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UNPRECEDENTED FIRE SEASON IN SOUTHERN
AFRICA AIDS AIR QUALITY, CLIMATE CHANGE
RESEARCH -- November 28, 2000
The fires that raged across southern Africa
this August and September produced a thick
"river of smoke" that observers compared
with the aftermath of the Kuwaiti oil fires
in 1991. NASA-supported studies currently
underway on the event will contribute to
improved air pollution policies in the region
and a better understanding of its impact
on climate change.
"Every
year African biomass burning greatly exceeds
the scale of the fires seen this year in
the western United States," says Robert
Swap of the University of Virginia, one
of the organizers of the Southern African
Regional Science Initiative (SAFARI 2000)
field campaign. "But the southern African
fire season we just observed may turn out
to be an extreme one even by African standards.
It was amazing how quickly this region went
up in flames."
The intensive SAFARI 2000 six-week field
campaign was planned to coincide with the
dry-season fires. The experiment included
observations from NASA's Terra and Landsat
7 spacecraft, research aircraft including
NASA's ER-2 high-altitude jet, and several
ground stations. Over 200 scientists from
around the world participated in the campaign,
which ended Sept. 25.
This
year the southern African fire season peaked
in late August and early September. The
region is subject to some of the highest
levels of biomass burning in the world.
SAFARI 2000 planners tracked the changing
location of fires with daily satellite maps
provided by researchers at NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center (Greenbelt, Md.). The
heaviest burning was in western Zambia,
southern Angola, northern Namibia, and northern
Botswana. Some of the blazes had fire fronts
20 miles long that lasted for days.
The
thick haze layer from these fires produced
between Aug. 23 and Sept. 7 was heavier
than campaign participants had seen in previous
field studies in the Amazon Basin and during
the Kuwati oil fires.
"We
observed a river of smoke that moved from
northwest to southeast over the subcontinent,
causing heavy haze and reduced visibility
over Botswana and South Africa for about
ten days in early September," says SAFARI
2000 organizer Harold Annegarn of the University
of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
According to veteran pilot Ken Broda, who
flew NASA's ER-2 above the haze layer, "this
was probably the worst in-flight visibility
I've seen anywhere, even during the oil
fires following the Persian Gulf war. From
the ER-2's altitude of 60,000 feet, where
normal visibility can stretch 60 miles,
I couldn't clearly see the city of Johannesburg
until I was directly overhead."
With
instruments on the ground, in the air, and
in space, scientists were able to sample
the chemistry and measure the thickness
of the smoke plumes, map the movements of
the haze layer, and investigate how the
smoke and fine aerosol particles affect
clouds.
"For
the first time we were able to track this
annual haze from its source and determine
what happens to the aerosols in the haze,"
says Annegarn. "The measurements we have
now of carbon transport in the haze, both
as gases and particles, will add important
pieces to balancing global carbon budgets."
Studies
by research aircraft flying inside the pall
of haze revealed several surprises. Aircraft
encountered puzzling layers of extremely
clean air sandwiched between polluted layers.
"The
pollution in the region is often very stratified
with height in the atmosphere," says Peter
Hobbs of the University of Washington, principal
investigator for the experiments onboard
the university's Convair-580 aircraft. "Regions
of heavy pollution were separated by a very
thin - just a few hundred feet deep - layer
of almost pristine air."
The
haze aerosols sampled were also more heat-absorbing
than expected, which means the haze layer
may have a significant warming influence
on the region's atmosphere. "The aerosol
in the region was surprisingly absorbing,"
says Hobbs. "Such aerosols may well add
to the greenhouse warming effect, particularly
in the mid-troposphere. Most aerosols are
thought to offset that warming by scattering
incoming solar radiation back into space."
The
thick haze also contained high levels of
ozone, a component of smog, that frequently
reached levels similar to those found during
air pollution alerts in major U.S. cities.
Making the first balloon-borne measurements
of ozone during the height of a southern
African burning season, NASA Goddard scientist
Anne Thompson found that the impact of the
haze may be greater on climate change than
on human health.
"Ozone
levels in U.S. urban centers may be more
unhealthy at the ground, but the ozone profiles
we took in Zambia show that much of the
ozone here is in the middle and upper troposphere
where ozone's 'badness' is its effect as
a greenhouse gas," says Thompson.
New
air quality data collected during the campaign
will also help governments in the region
develop future environmental policies. Annegarn
and other South African scientists are working
to distinguish the industrial sources of
air pollution from natural sources such
as emissions from vegetation and soils.
"With the SAFARI 2000 data we now have the
first comprehensive measurements of aerosols
from the major industrial sources in southern
Africa," said Annegarn. "Together with the
detailed chemical analyses of these sources
gathered during the campaign, we can now
evaluate the relative importance of industrial
emissions in the region's air pollution,
which will contribute to the development
of both national and regional air quality
management policies."
U.S.
participation in the SAFARI 2000 campaign
was sponsored by NASA's Earth Observing
System (EOS) project, a suite of spacecraft
and interdisciplinary science investigations
dedicated to advancing our knowledge of
global change. EOS is managed by Goddard
Space Flight Center for NASA's Earth Science
Enterprise. A key objective of this year's
campaign was to acquire measurements for
validating new data products from NASA's
Terra spacecraft.
More
information on the SAFARI 2000 project is
available at:
http://safari.gecp.virginia.edu/
Download
the latest SAFARI 2000 release by clicking here.
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