You are viewing the technical text

Ozone Hole

In some of the popular news media, as well as in many books, the term "ozone hole" has and often still is used far too loosely. Frequently, the term is employed to describe any episode of ozone depletion, no matter how minor. Unfortunately, this sloppy language trivialises the problem and blurs the important scientific distinction between the massive ozone losses in polar regions and the much smaller, but nonetheless significant, ozone losses in other parts of the world.

Technically, the term "ozone hole" should be applied to regions where stratospheric ozone depletion is so severe that levels fall below 200 Dobson Units (D.U.), the traditional measure of stratospheric ozone. Normal ozone concentration is about 300 to 350 D.U. Such ozone loss now occurs every springtime above Antarctica, and to a lesser extent the Arctic, where special meteorological conditions and very low air temperatures accelerate and enhance the destruction of ozone loss by man-made ozone depleting chemicals (ODCs).

 

Ozone Depletion

Print Topic

Websites
Ozone Depletion
US EPA
US EPA
Cambridge University
NASA GISS

Other topics
Introduction
Antarctica
Arctic
Causes
CFCs
Doing Our Bit
Evidence
Eye Disorders
Global Climate
Human Health
Immune System
Impacts
Land Plants
Legislation
Materials Damage
Measuring
Monitoring
Montreal Protocol
ODCs
Ozone
Ozone Hole
Ozone Layer
Polar Vortex
Protection
PSCs
Sea Life
Skin Cancer
Stratosphere
Sun
UV Radiation
Volcanoes

Home