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Thompson et al. 1996
Thompson, A.M., Pickering, K.E., McNamara, D.P., Schoeberl, M.R., Hudson, R.D., Kim, J.H., Browell, E.V., Kirchhoff, V.W.J.H. and Nganga, D. (1996). Where did tropospheric ozone over southern Africa and the tropical Atlantic come from in October 1992? Insights from TOMS, GTE TRACE A, and SAFARI 1992. Journal of Geophysical Research 101: doi: 10.1029/96JD01463. issn: 0148-0227.

The seasonal tropospheric ozone maximum in the tropical South Atlantic, first recognized from satellite observations <Fishman et al., 1986, 1991>, gave rise to the IGAC/STARE/SAFARI 1992/TRACE A campaigns (International Global Atmospheric Chemistry/South Tropical Atlantic Regional Experiment/Southern African Fire Atmospheric Research Initiative/Transport and Atmospheric Chemistry Near the Equator-Atlantic) in September and October 1992. Along with a new TOMS-based method for deriving tropospheric column ozone, we used the TRACE A/SAFARI 1992 data set to put together a regional picture of the O3 distribution during this period. Sondes and aircraft profiling showed a troposphere with layers of high O3 (≥90 ppbv) all the way to the tropopause. These features extend in a band from 0¿ to 25 ¿S, over the SE Indian Ocean, Africa, the Atlantic, and eastern South America. A combination of trajectory and photochemical modeling shows a strong connection between regions of high ozone and concentrated biomass burning, the latter identified using satellite-derived fire counts <Justice et al., this issue>. Back trajectories from a high-O3 tropical Atlantic region and forward trajectories from fire-rich and convectively active areas show that the Atlantic and southern Africa are supplied with O3 and O3-forming trace gases by midlevel easterlies and/or recirculating air from Africa, with lesser contributions from South American burning and urban pollution. Limited sampling in the mixed layer over Namibia shows possible biogenic sources of NO. High-level westerlies from Brazil (following deep convective transport of ozone precursors to the upper troposphere) dominate the upper tropospheric O3 budget over Natal, Ascension, and Okaukuejo (Namibia), although most enhanced O3 (75% or more) equatorward of 10 ¿S was from Africa. Deep convection may be responsible for the timing of the seasonal tropospheric O3 maximum: Natal and Ascension show a 1- to 2-month lag relative to the period of maximum burning Baldy et al., this issue; Olson et al., this issue>. Photochemical model calculations constrained with TRACE A and SAFARI airborne observations of O3 and O3 precursors (NOx, CO, hydrocarbons)show robust ozone formation (up to 15 ppbv O3/d or several DU/d) in a widespread, persistent, and well-mixed layer to 4 km. Slower but still positive net O3 formation took place throughout the tropical upper troposphere Pickering et al., this issue (a); Jacob et al., this issue>. Thus whether it is faster rates of O3 formation in source regions with higher turnover rates or slower O3 production in long-lived stable layers ubiquitous in the TRACE A region, 10--30 DU tropospheric O3 above a ~25-DU background can be accounted for. In summary, the O3 maximum studied in October 1992 was caused by a coincidence of abundant O3 precursors from biomass fires, a long residence time of stable air parcels over the eastern Atlantic and southern Africa, and deep convective transport of biomass burning products, with additional NO from lightning and occasionally biogenic sources. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1996

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Keywords
Atmospheric Composition and Structure, General or miscellaneous
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
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American Geophysical Union
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