Source contributions to airborne particle deposition at the Yungang Grottoes, China

The Buddhist cave temple complex at Yungang in northern China is affected by a rapid accumulation of airborne particles that settle onto the thousands of statues contained within those caves. Experiments have been conducted to identify the most important air pollution sources that contribute to the...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 1995-05, Vol.167 (1-3), p.33-47
Hauptverfasser: Salmon, Lynn G., Christoforou, Christos S., Gerk, Timothy J., Cass, Glen R., Casuccio, Gary S., Cooke, Gary A., Leger, Michael, Olmez, Ilhan
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container_end_page 47
container_issue 1-3
container_start_page 33
container_title The Science of the total environment
container_volume 167
creator Salmon, Lynn G.
Christoforou, Christos S.
Gerk, Timothy J.
Cass, Glen R.
Casuccio, Gary S.
Cooke, Gary A.
Leger, Michael
Olmez, Ilhan
description The Buddhist cave temple complex at Yungang in northern China is affected by a rapid accumulation of airborne particles that settle onto the thousands of statues contained within those caves. Experiments have been conducted to identify the most important air pollution sources that contribute to the dust deposition problem. The spatial distribution of the deposition rate of airborne particles within a 2 km × 2 km area surrounding the grottoes was measured during a 2-day period in April, 1991. Peak particle deposition rates of > 60 μg m−2 s−1 were found at locations within the village of Yungang itself and along the adjacent coal-haul highway. Moving away from the village and coal-haul highway, deposition rates decline to much lower values, indicating that the village and highway are significant sources of airborne particles. A comparison of the mineralogical composition of the dust deposits in the caves with the composition of local soil dust, paved road dust from the coal-haul highway and deteriorated cave ceiling rock material indicates that the dust deposits in the caves are a combination of the above sources, with the paved road dust from the coal-haul highway providing the closest match to the largest quantity of the material deposited in the caves.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/0048-9697(95)04567-K
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ispartof The Science of the total environment, 1995-05, Vol.167 (1-3), p.33-47
issn 0048-9697
1879-1026
language eng
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Airborne particles
Coal-haul highway
Deposition fluxes
Dust deposition
Emission sources
title Source contributions to airborne particle deposition at the Yungang Grottoes, China
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