Air Quality and Road Emission Results for Fort Stewart, Georgia [report]

Randy R. Kirkham, Crystal J. Driver, Mickie A. Chamness, Brad C. Barfuss
2004 unpublished
ph: (865) 576-8401 fax: (865) 576-5728 email: reports@adonis.osti.gov Available to the public from the National Technical Information Service, U.S. Department of Commerce, 5285 Port Royal Rd., Springfield, VA 22161 ph: (800) 553-6847 fax: (703) 605-6900 email: orders@ntis.fedworld.gov online ordering: http://www.ntis.gov/ordering.htm This document was printed on recycled paper. In this initial study, the emphasis was on training-generated PM, not receptor PM loading. The majority of PM samples
more » ... ere 24-hour filter-based samples with sampling frequency ranging from every other day, to once every six days synchronized with the EPA 6 th day national sampling schedule. Eight measurement sites were established and used to determine spatial variability in PM concentrations and evaluate whether fluctuations in PM appear to result from training activities and forest management practices on the installation. Data collected to date indicate the average installation PM2.5 concentration is lower than that of nearby urban Savannah, Georgia. At three sites near the installation perimeter, analyses to segregate PM concentrations by direction of air flow across the installation boundary indicate that air (below 80 ft) leaving the installation contains less PM2.5 than that entering the installation. This is reinforced by the observation that air near the ground is cleaner on average than the air at the top of the canopy. v
doi:10.2172/877086 fatcat:lwik3kos2zegnpch3wvkomdcbe