Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 24, 1993
Air Quality at Crater Lake
By Heidi Lyn Ross and David Lee Fuller
Most people visiting Crater Lake find
themselves in awe of the beautiful blue water. When they gasp at the
beauty, they should also realize that they are breathing some of the
cleanest air in the world.
The air is so pure at Crater Lake that
on the clearest day you can see at least 190 miles, and occasionally to
the 240 mile limit. Actual day to day visibility at Crater Lake averages
about 105 miles.
There are some threats, however, to
Crater Lake's air quality. Klamath Falls and Medford, each about 55 air
miles from Crater Lake, are non-attainment areas in the state; this
means that these cities do not comply with Oregon's goals for air
quality in populated areas. Nevertheless, the small amount of pollution
we do have is not directly associated with an urban or industrial
corridor. Weather patterns in those areas usually trap the pollutants to
the ground. At Crater Lake, air movement is generally characterized by
westerly winds associated with the presence of weather systems formed
over the Pacific Ocean. Air pollution over the park is usually
particulate from slash burning, wildfires, and agricultural burning.
One big reason efforts are being made
to protect our air is that preserving scenic vistas is a boon to
tourism. Although fire danger is a compelling reason to prohibit slash
burning during the summer months, land managers want to keep visibility
at its best during the tourist season. Oregon hosts 11.8 million
visitors every year who spend over $1.4 billion in the state. Roughly
$17.4 million of that total is spent to visit the state's wilderness
areas, including Crater Lake National Park.
The National Park Service and the
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality monitor the air at Crater
Lake in four different ways:
Standard Visual Range (SVR) data
is collected by a 35mm camera which photographs a vista of known
distance three times a day. Calculations are made of how far past, or in
front of a known target the horizon can be seen in the photograph.
Estimates of how many particles are in the air are made by calculating
how well the target contrasts with the area in front of it and behind
it. There are three SVR cameras in the park. One is located on Dutton
Cliff and another is on Watchman; both are aimed at Yamsay Mountain to
the east of the park. A third camera is at Rim Village, where it can
view Mount Theilson to the north of Crater Lake.
The Transmissometer has a
transmitting station at Rim Village that sends a light beam across the
lake to a receiving station at Wineglass on the northeast side of the
lake. By calculating how much light is sent and how much is received,
the amount lost traveling from one site to another can be determined.
The light is scattered by particles in the air, so the more light
received, the cleaner the air.
The Nephelometer is an
instrument that takes air into a vacuum tube and sends light through the
sample. It then measures the intensity of light that is scattered by
particles contained within the instrument's optical path. The less the
light is scattered the cleaner the air. The park's Nephelometer is
located at Rim Village.
Finally, the Improve pulls air
through many different filters. Each filter is a different degree or
size, meaning each filter will catch a different sized particle. To see
what particles are in the air, each filter is chemically analyzed. This
device is located at Park Headquarters.
Through use of this technology and
other indicators, we know that the air quality over Crater Lake has been
impacted by human activities. Presently, naked eye visibility at Crater
Lake National Park is substantially impaired for 4.6 percent of all
daylight hours. Nevertheless, this figure is impressive when compared
with stations further north in Oregon. Crater Lake is, in fact, often
the standard used when judging air quality in other areas. By contrast,
Mount Hood's visibility is impaired 21 percent of the time, while Mount
Washington's figure is 42 percent and Portland's is 85 percent.
Although a 4.6 percent impairment index
may seem satisfactory when compared to other areas, this may rise to
five, ten, or even 20 percent without the cooperation of people. We all
have a responsibility to ensure clean air--our next breath depends on
it.