Title of article
Dust-raising in the dustiest place on earth
Author/Authors
Warren، نويسنده , , Andrew and Chappell، نويسنده , , Adrian G. Todd، نويسنده , , Martin C. and Bristow، نويسنده , , Charlie and Drake، نويسنده , , Nick and Engelstaedter، نويسنده , , Sebastian and Martins، نويسنده , , Vanderlei and Mʹbainayel، نويسنده , , Samuel and Washington، نويسنده , , Richard، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
13
From page
25
To page
37
Abstract
The Bodélé in northern Chad is the dustiest place on earth. It is dusty because of the co-location of strong near-surface winds and a large exposure of low-density, friable diatomite. Data are reported from three kinds of observation on dust generation in the Bodélé: (a) two automatic weather stations and pilot balloon tracking, complemented with reanalysis data, measuring and estimating wind velocities; (b) sun-photometers, measuring atmospheric dust concentrations; (c) a vacuum-pump dust sampler and an array of MWAC sediment samplers, measuring in-situ sediment transport. With these data, we develop four hypotheses about dust generation: (1) the pulsing of dust output from the Bodélé depends primarily on the varying strength of a Low Level Jet (LLJ); i.e., at this scale, dust production is transport-limited; (2) the most prolific mechanism of dust production is the breakdown of saltating diatomite flakes as they collide with each other and with the surface; (3) disturbance of flow around the large barchans, particularly turbulence and convergence on their “horns”, is a major contributor to dust production, i.e., the dunes are “dust-mills”; (4) in consequence, dust production is localised within the main exposure of diatomite to places where there are the most dunes, as on the eastern and northern fringes of the exposure.
Keywords
Transport-limitation , Self-abrasion , Dune-included turbulence , Chad , Bodélé , Low level jet
Journal title
Geomorphology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Geomorphology
Record number
2359603
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