糖心视频

July 3, 2017

Human activities worsen air quality in Dunhuang, a desert basin in China

Dunhuang lies in western China and was a major stop on the ancient Silk Road. According to the statistics of Dunhuang Tourism Bureau, 67,400 tourists visited Dunhuang during May Day Holiday in 2017, 17.22 percent more than last year. Credit: Pixabay
× close
Dunhuang lies in western China and was a major stop on the ancient Silk Road. According to the statistics of Dunhuang Tourism Bureau, 67,400 tourists visited Dunhuang during May Day Holiday in 2017, 17.22 percent more than last year. Credit: Pixabay

Dunhuang is a typical desert basin in western China, with the Qilian mountains to the south, Kumtag desert and Lop-Nur to the west, Beisai mountain to the north, and Sanwei mountain to the east. The famous Taklimakan and Tengger deserts are also located in the west and east of Dunhuang region, respectively. Dunhuang is also a world-famous scenic spot, encompassing Mogao Caves, Crescent Spring and Mingsha Mountain within its territory.

By analyzing aerosol observational data for the year 2012 and comparing it with previous aerosol observations in 1999 and 2004-07, a study by Institute of Atmospheric 糖心视频ics/Chinese Academy of Sciences, concludes that, due to the increasing contribution of human activities, air quality has become worse in the most recent decade over the Dunhuang area, and the main reason is a shift to a mixture of coarse and fine particles, having previously been due to aerosol alone.

The study also reveals significant seasonal characteristics for optical properties. The maximum (AOD) was found to occur in , while the remaining three seasons were similar. Frequent dust weather events made dust aerosols the dominant component during spring. The peak tourism season occurs in summer and fall, and due to the relatively more intense level of human activities during this period, fine urban aerosols were found to be the main mode of control in summer. In fall, these dust influences combined, and urban-dust aerosols occupied the maximum proportion. Numerous fine black carbon and sulfate aerosols were emitted by coal combustion in winter, mixed with relatively frequent dust aerosols, resulting in a mixed mode taking the principal control during this season.

Finally, this work, recently published in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences, found Dunhuang to be seriously affected by dust aerosols transported by high-frequency northwest in spring, fall and winter, leading to the highest AOD values. Urban aerosols accounted for a considerable proportion in northwest (summer) and west (fall) air masses. Regional coal combustion produced a large amount of fine pollution aerosols during winter, and the different air masses exhibited similar diffusion behavior for the regional pollutants.

More information: Yongjing Ma et al, Optical properties and source analysis of aerosols over a desert area in Dunhuang, Northwest china, Advances in Atmospheric Sciences (2017).

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.