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To: T L Comiskey who wrote (5953)10/5/2000 3:20:57 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 65232
 
abcnews.go.com.

City Exposed to Radiation

Ozone Hole Leaves Chilean City
Unprotected from UV Rays

This image, compiled from NASA's Total
Ozone Mapping Spectrometer
instrument onboard the Earth Probe
satellite, reveals how the ozone hole (in
deep blue) has extended as far as
southern Chile. (NASA)

By Ray Lilley
The Associated Press
W E L L I N G T O N, New Zealand, Oct. 5 — The hole in the
ozone layer over Antarctica has stretched over a
populated city for the first time, after ballooning to a
new record size, New Zealand scientists said today.
Previously, the hole had only opened over Antarctica and
the surrounding ocean.
Citing data from the U.S. space agency NASA,
atmospheric research scientist Stephen Wood said the hole
covered 11.4 million square miles — an area more than
three times the size of the United States.

Punta Arenas, Chile Exposed
For two days, Sept. 9-10, the hole extended over the
southern Chile city of Punta Arenas, exposing residents to
very high levels of ultra violet radiation. Too much UV
radiation can cause skin cancer and destroy tiny plants at the
beginning of the food chain.
Wood is a researcher with New Zealand’s respected
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research.
Dr. Dean Peterson, science strategy manager of the
Antarctica New Zealand research group, said Wood’s
findings showed for the first time a city being exposed by the
ozone hole.
“The longer it gets, the greater the chances of populated
areas being hit by low ozone levels,” said Peterson, who was
not involved in the study.
Peterson said segments separating from the hole could
affect Argentina and even the tip of South Africa, Australia or
New Zealand.
“The hole won’t grow to that size. But as it breaks apart,
fingers of low ozone, or filaments as we call them, will go
over major land mass areas. Those filaments will be over
the land mass for a few weeks.”

Biggest Hole Ever
Last month, scientists expressed surprise when NASA data
from Sept. 3 showed the hole at just under 11 million square
miles — the biggest it had ever been.
Record-low temperatures in the stratosphere are
believed to have helped the expansion of the ozone hole
during the southern hemisphere’s spring season.
Antarctic ozone depletion starts in July, when sunlight
triggers chemical reactions in cold air trapped over the South
Pole during the Antarctic winter. It intensifies during August
and September before tailing off as temperatures rise in late
November of early December.
Depletion of the ozone layer over Antarctica and the
Arctic is being monitored because ozone protects Earth from
harmful ultraviolet radiation.

Human-Made Chemicals Deplete Ozone
Human-made chlorine compounds used in refrigerants,
aerosol sprays, solvents, foam-blowing agents and bromine
compounds used in firefighting halogens cause most ozone
depletion.
The temperature over Antarctica also significantly affects
the size of each year’s hole. Starting in October, warmer
temperatures reduce the ability of chlorine and other gases
to destroy ozone.
Experts agree that the man-made chemicals are leveling
off thanks to the 1989 Montreal Protocol, which commits
countries to eliminating production and use of
ozone-depleting substances. But it could be 20 years before
ozone levels recover noticeably.
“Although CFC levels will begin to reduce over the next
10 years, variations in the weather pattern will continue,”
Peterson said.