2.1 Duststorms and associated dustfalls observed in East Asia from January to June 2004

Wednesday, 27 April 2005: 1:30 PM
International Room (Cathedral Hill Hotel)
Y. S. Chung, Atmospheric Environment Observatory/K-CCAR, Chongwon, Choongbook, Korea, Republic of (South); and H. S. Kim, K. H. Park, D. H. Choi, J. Dulam, and T. Gao

A joint monitoring program was carried out on duststorms and associated dustfalls by scientists in China and Mongolia and Korea inclusively from January to June, 2004. Data was obtained using satellites, aircrafts, and ground monitors. Six cases of moderate dustfall occurred in Chongwon, central Korea, invading from northern China and Mongolia. During these periods PM10 values were 208 ~ 559 (mean: 358) µ¶m-3, while PM2.5 values were 35 ~ 70 (mean: 57) µ¶m-3. When anthropogenic air pollutants from the Yellow Sea and China moved in, the mean concentration of PM10 was only 152 µ¶m-3, yet the observed mean value of PM2.5 was high at 98 µ¶m-3. Therefore the duststorms consisted of relatively low concentrations of fine particles, while anthropogenic pollution air masses contained high concentrations of fine particles. During the joint monitoring venture it was noted, contrary to recommended ICAO observation methods, that, each participating country used different duststorm monitoring practices. This emphasizes a need for universal methods for observing duststorms.
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