484 LOCKHART, PATTERSON, SAUNDERS, AND BLACK Spring subsidence or the exchange of stratospheric air, which is primarily a phenomenon of the higher latitudes. Transequatorial migration of radioactive particulate matter in the troposphere_is definitely inhibited, as evidenced by the large disparity in the activity burdens in the two hemispheres which exists for months at a time and by the large gradient in activity that is invariably observed near the equator. The profiles of the gross beta-activity concentrations as a function of latitude during the corresponding periods in the springs of 1959 through 1962, shown in Fig. 4, demonstrate that equatorial crossover is small during the winter—spring season when . A a 4 {4 oO” Lec A 1960 VY 1961 O 1962 \ x <Lu =! = 6= ge o o uw . uu Z O w” — lu 5v=Z = ore < = = = = v > 6o2¢f = = wn es “ g a wen 107! 2 & < “ < Oo i 2 ¢ 3S fie a ao" 7 / / 3\ . \ \ \ \ = PN Tt vil K N 2 v \ NA ‘kh RN W\ f KY ‘ ‘ i | L 60°N i I L 30°N 1 0° . ‘\‘ ft \3 vel! l < =z2gu é v\ 90°PN iu on © ‘A 1072 Zz O On: & oe >= - =< ud ZO z g> s 18 SN Ww ve V L L L 30°S L i l 60°S 1 i 90°S LATITUDE Fig, 4—Profiles of gross beta activity along the 80th meridian during the month of April in successive years.

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