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Video Troff document Bringing Back the Brooks - A Revival of the South’s Trout
Freshwater Illustrated and the U.S. Forest Service serve a poetic look at a forgotten native of Appalachia, the Southern Appalachian Brook Trout, which is being brought back from the brink… by hand, bucket, and hoof.
Located in Training / Videos and Webinars
File PDF document Briukhurst 1995.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / BRA-BUT
File PDF document Bronmark et al 1984.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / BRA-BUT
File PDF document Bronmark Malmqvist 1984.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / BRA-BUT
File PDF document Brooks Brooks Newfoundland.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / BRA-BUT
File PDF document Brown 1998.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / BRA-BUT
File PDF document Brown Aquilla Lake.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / MUR-NIC
File PDF document Brown Pardue 1980.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / BRA-BUT
Person Octet Stream Brown, Marcus
Located in Expertise Search
File PDF document Brownness of organics in aerosols from biomass burning linked to their black carbon content
Atmospheric particulate matter plays an important role in the Earth’s radiative balance. Over the past two decades, it has been established that a portion of particulate matter, black carbon, absorbs significant amounts of light and exerts a warming effect rivalling that of anthropogenic carbon dioxide1,2. Most climate models treat black carbon as the sole light-absorbing carbonaceous particulate. However, some organic aerosols, dubbed brown carbon and mainly associated with biomass burning emissions3–6 , also absorbs light7 . Unlike black carbon, whose light absorption properties are well understood8, brown carbon comprises a wide range of poorly characterized compounds that exhibit highly variable absorptivities, with reported values spanning two orders of magnitude3–6,9,10. Here we present smog chamber experiments to characterize the effective absorptivity of organic aerosol from biomass burning under a range of conditions. We show that brown carbon in emissions from biomass burning is associated mostly with organic compounds of extremely low volatility11. In addition, we find that the effective absorptivity of organic aerosol in biomass burning emissions can be parameterized as a function of the ratio of black carbon to organic aerosol, indicating that aerosol absorptivity depends largely on burn conditions, not fuel type. We conclude that brown carbon from biomass burning can be an important factor in aerosol radiative forcing.
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents