"Dust from Sahara boosts methane removal, study reveals"

1 min read
Source: Phys.org
"Dust from Sahara boosts methane removal, study reveals"
Photo: Phys.org
TL;DR Summary

A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals that blowing mineral dust from the Sahara Desert mixed with sea salt aerosol forms mineral dust-sea spray aerosol (MDSA), which is activated by sunlight to produce an abundance of chlorine atoms. These chlorine atoms oxidize atmospheric methane and tropospheric ozone, potentially explaining the accelerating increase in atmospheric methane. The study suggests that global atmospheric chlorine concentrations may be roughly 40% higher than previously estimated, which could shift our understanding of methane emissions sources. Further research is needed to understand the MDSA mechanism in other parts of the world.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

1

Time Saved

4 min

vs 5 min read

Condensed

89%

923101 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on Phys.org