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Wolff et al. 1983
Wolff, G.T., Kelly, N.A., Ferman, M.A. and Morrissey, M.L. (1983). Rural measurements of the chemical composition of airborne particles in the Eastern United States. Journal of Geophysical Research 88: doi: 10.1029/JC080i015p10769. issn: 0148-0227.

Quantitative measurements of particulate composition was made at three rural sites: in central South Dakota, on the Louisiana Gulf Coastal, and in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. The first two sites were selected to determine background concentrations in continental polar and maritime tropical air masses, respectively, which affect the eastern United State during the summer. The Virginia site was selected as a receptor site, downwind of the midwestern source area. The South Dakota data established the background concentrations. These concentrations were similar to the levels in Louisiana when air parcels arrived from the Gulf of Mexico, without recently passing over the United States. Levels of fine particles (diameters less than 2.5 μm) were highest in Virginia and were due chiefly to sulfate. Using trajectory and statistical analyses, it is shown that the residence time of an air parcel over the midwestern source area was the most important variable in determining the sulface levels in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

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Journal of Geophysical Research
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