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Related: About this forumBeware the Fog
In horror movies, fog often provides creepy atmospherics, hiding threats from hideous creatures, bandits, ax murderers, and the like. Now, a new study suggests that fog can harbor real-life horrors. Researchers have found that coastal mists may carry toxic mercury that can harm ecosystems and human health.Mercury pours into the atmosphere from coal-fired power plants and various industrial processes, including some used in refining ores and paper manufacturing. It's a neurotoxin that isn't easily excreted by organisms that ingest it, so it becomes increasingly concentrated in animals at higher levels of a food chain. A well-absorbed form is monomethyl mercury, a positively charged ion that readily binds with proteins and can be transported throughout the body, even across the blood-brain barrier into the brain and through the placenta into a developing fetus. Monomethyl mercury can impair neurological development in fetuses and young children, reducing memory, attention, and language and motor skills. In adults, exposure can impair peripheral vision, trigger a "pins and needles" feeling in the hands and feet, and lead to muscle weakness and a lack of coordination.
Most scientists presumed mercury deposited from the atmosphere came either from raindrops that had absorbed the element from the air or via "dry deposition," in which the vaporized atoms stick to or chemically react with an exposed surface, says Peter Weiss-Penzias, an atmospheric chemist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Now, field experiments conducted by Weiss-Penzias and his colleagues have identified another atmospheric source of mercury that's likely to be substantial in some areas, especially along some coasts.
At four locations in and around Monterey Bay, California, the researchers, using equipment that slurps up large quantities of air and retains any suspended particles, collected large volumes of fog droplets from June through August 2011. In the 25 samples they analyzed, concentrations of all forms of mercury averaged 10.7 nanograms per liter, and levels of monomethyl mercury averaged 3.4 nanograms per liter, they reported last month in Geophysical Research Letters. The latter concentration, the first such measurement ever reported from fog water, "is about five times the highest concentration ever seen in rainwater," Weiss-Penzias notes. Using data from previous studies, including those of other teams, the researchers estimated that between 61% and 99% of the monomethyl mercury deposited in coastal ecosystems around Monterey Bay over the course of a year comes from fog.
More: http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2012/03/beware-the-fog.html
Paper (sub): http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2012/2011GL050324.shtml
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Beware the Fog (Original Post)
Dead_Parrot
Mar 2012
OP
xchrom
(108,903 posts)1. Du rec. Nt
Warpy
(111,383 posts)2. I think I've seen fog here in NM exactly twice
which means once a decade. I used to miss it. I don't any longer.
It makes sense that fog would help suspend mercury particles from coal fired power plants. Those plants polluting Monterey Bay are likely in China.
Dead_Parrot
(14,478 posts)3. One of those "why didn't I think of that?" moments. nt