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Classroom presentations to accompany Understanding Earth, 3rd edition prepared by Peter Copeland and William Dupré University of Houston Chapter 14 Wind and Deserts Stanley Breeden/DRK Deserts Deserts are usually thought of as hot and dry, but there are different ways to define a desert: • Annual rainfall (<25 cm) • Less precipitation than the potential for evaporation Deserts can be cold if there is an extremely small amount of precipitation. Atmospheric Circulation Patterns Fig. 14.1 Erosion and deserts Wind is often thought to be the most important agent of erosion in deserts. However, even in deserts, most of the work of erosion is done by water. Because there is so little water in deserts, erosion is very intermittent. Erosion and deserts Typically, when storms take place in desert regions, dry stream courses fill quickly with water. With little vegetation to hold water, flash floods can be brief, but violent. Erosion and deserts When rainfall is unusually heavy, desert soil may become saturated with water and begin to flow. This is known as a debris flow. Fig. 14.2 Fig. 14.3 Wind Direction Fig. 14.4 Tom Bean Rate of Sand Movement as a Function of Wind Velocity Fig. 14.5 Wind • Transportation of material: Because wind is much less dense than water, it can transport only small particles, mainly fine sand and silt (clay is usually too cohesive). • Particles move by either saltation (sand) or suspension (dust). Wind Dust can be transported over great distances. Skiers in the Alps commonly encounter a silty surface on the snow. The silt comes from the Sahara desert in Africa, over 1500 km away. Wind • Wind-borne material can become extremely concentrated in air: in 1 km3, there may be up to 1000 tons of dust. • Sand grains carried by wind get a frosted exterior (diagnostic of eolian transport). Dust Storm, 1937 Library of Congress Frosted and Rounded Wind-blown Sand Walter N. Mack Fig. 14.6 Deflation • The process of removing all of the small (easily moved) particles. • As this process proceeds, only larger rocks are left. This is known as “desert pavement”. Deflation Hollow Breck P. Kent Fig. 14.7 Formation of Desert Pavement Fig. 14.9b Desert Pavement David Muench Fig. 14.8a Ventifact E.R.Degginger Fig. 14.9 Yardangs in Iran Comstock Fig. 14.10 Linear Dunes in Saudi Arabia Prevailing Winds ERIM Fig. 14.11 Coastal Dunes in Peru Loren McIntyre Fig. 14.12 Formation of a Windshadow Dune Fig. 14.13 Dune Migration Fig. 14.14 Dune Migration and the Formation of Cross Bedding Fig. 14.15 Compression of Streamlines over Dune Increases Velocity Fig. 14.16 Types of Dunes Fig. 14.17 Pleistocene Loess E.R.Degginger Fig. 14.18 Loess in China Stephen C. Porter Fig. 14.19 Where deserts are • Tropic of Capricorn, Tropic of Cancer • High pressure subsiding air heats loses moisture • Center of continent • Rain shadow • Interaction with ocean currents: e.g., Atacama Desert (Peru and Chile). Air moves from above cold ocean waters to warm land and expands, absorbing moisture. Major Deserts of the World Fig. 14.20 Desert varnish • Surface coating of Fe and Mn oxides • Can be used to date exposure intervals. Petroglyphs in Desert Varnish Peter Kresan Fig. 14.21 Streams and lakes in deserts • Often streams in the desert dry up before they reach the sea. • Those that don’t dry up are usually fed from a wetter area (e.g., Colorado River). • Interior drainages are common in deserts — the two are linked. Examples: Nevada, Tibetan plateau “Dry wash” in Flood Peter Kresan Fig. 14.22a The Day After Peter Kresan Fig. 14.22b Playa Lake David Muench Fig. 14.23 Typical Landscape Formed by Desert Weathering Peter Kresan Fig. 14.24 Playa lakes • Formed in a closed basin. • Water accumulates after rain; may last days to months before complete evaporation, leaving a playa, a flat lake bed of clay, silt, and evaporites. Faulting Fig. 14.25a Deposition of Alluvial Fans Fig. 14.25b Erosional Retreat Forms Pediment Fig. 14.25c Pediment Expands with Continued Erosion Fig. 14.25d Evolution of a Mesa Rivers Breach Resistant Cap Fig. 14.26a Evolution of a Mesa Continued Erosion Fig. 14.26b Evolution of a Mesa Long-continued Erosion Fig. 14.26c