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More Natural Dust in the Air Improves Air Quality in Eastern China

May 11, 2017 |

This article was originally published on: Phys.org.


“Man-made pollution in eastern China’s cities worsens when less dust blows in from the Gobi Desert, according to a new study published May 11 in Nature Communications. Yes, you read that correctly: When less natural blows in, the for millions of people worsens.

That’s because dust plays an important role in determining the air temperatures and thereby promoting winds to blow away man-made . Less dust means the air stagnates, with man-made pollution becoming more concentrated and sticking around longer. The scientists found that reduced dust causes a 13 percent increase in man-made pollution over eastern China during the winter.

Researchers say the broader question of how natural dust and man-made pollution interact is an important one for people across the globe, not just China. Many of the same forces that ease or worsen pollution in China are at play in many areas around the globe, including several cities in the United States.

The paradoxical finding—that more natural dust in the air improves air quality—comes from a team of researchers from the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California at San Diego…”

Read on at: Phys.org.

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