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Some measurements of the pH and chemistry of precipitation at Davis and Lake Tahoe,California
Authors:Robert L. Leonard  Charles R. Goldman  Gene E. Likens
Affiliation:1. Division of Environmental Studies, and Institute of Ecology, University of California, 95616, Davis, CA, USA
2. Section of Ecology and Systematics, Cornell University, 14853, Ithaca, NY, USA
Abstract:Precipitation samples were collected at Davis and Lake Tahoe, California, in 1972–73 and 1977–78 and analyzed for pH and major cations and anions. Rain and snow in this region of northern California are derived primarily from winter cyclonic storms which move easterly from the Pacific Ocean over Davis and then Lake Tahoe. Precipitation at both sites was found to be more acid than water in equilibrium with atmospheric CO2. Acidity at Lake Tahoe apparently increased over the 5-yr period of the study. Sulfate was the dominant acid anion in 1972–73 (not measured in 1977–78). A major source of sulfate in precipitation was probably industry in the San Francisco Bay Area, upwind of the study sites. Automobile exhaust emissions throughout the region, which contains three major interstate highways and several large urban centers, contribute both sulfate and nitrate precursors to the atmosphere. As in the Eastern United States, these strong acid anions are influencing precipitation chemistry in northern California, including the Sierra Nevada mountains.
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