercury, >95% for most burns, with particulate mercury (TPM) accounting for the remainder. From the laboratory experiments we project that mercury emitted from temperate/boreal forest fires and from all biomass burning is an important source components for the atmospheric mercury budget.
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