Wind seems to be in the most abundance by a significant, discernible amount. One can see this demonstrated based on how the 'wind' line is separated by the other data lines (pollutants and temperature) by a large amount. This makes sense as if one goes out, they can often feel at least a slight breeze or draft even on non-windy days, whereas, unless it's reached a hazardous level, one will seldom be able to discern pollutants in the air, with their own physical senses. While the same thing could be said for temperature as it could for wind, it still makes sense that the 'temperature' line is mingled with the pollutant ones at the bottom, because the temperature on Earth, in this context, will never surpass a livable number. (Unless the world ends!)
Functionality of the map demonstrated; one can customize how many counties and which counties show up on the map. This can be done in correlation to the line graph or independently. Here, Hawaii, Hawaii, Los Angeles, California, and Cook, Illinois are pictured.
Bar graph that shows contributing pollutant data for a selected year and county. In this case, it's New York, New York in 2016. Here, you can see that Ozone and PM2.5 are the largest contributing pollutants in this county.