From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

David E. Steitz
Headquarters, Washington, DC               September 7, 2000
(Phone:  202/358-1730)

Lynn Chandler
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD
(Phone:  301/614-5562)

RELEASE:  00-137

LARGEST-EVER OZONE HOLE OBSERVED OVER ANTARCTICA

A NASA spectrometer has detected an Antarctic ozone "hole" (what scientists 
call an "ozone depletion area") that is three times larger than the entire 
land mass of the United States - the largest such area ever observed.

The "hole" expanded to a record size of approximately 11 million square 
miles (28.3 million square kilometers) on Sept. 3, 2000. The previous 
record was approximately 10.5 million square miles (27.2 million square km) 
on Sept. 19, 1998.

The ozone hole's size currently has stabilized, but the low levels in its 
interior continue to fall. The lowest readings in the ozone hole are 
typically observed in late September or early October each year.

"These observations reinforce concerns about the frailty of Earth's ozone 
layer.  Although production of ozone-destroying gases has been curtailed 
under international agreements, concentrations of the gases in the 
stratosphere are only now reaching their peak.  Due to their long 
persistence in the atmosphere, it will be many decades before the ozone 
hole is no longer an annual occurrence," said Dr. Michael J. Kurylo, 
manager of the Upper Atmosphere Research Program, NASA Headquarters, 
Washington, DC.

Ozone molecules, made up of three atoms of oxygen, comprise a thin layer of 
the atmosphere that absorbs harmful ultraviolet radiation from the 
Sun.  Most atmospheric ozone is found between approximately six miles (9.5 
km) and 18 miles (29 km) above the Earth's surface.

Scientists continuing to investigate this enormous hole are somewhat 
surprised by its size. The reasons behind the dimensions involve both 
early-spring conditions, and an extremely intense Antarctic vortex. The 
Antarctic vortex is an upper-altitude stratospheric air current that sweeps 
around the Antarctic continent, confining the Antarctic ozone hole.

"Variations in the size of the ozone hole and of ozone depletion 
accompanying it from one year to the next are not unexpected," said Dr. 
Jack Kaye, Office of Earth Sciences Research Director, NASA 
Headquarters.  "At this point we can only wait to see how the ozone hole 
will evolve in the coming few months and see how the year's hole compares 
in all respects to those of previous years."

"Discoveries like these demonstrate the value of our long-term commitment 
to providing key observations to the scientific community," said Dr. 
Ghassem Asrar, Associate Administrator for NASA's Office of Earth Sciences 
at Headquarters.  "We will soon launch QuickTOMS and Aura, two spacecraft 
that will continue to gather these important data."

The measurements released today were obtained using the Total Ozone Mapping 
Spectrometer (TOMS) instrument aboard NASA's Earth Probe (TOMS-EP) 
satellite. NASA instruments have been measuring Antarctic ozone levels 
since the early 1970s.  Since the discovery of the ozone "hole" in 1985, 
TOMS has been a key instrument for monitoring ozone levels over the Earth.

TOMS ozone data and pictures are available on the Internet at:

http://jwocky.gsfc.nasa.gov/TOMSmain.html

TOMS-EP and other ozone-measurement programs are important parts of a 
global environmental effort of NASA's Earth Science enterprise, a long-term 
research program designed to study Earth's land, oceans, atmosphere, ice 
and life as a total integrated system.

                               -end-

                              * * *


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