MARIN COUNTY'S NEWS
MONTHLY - FREE PRESS
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(415)868-0502(fax) - P.O. Box 31, Bolinas, CA, 94924
February, 2005
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Ozone Decline Stuns Scientists
By Katy Human and Kim McGuire
Denver Post Staff Writers
Solar flares and frigid temperatures are believed to be working with human
chemicals to eat away at the protective ozone layer above the North Pole,
surprising scientists who have been looking for evidence that the planet's
ozone layer is healing.
The ozone layer protects Earth from dangerous ultraviolet radiation, which
can cause skin cancer.
Last winter, Arctic ozone declined more precipitously than ever in the
upper atmosphere, probably because of violent storms on the sun's surface, one
team reports today in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
And in recent days, a lower layer of ozone has undergone an extraordinary
thinning because of a level of bitter cold (about minus-110 degrees Fahrenheit)
rarely seen in the Arctic and manmade chemicals, researchers said. One Colorado scientist has raced north to
document the event, expected to sputter out within days.
The two unusual findings have experts worried that they don't fully
understand the dynamics of ozone depletion.
"I don't think we can be confident about whether or not we're seeing
an ozone recovery or if we're attributing recovery to the correct causes,"
said Cora Randall, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Colorado.
Randall and her colleagues studied a dramatic and unexpected drop in
upper-level ozone levels last winter. A few months before the decline, massive
solar storms had blasted high-energy particles toward Earth. Randall suspects
the energetic particles helped create chemicals called nitrogen oxides, which
are known ozone-gobblers.
Solar storms are natural, she said, but some scientists suspect humans also
played a role in creating conditions that contributed to the historic ozone-
depletion event.
Human-emitted chemicals are largely responsible for the massive ozone hole
that has formed at lower levels in the Arctic atmosphere in recent days,
experts said. There, unusually low temperatures are triggering reactions in
which manmade chemicals quickly devour ozone, they said.
"Something like this only happens once every 20 years," said Russ
Schnell, with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder.
His agency deployed Andrew Clarke to a lab in Greenland, located under the area of sky where the ozone layer is
diminishing. There, Clarke is lofting testing equipment into the sky with giant
balloons. It will be weeks or months before the results are understood, he
said.