Abstract
The Kirchhofer synoptic classification procedure is applied to both mean sea level and 500-hPa NMC gridded pressure fields for the vicinity of southwestern British Columbia. Exceedances of the Canadian 1-h Ambient O3 Air Quality Objective of 82 ppb at Port Moody, Vancouver, are associated with the coincidence of a low-level thermal trough and an upper-level ridge of high pressure. Analysis of synoptic sequences also reveals the importance of persistence in the development of elevated O3 concentrations. The application of synoptic climatology to ground-level O3 in Vancouver highlights the need for consideration of more than one atmospheric level in map-typing schemes. An extension of the basic Kirchhofer approach to permit multilevel computer-assisted map typing is advocated. Abstract The Kirchhofer synoptic classification procedure is applied to both mean sea level and 500-hPa NMC gridded pressure fields for the vicinity of southwestern British Columbia. Exceedances of the Canadian 1-h Ambient O3 Air Quality Objective of 82 ppb at Port Moody, Vancouver, are associated with the coincidence of a low-level thermal trough and an upper-level ridge of high pressure. Analysis of synoptic sequences also reveals the importance of persistence in the development of elevated O3 concentrations. The application of synoptic climatology to ground-level O3 in Vancouver highlights the need for consideration of more than one atmospheric level in map-typing schemes. An extension of the basic Kirchhofer approach to permit multilevel computer-assisted map typing is advocated.

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