Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: TUESDAY, December 20, 1994 TAG: 9412200082 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B-5 EDITION: NEW RIVER VALLEY SOURCE: Cox News Service DATELINE: WASHINGTON LENGTH: Medium
``This nails it. There is no other possibility,'' said Anne Douglass, deputy project scientist of NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite program.
In the stratosphere, ozone blocks ultraviolet rays from sunlight - a major cause of skin cancer - but global levels have declined gradually for more than a decade. That trend is punctuated annually by the dramatic appearance of an enormous ``ozone hole'' over Antarctica.
Virtually all of the ozone in the stratosphere over a growing area of Antarctica is destroyed in a few days each fall. After several weeks, changes in weather patterns cause ozone from surrounding areas to flow in and replenish the ozone holes, scientists say.
Previous measurements have convinced most scientists that the ozone destruction is caused by chemical chain reactions involving chlorine.
But the source of the culprit chlorine has remained somewhat controversial. Ever since a treaty was ratified in 1987 to gradually eliminate worldwide production of chlorofluorocarbons, or ``CFCs,'' the chemicals believed responsible for destruction of the Earth's ozone layer, some scientists and political conservatives have argued that chlorine in the stratosphere may come from volcanoes.
Talk show host Rush Limbaugh, whose radio program is heard by millions of listeners, has charged that talk of ozone depletion by CFCs is a ``hoax.''
Douglass, Mark Schoeberl and other NASA scientists said data collected by the satellite convinces them that approximately five-sixths of the ozone-destroying chlorine in the stratosphere comes from chlorofluorocarbons, or ``CFCs.''
The conclusive finding, they said, was the presence of fluorine, the ``fluoro'' part of the CFC molecule, in amounts that correspond to chlorine in the stratosphere.
``There is no natural source of fluorine,'' said Schoeberl.
Memo: NOTE: Shorter version ran in Metro edition.