Cornell University
Library
Cornell UniversityLibrary

eCommons

Help
Log In(current)
  1. Home
  2. College of Engineering
  3. Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
  4. Climate Sciences
  5. Data from: Anthropogenic Perturbations to the Atmospheric Molybdenum Cycle

Data from: Anthropogenic Perturbations to the Atmospheric Molybdenum Cycle

File(s)
Mo.model.base.nc (16.46 MB)
Mo.model.natural.nc (16.46 MB)
Wong_etal_2021_readme.txt (5.27 KB)
Mo.model.high.nc (16.46 MB)
Mo.soils.nc (1.69 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://doi.org/10.7298/nzhv-4579
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/70169
Collections
Climate Sciences
Author
Wong, Michelle Y.
Rathod, Sagar D.
Howarth, Robert W.
Marino, Roxanne
Alastuey, Andres
Artaxo, Paulo
Barraza, Francisco
Beddow, D.C.S.
Bond, Tami
Chellam, Shankar
Chen, Yu-Cheng
Chen, Ying
Chien, Chia-Te
Cohen, David D.
Connelly, David
Dongarra, Gaetano
Gomez, Dario
Hand, Jenny
Harrison, R.M.
Hopke, Philip
Hueglin, Christoph
Husain, Liaquat
Kuang, Yuan-wen
Lambert, Fabrice
Liang, James
Li, Longleino
Losno, Remi
Maenhaut, Willy
Milando, Chad
Monteiro, Maria Inês Couto
Morera Gómez, Yasser
Paytan, Adina
Prospero, Joesph S.
Querol, Xavier
Rodriguez, Sergio
Smichowski, Patricia
Varrica, Daniela
Xiao, Yi-hua
Xu, Yangjunjie
Mahowald, Natalie M.
Abstract

Molybdenum (Mo) is an essential trace element that is, important for terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, as it is required for biological nitrogen fixation and uptake. Mo is carried in particles to the atmosphere from sources such as desert dust, sea spray, and volcanoes resulting in losses and sources to different ecosystems. Atmospheric Mo deposition is essential on long time scales for soils which have lost Mo due to soil weathering, with consequences for nitrogen cycling. Anthropogenic changes to the Mo cycle from combustion, motor vehicles, and agricultural dust, are likely to be large, and have more than doubled sources of Mo to the atmosphere. Locally, anthropogenic changes to Mo in industrialized regions can represent a 100‐fold increase in deposition, and may affect nitrogen cycling in nitrogen‐limited ecosystems. This dataset supports these findings.

Sponsorship
We acknowledge the Atkinson Center for funding for this project, and NSF CCF-1522054.
Date Issued
2021
Keywords
Atmospheric Mo
•
Biogeochemistry
•
Aerosols
Related Publication(s)
Wong, M. Y., Rathod, S. D., Marino, R., Li, L., Howarth, R. W., Alastuey, A., et al. (2021). Anthropogenic perturbations to the atmospheric molybdenum cycle. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 35, e2020GB006787. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GB006787
Link(s) to Related Publication(s)
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GB006787
Rights
CC0 1.0 Universal
Rights URI
http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Type
dataset

Site Statistics | Help

About eCommons | Policies | Terms of use | Contact Us

copyright © 2002-2026 Cornell University Library | Privacy | Web Accessibility Assistance