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Lecture 16 - Deserts
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Definition of Desert A desert is an area with less than 25 cm (10 inches) of annual precipitation aridity index = potential evaporation/precipitation greater than 4.0 Deserts may be cold, temperate or hot. All major continents have one type of desert or the other.
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Wind-Swept Sand Dunes
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Desert Life Forms (Roadrunner)
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Desert Life Forms (Lizard)
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Types of Deserts Desert Types - Subtropical Desert – 30 o Latitude - Deserts on Leeward side of major Mountain ranges - Interior Deserts- center of continents far from ocean - Coastal desert- prevailing onshore wind cooled by cold ocean current - Polar deserts- extremely cold and dry
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The major wind cells Coriolis “turns” them
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Subtropical Deserts +/- 30 o latitude
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A Rain-Shadow Desert
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Ocean-Current Desert
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Also Interior and Polar Deserts
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Desert Landscape (Features) Weathering and desert streams create Desert features Weathering in Desert is mostly mechanical - A little chemical weathering produces manganese and iron-oxide stains, called desert vanish Stream Erosion - Arroyo- channel with water during periods of high discharge but dry most part of the year - Pediments- large-scale gently inclined surfaces - Inselberg- steep-sided knob of durable rock - Playa- dry lake bed
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Chemical Weathering in Deserts
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Desert Landforms Produced By Water
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Uluru (Ayers Rock) Inselberg
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Playas
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Playas (cont'd)
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Playas (cont'd) – A Playa in Death Valley, California
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Swimmers in hypersaline Dead Sea Evaporite deposits indicate a dry climate in the geologic record
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Water-Carved Canyon
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Work of Winds Erosion by Wind - Deflation- wind removes finer particles from the surface - Desert pavement- layer of pebbles left behind after deflation - Abrasion- sand blasting - Ventifacts- wind-shaped stones with sharp- edge faces - Yardangs- streamlined desert ridges
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Blowout Caused by Deflation
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Desert Pavements
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Desert Pavements (cont'd)
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Desert Pavements (cont'd) – Source: Martin Miller These make good landing strips
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Desert Varnish slows infiltration Causes Flash Floods
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Remnants of Wind Abrasion in addition to occasional flash flood erosion (surface grains are frosted)
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Origin of Ventifacts
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Origin of Ventifacts (cont’d) Wind
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Yardangs, White Desert, Egypt
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Transport By Wind No dissolved load Suspended Load- most consist of dust (silt, clay, pollen, bacteria, salt crystals, etc.) Bed Load- sediments moved along or near the ground –Rolling or saltation- bed loads lifted off the ground momentarily due to force of collision with other grains
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Transport of Wind-Borne Sediment Suspended Load Transports Sahara sediment to Caribbean and Amazon Rain Forest
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Deposition of Dunes Reduced wind velocity results in sediments deposition Dunes are hills of loose wind-born sand - Size, shape, and orientation of dune are determined by available sand, vegetation, and wind
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Beach Sand Dunes
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Deposition of Wind’s Bed Load Rain – Shadow Desert in Lee Of Mountains
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Large Scale Dunes (Gobi Desert)
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Dune Migration Just like ripples in a stream
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Dune Migration (cont'd)
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Deposition and Dune Types Dune Types - Transverse- ridges that are perpendicular to prevailing wind direction - Longitudinal- ridges that are parallel to prevailing wind direction - Barchans- crescent-shaped with horns pointing downwind - Horseshoe (Parabolic)- crescent-shaped with horns pointing upwind - Star- winds from three or more directions
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Transverse Dunes
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Longitudinal Dunes
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Barchan Dunes
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Barchan Dunes in Baja California
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Parabolic Dunes
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Star Dunes
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Lithified Sand Dunes (Jurassic Navajo Sandstone)
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Loess Loess formed by windblown deposits of glacial outwash silt Loess from the Columbia River Basin
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Desertification Desertification- invasion of desert conditions into formerly non-desert areas Drought and overpopulation are main causes Signs - Lowering of water table - Marked reduction of water supply - Increased salinity in water and soil - Progressive destruction of native vegetation - Accelerated soil erosion
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Map of the Sahel
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End of Lecture 16
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