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Desert Dust in the Global System

A.S. Goudie N.J. Middleton

Desert Dust
in the Global System

With 114 Figures and 41 Tables


Prof. Dr. Andrew S. Goudie Dr. Nicholas J. Middleton
St Cross College School of Geography
St Giles Oxford University Centre for the Environment
Oxford, OX1 3LZ South Parks Road
UK Oxford, OX1 3QY
UK

Cover illustration: A Seawifs image of a Saharan dust storm (see Fig. 5.9)

Library of Congress Control Number: 2006925945

ISBN-10 3-540-32354-6 Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York


ISBN-13 978-3-540-32354-9 Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York

This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is
concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broad-
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Springer is a part of Springer Science+Business Media

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© Andrew S. Goudie and Nicholas J. Middleton 2006
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Acknowledgements

We are pleased to have worked with various colleagues over the years, includ-
ing Richard Washington of the University of Oxford and Martin Todd of
University College London. Our work has been greatly helped by the splendid
web sites that make so much material available and we acknowledge the
great stimulus to dust studies that has been provided by workers such as
Jo Prospero. Sara Dickson (St Cross College, Oxford) kindly helped with the
production of the manuscript, while Ailsa Allen of the Oxford University
Centre for the Environment produced some of the figures with her custom-
ary skill and patience. Ben Hickey provided data on the Tokar Delta of Sudan
and the Hamun Lakes of Afghanistan.
We are grateful to the following for permission to reproduce figures:
Elsevier (Figs. 2.1, 3.3, 4.7, 7.5, 7.13, 7.15a, b, d, and 9.3), the Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge (Fig. 2.5), Blackwell, Oxford (Fig. 3.3), Kluwer,
Dordrecht (Fig. 6.1), the American Meteorological Society (Fig. 6.2), John
Wiley and Sons, Chichester (Figs. 6.6, 10.7), Annual Reviews (Fig. 9.3), Nature
(Figs. 7.7, 9.4), Science (Fig. 7.11), the Soil and Water Conservation Society
(Fig. 7.4), the American Geophysical Union and the Journal of Geophysical
Research (Fig. 7.15c), Cyril Moulin and The Institute Pierre-Simon Laplace
(Fig. 5.8) and Annales Geophysicae (Fig. 7.7). We have also included selected
illustrative material from our own previously published papers in Earth
Science Reviews, the Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, the
Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Climatic Change, Acta
Universitatis Carolinae (Prague) and the Bulletin de la Classe des Sciences
(Académie Royale de Belgique).
Contents

1 The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms


1.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.2 Methods of Study. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

2 Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition


2.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
2.2 The Origin of Desert Dust Particles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
2.3 Threshold Velocities and Environments of Deflation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
2.4 Wind Erosion of Soil and Other Surface Materials. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
2.5 Synoptic Meteorological Conditions Leading to Dust Events . . . . . . . . . . 22
2.6 Long-Range Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
2.7 Wet and Dry Deposition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
2.8 The ‘Giant’ Dust Particle Conundrum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

3 Environmental and Human Consequences


3.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
3.2 Marine Ecosystems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
3.3 Aeolian Erosion of Soils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
3.4 Aeolian Contamination of Soils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
3.5 Stone Pavements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
3.6 Duricrusts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
3.7 Salinization and Acidity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
3.8 Desert Depressions and Yardangs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
3.9 Dust and Radiative Forcing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
3.10 Dust and Atmospheric CO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
3.11 Dust and Tropospheric Ozone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
3.12 Dust and Clouds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
3.13 Economic Effects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
3.14 Health . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
3.15 Dust Storms in War. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

4 The Global Picture


4.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
4.2 Major Global Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
4.3 Dust Storms and Rainfall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
4.4 Vegetation and Dry Lake Beds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
viii Contents

4.5 Diurnal and Seasonal Timing of Dust Storms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63


4.6 Duration of Dust Storms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
4.7 Dust Storms on Mars. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68

5 The Regional Picture


5.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
5.2 North America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
5.3 South America . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
5.4 Southern Africa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
5.5 The Sahara . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
5.6 Trajectories of Saharan Dust Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
5.7 Middle East. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
5.8 South West Asia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
5.9 Central Asia and the Former USSR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
5.10 China. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
5.11 Mongolia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
5.12 Trajectories of Dust Transport from China and Mongolia . . . . . . . . . . . 141
5.13 Australia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142

6 Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents


6.1 Dust Contents of Air . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
6.2 Dust Deposition and Accumulation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149
6.3 Particle Sizes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
6.4 Dust Chemistry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
6.5 Clay Mineralogy of Dust . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164

7 Changing Frequencies of Dust Storms


7.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
7.2 The United States Dust Bowl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167
7.3 Mexico . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
7.4 Saharan Dust Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
7.5 Russia and its Neighbours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
7.6 Pakistan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
7.7 China and Mongolia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
7.8 Australia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
7.9 The Aeolian Environment in a Warmer World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
7.10 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191

8 Dust Storm Control


8.1 Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
8.2 Agronomic Measures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
8.3 Soil Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
8.4 Mechanical Methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
8.5 Miscellaneous Methods to Reduce Dust Emissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
Contents ix

9 Quaternary Dust Loadings


9.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
9.2 Ocean Cores . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
9.3 Dust Deposition as Recorded in Ice Cores . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
9.4 Loess Accumulation Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 208

10 Loess
10.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211
10.2 PeriSaharan Loess . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216
10.3 Central Asian Loess . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219
10.4 Chinese Loess . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
10.5 Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225

References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227

Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283
1 The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms

1.1 Introduction

This book is about dust storms, atmospheric events that are typically associated
with deserts. The study of desert dust, its entrainment, transport and deposi-
tion is an area of growing importance in investigations of global environmen-
tal change because dust storms have great significance for the physical
environment and the world’s human inhabitants (Table 1.1). Most dust events
are generated by the erosion of surface materials in the world’s drylands. Dry,
unprotected sediments in any environment can be blown into the atmosphere,
but the main sources of soil-derived mineral dust are located in desert regions.
However, the impacts of wind-blown desert dust are global in their extent,
making their study an area of major concern in Earth System Science.
Among the reasons why dust storms are important is that dust loadings in
the atmosphere are significant for climate (Park et al. 2005). They affect air
temperatures through the absorption and scattering of solar radiation
(Haywood et al. 2003). In addition, dust may affect climate through its influ-
ence on marine primary productivity (Jickells et al. 1998); and there is some
evidence that it may cause ocean cooling (Schollaert and Merrill 1998).
Changes in atmospheric temperatures and in concentrations of potential
condensation nuclei may affect convectional activity and cloud formation,
thereby modifying rainfall (Bryson and Barreis 1967; Maley 1982) and possi-
bly intensifying drought conditions.
Dust loadings may also change substantially in response to climatic
changes, such as the North Atlantic Oscillation (Ginoux et al. 2004; Chiapello
et al. 2005) or the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (Leslie and Speer 2005), to
drought phases (Middleton 1985a; Littmann 1991a; Moulin et al. 1997;
McTainsh et al. 2005) and in response to land-cover alterations (Tegen and
Fung 1995). In these situations, the monitoring of dust storms can be indica-
tive of environmental change.
Dust deposition provides considerable quantities of nutrients to ocean sur-
face waters and the sea bed (Talbot et al. 1986; Swap et al. 1996). Aeolian dust
contains appreciable quantities of iron (Zhu et al. 1997), the addition of which
to ocean waters may increase plankton productivity (Gruber and Sarmineto
1997; Sarthou et al. 2003). Dust aerosols derived from the Sahara influence the
nutrient dynamics and biogeochemical cycling of both terrestrial and oceanic
2 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 1.1. Some environmental consequences and hazards to human population caused by
dust storms

Consequence Example

Environmental
Algal blooms Lenes et al. (2001a, b)
Butterfly transport Davey (2004)
Calcrete development Coudé-Gaussen and Rognon (1988)
Case hardening of rock Conca and Rossman (1982)
Climatic change Maley (1982)
Clouds Sassen et al. (2003)
Coral reef deterioration Shinn et al. (2000)
Desert varnish formation Dorn (1986), Thiagarajan and Lee (2004)
Easterly wave intensification Jones et al. (2003)
Glacier mass budget alteration Davitaya (1969)
Loess formation Liu et al. (1981)
Mercury translocation Cannon et al. (2003)
Ocean productivity Sañudo-Wilhelmy (2003), Jickells
et al. (2005)
Ocean sedimentation Rea and Leinen (1988)
Plant nutrient gain Das (1988), Kaufman et al. (2005)
Playa (pan) formation and relief inversion Khalaf et al. (1982)
Radiative forcing Coakley and Cess (1985), Miller
et al. (2004a)
Rainfall acidity/alkalinity Stensland and Semorin (1982), Rogora
et al. (2004)
Rock polish Lancaster (1984)
Salt deposition and ground water salinization Logan (1974)
Sediment input to streams Goudie (1978)
Silcrete development Summerfield (1983)
Soil erosion Kalma et al. (1988)
Soil nutrient gain Syers et al. (1969)
Stone pavement formation McFadden et al. (1987)
Terra rossa formation Delgado et al. (2003)
Tropospheric ozone Bonasoni et al. (2004)
Ventifact sculpture Whitney and Dietrich (1973)
Human-related
Air pollution Hagen and Woodruff (1973)
Animal madness Saint-Amand et al. (1986)
Animal suffocation Choun (1936)
The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms 3

Table 1.1. Some environmental consequences and hazards to human population caused by
dust storms—cont’d

Consequence Example

Asthma incidence Gyan et al. (2005)


Car-ignition failure Clements et al. (1963)
Closing of business Gillette (1981)
DDT transport Riseborough et al. (1968)
Disease transmission (human) Leathers (1981)
Disease transmission (plants) Clafin et al. (1973)
Drinking-water contamination Clements et al. (1963)
Electrical-insulator failure Kes (1983)
Machinery problems Hilling (1969)
Microwave propagation Ghobrial (2003)
Radio communication problems Martin (1937)
Radio-active dust transport Becker (1986)
Rainfall acid neutralization Löye-Pilot et al. (1986)
Reduction of property values Gillette (1981)
Reduction of solar power potential Goossens and Van Kerschaever (1999)
Respiratory problems and eye infections Kar and Takeuchi (2004), Chen et al. (2004)
Transport disruption Houseman (1961), Brazel (1991)
Warfare Agence France Press (1985)

ecosystems. Moreover, because of the thousands of kilometres over which the


dust is transported, its influence extends as far a field as Northern Europe
(Franzen et al. 1994), Amazonia (Swap et al. 1992) and the coral reefs of the
Caribbean. Saharan dust has been suggested by Shinn et al. (2000) to be an
efficient medium for transporting disease-spreading spores, which on occa-
sion can cause epidemics that diminish coral reef vitality, a good match hav-
ing been found between times of coral-reef die-off and peak dust deposition
(Fig. 1.1). Atmospheric dust also influences sulphur dioxide levels in the
atmosphere, either by physical adsorption or by heterogeneous reactions
(Adams et al. 2005).
On land surfaces, additions of dust may affect soil formation. This has
been proposed, inter alia, in the context of calcretes, salt horizons, terrae
rossae, stone pavements and desert varnish (Thiagarajan and Lee 2004).
Dust additions play a major role in the delivery of sediments to the oceans
(Fig. 1.2). For example, Guerzoni et al. (1999, p. 147) have suggested that: “Both
the magnitude and the mineralogical composition of atmospheric dust inputs
indicate that eolian deposition is an important (50%) or even dominant (>80%)
contribution to sediments in the offshore waters of the entire Mediterranean
4 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Staghorn coral, elkhorn coral and Black-band disease - Florida


sea urchin Diaderma antillarum die Corals bleach - Carribbean
- Caribbean (major El Niño) Sea grasses die - Florida
(major El Niño)
20 Staghorn and elkhorn
corals die - Jamaica Corals bleach
in Florida
First appearance of
black-band coral disease
15
Dust concentration (Mg m−3)

10

15

0
1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995
Year

Fig. 1.1. The overall increase in dust reaching Barbados since 1965. Peak years for dust were
1983 and 1987. These were also the years of extensive damage to Caribbean coral reefs. Modified
after Shinn et al. (2000)

basin”. The role of dust sedimentation in the eastern Atlantic off the Sahara is
also extremely important (Holz et al. 2004), and its significance in the Arctic
Ocean has been discussed (Mullen et al. 1972; Darby et al. 1974).
Dust storms help to create various geomorphological phenomena by evac-
uating material from desert surfaces and then depositing it elsewhere. Desert
depressions, wind-fluted bedforms (yardangs) and stone pavements are
among such features. Above all, however, dust storms play a general role in
the denudation of desert surfaces.
Dust storms also have many direct implications for humans. They can, for
example, transport allergens and pathogens and disrupt communications.
They may be a manifestation of desertification and of accelerated soil ero-
sion. As ‘Big Hugh’ Bennett, father of the soil conservation movement in the
United States, wrote at the end of the Dust Bowl: “To an alarming extent . . .
the fertile parts of the soil are blowing away; to an equally alarming extent,
menacing, drifting sand is left behind.” (Bennett 1938b, p. 382)
Standard World Meteorological Organization (WMO) definitions for dust
events that involve dust entrainment in the atmosphere are given by McTainsh
and Pitblado (1987): (a) Dust storms are the result of turbulent winds raising
large quantities of dust into the air and reducing visibility to less than 1000 m.
The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms 5

Benghazi

Dust

Libya

Fig. 1.2. Dust over northern Libya and the Gulf of Sirte, 26 May 2004 (MODIS)

(b) Blowing dust is raised by winds to moderate heights above the ground
reducing visibility at eye level (1.8 m) but not to less than 1000 m. (c) Dust haze
is produced by dust particles in suspended transport which have been raised
from the ground by a dust storm prior to the time of observation. (d) Dust
whirls (or dust devils) are whirling columns of dust moving with the wind and
are usually less than 30 m high (but may extend to 300 m or more) and of
narrow dimensions. There is some confusion in the literature between ‘sand
storms’ and ‘dust storms’. The former tend to be low altitude phenomena
of limited areal extent, composed of predominantly sand-sized materials.
Dust storms reach higher altitudes, travel longer distances and are mainly
composed of silt and clay. In this work, the term dust storm refers to an atmos-
pheric phenomenon in meteorology, where the horizontal visibility at eye level
is reduced to less than 1000 m by atmospheric mineral dust.
While airborne particles in the world’s atmosphere may be derived from a
number of different sources – including cosmic dust, sea salt, volcanic dust
and smoke particles from fire – in this book we concentrate very largely on
the dust emitted from desert surfaces in low latitudes, though we recognize
that dust may be emitted from glacial outwash material in polar regions and
from disturbed agricultural land on susceptible soils in more humid parts of
the world (Table 1.2).
6 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 1.2. A selection of studies on wind erosion and dust deflation in non-desert regions

Region Reference

Parts of Denmark Møller (1986)


Swedish province of Skåne Bärring et al. (2003)
Fenland and Breckland of eastern England Goudie (1990, p. 302)
North-east of the Netherlands Eppink (1982)
Northern Germany Schäfer (1991)
Moravia and Silesia, Czech Republic Hrádek and Śvehlik (1995)
Southern Hungary Mezösi and Szatmári (1998)
Southern Ukraine Shikula (1981)
North-east Spain López et al. (1998)
Parts of New Zealand Marx and McGowan (2005)
Northern Canada Nickling (1978)
Alaska Péwé (1951)

1.2 Methods of Study

Desert dust has interested observers of the natural world for a very long time.
Its transport over great distances has been noted in apparently bizarre depo-
sitional events such as ‘blood rain’ that are described in Homer’s Iliad and in
the works of numerous writers working in ancient Rome. Some of the earli-
est scientific observations were made by Charles Darwin (1846) off the west
coast of Africa and Ehrenberg (1849) in the same area and in southern
Europe, while von Richthofen’s work in China was instrumental in establish-
ing the aeolian origin of loess (von Richthofen 1882).
In contrast to this long history of reporting dramatic dust transport and
deposition events, which has for the most part been largely descriptive
(Fig. 1.3), it is only during the past few decades that aeolian dust has become
a major environmental topic and that a more structured, systematic and
quantitative approach to dust research has been developed (McTainsh 1999).
The study of dust storms has been carried out in a variety of ways. On the
one hand, there are analyses that involve the long-term stratigraphic history
of dust deposition in the oceans, in ice cores, in lakes and in loess sections.
We return to this in Chapters 9 and 10. Archival studies have been under-
taken, employing newspaper reports, diaries and the like. The classic study of
this type is that undertaken for Kansas in the nineteenth century by Malin
(1946). Then, there are studies that employ the analysis of observational data
recorded at meteorological stations, using a set of standardized WMO Synop
codes that relate to dust in the atmosphere (Table 1.3). This enables the fre-
quency and distribution of dust storms to be mapped, though there are large
The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms 7

Fig. 1.3. A nineteenth century engraving of Saharan dust devils

tracts of the world’s drylands where records are missing or imperfect.


Current dust activity can also be monitored with ground- or air-based instru-
ments such as lidar (Pisani et al. 2005), sun photometers, sun sky radiometers
(Pinker et al. 2001; Masmoudi et al. 2003; Reid et al. 2003; Kaufman et al.
2005) and web cameras (Iino et al. 2004). The global Aerosol Robotic Network
(AERONET) operated by the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center has been
especially important in collecting near-real time data for a large number of
sites globally (Kubilay et al. 2003). Dust can also be monitored and ‘finger-
printed’ Grousset and Biscaye (2005) to determine source areas by numerous
means, including the analysis of mass size distributions, mineralogy, isotopic
ratios, fossil content, plant waxes and pollen, and electron spin resonance
(ESR; Table 1.4). Identification of source areas for specific long-range trans-
port events can also be made using three-dimensional back-trajectory analy-
sis for specific air masses (e.g. Betzer et al. 1988; Schwikowski et al. 1995;
Kubilay et al. 2000).
Many devices have been developed to trap dust and measure the rate of its
accumulation at the surface. Active samplers are equipped with pumping
devices to maintain a flow through their intakes. They use filters of fine mesh
(generally less than 2 µm) upon which particles accumulate. Small particle
concentration can be monitored continuously at active sampling sites, using
such devices as tapered element oscillating microbalances (TEOMs; see, for
example, Kjelgaard et al. 2004; Xie et al. 2005). Passive samplers rely on wind
8 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 1.3. WMO SYNOP present weather codes for dust events

Code
figure
ww Symbol Description

05 Haze

Widespread dust in suspension in the air, not raised by wind


06 S at or near the station at the time of observation

Dust or sand raised by wind at or near the station at the time


07 S of observation, but no well-developed dust whirl(s) and no
duststorm or sandstorm seen

Well-developed dust whirl(s) or sand whirl(s) seen at or near


08 the station during the preceding hour or at the time of
observation, but no duststorm or sandstorm

Duststorm or sandstorm within sight at the time of observation


09 ( S ) or at the station during the preceeding hour

has decreased during


30 S the preceeding hour

Slight or moderate no appreciable change


31 S duststorm or sandstorm during the preceding hour

has begun or has increased


32 S during the preceding hour

has decreased during


33 S the preceeding hour

Severe duststorm or no appreciable change


34 S sandstorm during the preceding hour

has begun or has increased


35 S during the preceding hour

Thunderstorm combined with duststorm or sandstorm


98
at time of observation

to maintain a flow through their intakes, but because they must use filters of
much coarser mesh (generally greater than 40 µm), they are more suitable for
sampling sand than dust. Moreover, passive samplers cause significant dis-
turbance of the flow. This causes streamlines to diverge at the opening of the
sampler; and dust particles tend to follow these streamlines rather than enter
the collector. There are also various devices for measuring and sampling dry
The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms 9

Table 1.4. Methods used for dust monitoring and identification of source areas

Dust characteristic Selected references

Mass size distribution Prospero et al. (1970)


Mineralogy and elemental composition Paquet et al. (1984)
Stable isotopes Aléon et al. (2002), Wang et al. (2005b)
Lead isotopes Turekian and Cochran (1981), Abouchami
and Zabel (2003)
Rubidium–strontium isotopes Biscaye et al. (1974)
Thorium isotopes Hirose and Sugimura (1984)
Helium isotopes Patterson and Farley (1997)
Neodymium isotopes Grousset et al. (1998), Jung et al. (2004),
Grousset and Biscaye (2005), Nakano
et al. (2005)
Radon-222 Prospero and Carlson (1972)
Magnetic mineral assemblages Oldfield et al. (1985)
Aluminium concentration Duce et al. (1980)
Aerosol-crust enrichment Rahn et al. (1981)
Rare earth element (REE) signature Gaiero et al. (2004)
Single scattering albedo (SSA) signature Collaud Coen et al. (2004)
Scanning electron microscopy of Prodi and Fea (1979)
individual grain features
Continentally derived lipids Gagosian et al. (1981)
Pollen, plant waxes Franzen et al. (1994), Dahl et al. (2005)
Enzyme activities Acosta-Martínez and Zobeck (2004)
Trace elements McGowan et al. (2005), Marx et al. (2005a, b)
Foraminifera Ehrenberg (1849)
Electron spin resonance Toyoda and Naruse (2002)

deposition fluxes, including bowls with or without water, buckets full of


marbles or glass beads, moss bags, plastic mats with plastic straws like a grass
lawn and inverted Frisbee samplers (Goodman et al. 1979; Hall et al. 1994;
McTainsh 1999; Breuning-Madsen and Awadzi 2005). These tend to be cheap,
simple and robust, but they are prone to contamination by bird excrement
and the like; and different devices have differing capture efficiencies.
One tool that has become increasingly important in recent years for iden-
tifying, tracking and analysing large-scale dust events is remote sensing
(Fig. 1.4). A range of different sensors has been used either singly or in com-
bination (Table 1.5). These techniques give a global picture of dust storm
activity, provide information on areas for which there are no meteorological
station data, allow the tracking of individual dust plumes, enable sources of
10 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Dust

Fig. 1.4. A major dust storm in the Lut Desert east of Bam in Iran. The image was acquired by
the crew of the International Space Station on 15 February 2004 (Earth Observatory, NASA)

dust to be precisely located and give information on such parameters as the


optical thickness and altitude of dust.
Signals measured by satellite-based sensors generally include contribu-
tions from both the earth’s surface and the intervening atmosphere, but a
number of methods have been developed to identify that signal related to the
radiative effect of atmospheric aerosols. These techniques include single- and
multiple-channel reflectance, contrast reduction and polarization, multi-
angle reflectance and thermal infrared emission (for a comprehensive review,
see King et al. 1999). All of these approaches have their own drawbacks.
Methods based on visible and infrared wavelengths, such as the Advanced
Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) sensor carried on the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA’s) polar-orbiting and
Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES), are adversely
affected by clouds and water vapour and their use is restricted to either ocean
or land surfaces. SeaWiFS (sea-viewing wide field of view sensor) is useful for
detecting large plumes moving over the oceans but has difficulty detecting
small and short-lived dust events over desert areas, due to their high radiance.
Particular use has been made of the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer
(TOMS) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS).
TOMS can detect UV-absorbing aerosols in the atmosphere, a method that
does not suffer from the limitation of visible-wavelength techniques such as
AVHRR because the UV surface reflectivity is low and almost constant over
The Nature and Importance of Dust Storms 11

Table 1.5. Examples of the use of remote sensing in the study of dust storms and dust aerosols

Sensor/satellite References

LIDAR Karyampudi et al. (1999), Chazette et al. (2001), Gobbi et al.


(2002), Pisani et al. (2005)
METEOSAT Legrand et al. (1994), Brooks (1999), Karyampudi et al.
(1999), Brooks and Legrand (2000), Chazette et al. (2001),
Chiapello and Moulin (2002), Leon and Legrand (2003)
MODIS: moderate resolution Ichoku et al. (2004), Koren and Kaufman (2004), Jeong
imaging spectroradiometer et al. (2005), Kaufman et al. (2005)
MISR: multi-angle imaging Zhang and Christopher (2003), Christopher et al. (2004)
spectrometer
TOMS: total ozone mapping Alpert et al. (2000), Alpert and Ganor (2001), Chiapello
spectrometer and Moulin (2002), Colarco et al. (2002), Ginoux and Torres
(2003), Barkan et al. (2004), Mahowald and Dufresne
(2004), Moulin and Chiapello (2004), Kubilay et al. (2005)
GOME: global ozone Guzzi et al. (2001), De Graaf et al. (2005)
monitoring experiment
AVHRR: advanced very Husar et al. (1997), Cakmur et al. (2001)
high resolution radiometer
AIRS: aqua advanced Pierangelo et al. (2004)
infrared radiation sounder
VISSR: visible and spin scan Iino et al. (2004)
radiometer from fifth Japanese
geostationary meteorological
satellite (GMS-5)
TMI: tropical rainfall El-Askary et al. (2003)
measuring mission (TRMM)
microwave imager

both land and water. The TOMS UV spectral contrast data are, however,
contaminated to a small degree by clouds and also suffer from an inability
fully to detect aerosols within roughly 1–2 km above the surface (Mahowald
and Dufresne 2004; Kubilay et al. 2005). Various recent studies have
attempted to compare the results of different sensors with respect to measur-
ing such parameters as aerosol optical thickness (AOT) or the Absorbing
Aerosol Index (AAI; e.g. De Graaf et al. 2005; Jeong et al. 2005).
2 Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition

2.1 Introduction

Desert dust movement occurs in three phases: the entrainment or emission of


material from the ground surface, its transport through the atmosphere and
its deposition. These stages of wind erosion form the basis of this chapter,
following an appraisal of the physical processes responsible for the formation
of dust-sized particles and the geomorphological environments from which
deflation typically occurs.

2.2 The Origin of Desert Dust Particles

Not all authorities agree on the upper grain-size limit for dust particles.
Bagnold (1941) defines such particles as having diameters of less than 0.08 mm
(80 µm), but many other workers prefer to define them according to the
silt/sand boundary (i.e. less than 62.5 µm). Below this cut-off, fine particles
are commonly categorised into those of silt and clay sizes, with grain diame-
ters of 4.0–62.5 µm and <4.0 µm respectively (Wentworth 1922).
Whereas inorganic clay-size particles are generally agreed to be derived
largely from chemical weathering, the processes responsible for silt forma-
tion in the desert environment remain a matter for debate. As Pye (1987)
pointed out, many mechanisms of silt formation have been formulated but
no clear picture regarding their relative importance has yet emerged. One
major hypothesis is that silt can be formed by glacial grinding. This is an
attractive theory to explain the great expanses of loess that occur on the
margins of the former great Pleistocene ice caps (Smalley 1966; Smalley and
Vita-Finzi 1968). Abrasion (sometimes called corrasion) during fluvial and
aeolian transport may also produce silt. For example, numerous laboratory
experiments have shown that abrasion of dune sand releases fines by spalling,
chipping and breakage of particles and by the removal of grain surface coat-
ings (Bullard et al. 2004; Bullard and White 2005). Moreover, many surfaces
in both desert and polar regions show clear evidence of wind abrasion at a
variety of spatial scales. In the latter case, some of the abrasion is achieved by
driven snow, though snow abrasion is less efficient than that by quartz grain
14 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

impacts. The greater kinetic energy of windblown sand compared to water


transported sand explains the greater abrasion achieved by wind transport
(Kuenen 1960).
Also of potential importance to silt formation are various types of weath-
ering, including frost action, salt attack, thermal fatigue weathering and
chemical weathering (see, for example, Goudie et al. 1979; Nahon and
Trompette 1982; Smith et al. 2002). For instance, deeply weathered granitoid
rocks may contain a quite high silt percentage – up to 37.7% in eastern
Australia (Wright 2002). The role of salt weathering may also be important in
producing what is often termed ‘rock flour’. Goudie et al. (1979) designed an
experiment to test whether silt-sized debris could be produced by salt weath-
ering of aeolian dune sand, and found that it could. Subsequently other suc-
cessful experimental simulations of salt attack on sands and on rocks were
undertaken by Pye and Sperling (1983), Fahey (1985), Smith et al. (1987) and
Goudie and Viles (1995). In addition, samples of salt-weathered rock col-
lected in the field have shown that appreciable quantities of silt-sized mate-
rial are produced (Goudie and Day 1980; Mottershead and Pye 1994).
Although the relative dominance of these mechanisms is difficult to assess,
the important point to make is that silt can be produced in many ways, either
singly, or more likely, in combination. Moreover, such mechanisms allow silt
production in many types of environment, whether glacial, periglacial, arid
or humid tropical (Wright 2001a; Smith et al. 2002). In addition, complex
pathways of silt production and transport may be involved (Wright 2001b;
Fig. 2.1). As Smith et al. (2002) remark:
“Weathering mechanisms coupled with periods of sediment reworking
and associated silt production by glacial, fluvial and aeolian systems may
provide a feasible explanation for the provenance of a significant majority of
total global quartz silt. In addition to releasing silt-size particles directly,
weathering may release considerable quantities of partially flawed sand
grains. These flaws may then be readily exploited during subsequent periods
of transport within glacial, fluvial or aeolian systems”.
Some dust may be derived from erosion of organic materials (such as
diatomite) which were deposited in pluvial lakes that have now become des-
iccated. Diatomite is a very light substance that, if abraded, produces fine,
easily carried debris. This has been proposed as a major dust source in the
Bodélé Depression in the Central Sahara (Giles 2005).
Other dust may be provided by the winnowing of fines from reactivated
sand dunes. Dunes that have long been stable, having been produced under
earlier conditions of greater aridity in, say, the Late Pleistocene, contain silt
and clay contents in reasonably substantial quantities. Such fines may be the
result of penecontemporaneous deposition of clay aggregates within the
dunes as they were formed, but also important are post-depositional weath-
ering and accretion of dust. Data from Kordofan (Sudan), north-west India,
Zimbabwe, Niger and north-west Australia suggest that silt and clay contents
of stabilized dunes can range from 7.8% to 32.0% (Goudie et al. 1993, Table 1).
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 15

a)

Preglacial weathering Glacial erosion : Glacial grinding,


and cold weathering reworking pre-weathered debris,
mechanisms direct release of silt from fine
grained bedrock

Production of unsorted
mixed size sediments

Transport by fluvial, Transport by glacial


fluvioglacial or slope processes
processes

Further comminution and


particle size reduction

Deposition of mixed
sediment size material

Further transport by fluvial/


fluvioglacial processes

Comminution and particle


size reduction

Deposition in outwash
plains/ floodplains

Aeolian deflation

Aeolian abrasion and


particle size reduction

Sand grains transported Medium to coarse silt Fine silt and clay
in saltation transported for short transported for long
distances in suspension distances in suspension

Formation of dunes Deposition to contribute to Widely dispersed


and coversands LOESS deposits deposition

Fig. 2.1. a) Events in the formation of loess deposits – a hypothetical pathway to explain the
formation of loess deposits associated with cold environments. Modified after Wright (2001b,
Fig. 3)
16 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

b)
Rock debris produced by
weathering mechanisms

Fluvial transport of Weathered debris


weathered debris / slope transported by slope
deposits processes

Fluvial comminution and


particle size reduction
Aeolian deflation of
Deposition on alluvial weathered debris, slope
fan / wadi / chott deposits

Further weathering and


particle size reduction

Further fluvial transport


and particle size reduction

Fluvial deposition

Aeolian deflation of
fluvial sediments

Aeolian abrasion and


particle size reduction

Sand grains transported Medium to coarse silt Fine silt and clay
in saltation transported for short transported for long
distances in suspension distances in suspension

Formation of dune Deposition to contribute Widely dispersed


systems to LOESS deposits deposition

Fig. 2.1. (Continued) b) Events in the formation of loess deposits – a hypothetical pathway to
explain the formation of loess deposits associated with hot environments. Modified after
Wright (2001b, Fig. 4)

Thus, if such dunes become mobile as a result of climate or land-cover


changes, they can release silt and clay for dust storm generation.
Given that there are so many mechanisms to produce silt-sized material
(Smalley et al. 2005), it is not surprising that various geomorphological envi-
ronments, in addition to old dunes, contain silt-sized material that is available
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 17

Mountain front
Mountains
Zone of salt
weathering
Outwash
Glacier
Fan
Till
Zone of seasonal
desiccation
Playa

Loess Deflation
depression
insusceptible
shale

Erg
Major river

Alluvial plain

Fig. 2.2. A model of geomorphological environments from which substantial deflation occurs

for deflation. These include situations like outwash and alluvial fans, playa
basins, weathered or unconsolidated rock exposures and areas of previously
deposited loess (Fig. 2.2). Coudé-Gaussen (1984), whose work is largely based
on the Sahara, has attempted to categorise desert surfaces that are highly
favourable for producing dust:
– Dried-out salt lakes of internal drainage, the surface of which is disrupted
and rendered mobile by salt crystallization
– Wadi sediments containing silt and the floodplains of great rivers, like the
Niger
– Powdery areas ( fech-fech) derived from ancient lake muds or on certain
argillaceous rocks
– Desert clay soils (takyrs) with polygonal desiccation cracks
– Outcrops of rocks like unconsolidated Neogene fine-grained sediments

2.3 Threshold Velocities and Environments of Deflation

The threshold velocity is the minimum wind speed required to initiate defla-
tion of surface sediments. At this velocity, the aerodynamic drag on the sur-
face is enough to dislodge particles from the ground surface, to set them in
motion and to lift them into the atmospheric boundary layer. The threshold
18 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

velocity depends on a number of surface properties (see Section 2.4 below).


The susceptibility of surfaces to deflation varies greatly, but very few sound
empirical data are available to ascertain the critical threshold velocities for
the input of soil particles into the air. A major attempt to rectify this problem
was made by Gillette et al. (1980), employing a specially developed portable
wind tunnel which permits the estimation of minimum threshold velocities
under field conditions. They found that the velocities increase with different
types of soil in the following sequence: disturbed soils, sand dunes, alluvial
and aeolian sand deposits, disturbed playa soils, skirts of playas, playa cen-
ters, desert pavements. Table 2.1 (derived from Brazel 1991) indicates the
threshold velocities for different types of surface in the American south-west.
They range, according to material type, from 5.1 m s−1 to >16.0 m s−1.
In addition, by studying the relationship between the occurrence of dust
events and the wind speeds recorded by anemometers at meteorological sta-
tions, it is possible to see whether there is a characteristic wind speed at which
dust is mobilized. In the Sahara, most dust-raising events are associated with
winds between 6.5 m s−1 and 13.5 m s−1, with a mean for all dust-raising events
of 10.5 m s−1 (Helgren and Prospero 1987). Callot et al. (2000) found thresh-
old values for the Sahara that ranged over 6.5–20.0 m s−1, while for the Bodélé
Depression in the central Sahara, Koren and Kaufman (2004) suggest a
minimum threshold velocity of 10–11 m s−1, with most of the values under
14 m s−1. Lee et al. (1993) give an overall threshold value for the south High
Plains of the United States of 6 m s−1, while in China the threshold wind speed

Table 2.1. Wind threshold values for type surfaces in the United States South-West (after
Clements et al. 1963; Nickling and Gillies 1989). From Brazel (1991)

Surface type Threshold speed (m s−1)

Mine tailings 5.1


River channel 6.7
Abandoned land 7.8
Desert pavement, partly formed 8.0
Disturbed desert 8.1
Alluvial fan, loose 9.0
Dry wash 10.0
Desert flat, partly vegetated 11.0
Scrub desert 11.3
Playa (dry lake), undisturbed 15.0
Agriculture 15.6
Alluvial fan, crusted 16.0
Desert pavement, mature >16.0
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 19

to generate a dust storm is generally considered to be between 6.5 m s−1 and


8.0 m s−1 (Kurosaki and Mikami 2005; Yabuki et al. 2005), though the values
vary between different areas, with the Taklimakan Desert having values of
6–8 m s−1 and the Gobi Desert having values of 11–20 m s−1 (Laurent et al. 2005).

2.4 Wind Erosion of Soil and Other Surface Materials

Wind erosion occurs when the shear stress exerted on the surface by the wind
exceeds the ability of the surface material to resist detachment and transport.
Important controls of the susceptibility of soils to erosion include inherent
properties of the soils themselves, including their grain-size characteristics,
surface roughness and aggregate stability. The former includes clay content,
which promotes cohesion, while the latter is greatly affected by soil organic
content. It has long been recognized (Bagnold 1941; Chepil 1945) that the
threshold velocity for particle movement increases as grain size increases,
due to the effects of gravity, but that it also increases for the smallest parti-
cles, due to particle cohesion. The balance of these two effects produces an
optimum particle size (ca. 60–80 µm) for which the threshold friction veloc-
ity is at a minimum. Land surface roughness is also a key factor. On the one
hand, the threshold velocity required to initiate dust emission is increased in
areas with higher surface roughness. On the other hand, the drag coefficient
is also increased, leading to higher wind friction and thus to possibly higher
dust emissions (Prigent et al. 2005).
Other important controls on a soil’s erodibility include the degree of cover
by non-erodible elements, such as rocks and vegetation (e.g. Merrill et al.
1999), and the moisture content, which affects the adhesive properties of the
soil (Ravi et al. 2004). Snow cover (Kurosaki and Mikami 2004) will reduce
wind erosion during winter months, though blowing snow can also break
down soil aggregates. Seasonal freeze–thaw action is another way in which
aggregate stability can be reduced (Bullock et al. 2001). Any surface crusts
will also control rates of soil erosion (Singer and Shainberg 2004). Such crusts
can be physical (e.g. clay skins, salt, lag gravels) or organic crusts composed
of cyanobacteria, green algae, lichens and mosses. The importance of biolog-
ical soil crusts for stabilizing arid zone soils and protecting them from wind
erosion is becoming increasingly obvious (Belnap and Gillette 1998) and fila-
mentous cyanobacteria mats are especially effective against wind attack
(McKenna Neuman et al. 1996), partly because of their elasticity (Langston
and McKenna Neuman 2005). However, these crusts are very susceptible to
anthropogenic disturbance (Belnap and Gillette 1997). Table 2.2 illustrates
the nature and direction of the effects on wind erosion of a range of soils,
vegetation and landform conditions.
Numerous models have now been developed to predict wind erosion, with
many of them developed from the prolific and influential pioneer work of
20 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 2.2. Some key physical factors influencing wind erosion. Symbols in parentheses: + wind
erosion becomes weaker; – erosion becomes greater as factor increases. Modified from Shi et al.
(2004)

Climate Soil Vegetation Landform

Wind speed (−) Soil type Type Surface roughness


Wind direction Particle composition Coverage (+) Slope (+)
Turbulence (−) Soil structure Ridge
Precipitation (+) Organic matter (+)
Evaporation (−) Calcium carbonate (+)
Air temperature (+) Bulk density
Air pressure (−) Soil aggregation (+)
Freeze–thaw action (+) Soil water (+)

Chepil and his co-workers (e.g. Chepil et al. 1962; Woodruff and Siddoway
1965). The Chepil wind erosion equation (WEQ) is:
E = f (I, C, K, L, V )
where E is the amount of wind erosion, I is a soil erodibility index, C is a local
wind erosion climatic factor, K is a measure of local surface roughness, L is
the maximum unsheltered distance across a field along the prevailing direc-
tion of wind erosion and V is the quantity of vegetation cover.
Subsequent models for predicting wind erosion include the Revised wind
erosion equation (RWEQ) and the Wind erosion prediction system (WEPS;
Visser et al. 2005).
Chepil and colleagues also devised a climatic index of wind erosion:
C = 100 U 3/(P − E)2
where U is the average annual wind velocity at a standard height (10 m), and
P – E is the effective precipitation index developed by Thornthwaite (1948).
This index assumes that wind erosion intensity varies with the cube of the
wind velocity and the soil moisture content. McTainsh et al. (1990) also used
a climatic index of potential wind erosion (Ew):
Ew = W (P − E)−2
where W is the mean annual wind run (an indirect measure of wind velocity).
They found that this simple index accounted for around two-thirds of the
variance in dust storm activity in eastern Australia.
Some success has been gained by comparing dust emissions observed by
satellite with predicted emissions based on analysis of wind velocities and the
threshold conditions for dust emissions from mapped surface material types
(e.g. Marticorena et al. 1999; Callot et al. 2000). Details of the Dust production
model (DPM; developed by the LISA laboratory; University of Paris) which
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 21

has two key parameters – aggregate size distribution and surface roughness –
are provided by Lasserre et al. (2005) in the context of China.
Since Bagnold’s classic work (Bagnold 1941), three modes of aeolian parti-
cle motion have been recognized: the rolling motion of the largest particles
(creep), the hopping motion of particles in the size range ca. 50–500 µm
(saltation) and the wafting of the smallest particles under the action of tur-
bulent diffusion (suspension). The fraction undergoing suspension is dust,
though saltation is a primary mechanism for the uplift of dust from the sur-
face through a process called ‘saltation bombardment’ (Grini et al. 2002;
Rampach and Lu 2004). Sand grains saltating over a surface of loose particles
excavate ovoid-shaped micro-craters and a proportion of the material dis-
placed from them is ejected into the flow. Saltation bombardment also breaks
down aggregates.
There is some information to suggest that susceptible surfaces under
appropriate climatic conditions can be deflated rather quickly. For example,
the incision of wind-fluted bedforms (yardangs) into Saharan lake deposits
that are of Neolithic pluvial age gives rates of deflation that are normally
between 0.4 mm and 4.0 mm per year (Cooke et al. 1993). In the Kharga Oasis
of Egypt (Fig. 2.3), yardangs almost 9 m high have developed in swamp
deposits that were accumulating until ca. 4000 years ago, implying Late
Holocene deflation of around 2000 mm ka−1 (Goudie et al. 1999). Boyé et al
(1978) suggested that the Sebkha Mellala (Algeria) had been deflated at a rate
of about 410 mm ka−1, while Riser (1985), working in the Araouane Basin of

Fig. 2.3. A deflated yardang in the Western Desert of Egypt, which indicates the degree of defla-
tion that has occurred in Holocene times (from ASG)
22 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Mali, found a rate of 92 mm ka−1. The Lop Nor yardangs in Central Asia may
have been eroded since the fourth century AD, indicating a rate of wind ero-
sion as high as 20 000 mm ka−1 (McCauley et al. 1977). Alluvium can also be
deflated rapidly. In the Biskra region of Algeria, at least 1–4 m of deflation has
occurred in less than 2000 years (Williams 1970, p. 61).
In general terms, it can be anticipated that soil surfaces disturbed by human
activities may be especially susceptible to wind erosion and dust generation.
Some studies have estimated that up to 50% of the current atmospheric dust
load originates from anthropogenically disturbed surfaces (see, for example,
Tegen and Fung 1995). However, a more recent study (Tegen et al. 2004) has
suggested this may be an over-estimate and that dust from agricultural areas
contributes <10% to the global dust load. Likewise, studies of dust over North
Africa using the Infra-red difference dust index (IDDI) derived from
METEOSAT (Brooks and Legrand 2000) suggest that there is little or no evi-
dence that dust production is associated with widespread land degradation.
Humans are responsible, however, in a variety of ways for generating ‘fugitive
dust’, dust which escapes beyond the property line on which the source is
located. Such dust comes from sources such as dirt roads, coal tips, mining
sites, construction sites, stone crushers and sand- or gravel-processing plants.

2.5 Synoptic Meteorological Conditions Leading


to Dust Events

Dust-raising events may occur under a wide variety of meteorological condi-


tions within most global regions experiencing dust storms. However, the
most frequent and severe dust storms typically occur under only one of a
few synoptic meteorological conditions prevailing over any selected region.
A number of dust-generating weather systems have been identified. By far the
most important is the passage of low-pressure fronts with intense baroclinal
gradients that are accompanied by very high velocity winds entraining and
carrying dust. Surface cyclones themselves may sweep out gyres of dust, if
circulation around the low pressure is sufficiently intense. In regions of mon-
soonal airflow, dust may be funneled along the convergence zone between
cold air masses associated with regions of low pressure and hot, tropical anti-
cyclonic air masses. More localized dust storms occur when katabatic winds
(literally winds that blow downhill), such as the Berg winds of Namibia,
deflate alluvial plains and fans adjacent to regions with considerable topo-
graphic relief. Convective plumes and vortices are active causes of dust-
raising, and may contribute to about 35% of the global budget of mineral dust
(Koch and Renno 2005).
At a local scale, dust devils and haboobs are significant for dust-raising
and transport. Dust devils are highly localized rotating updrafts of buoyant
air that develop over strongly heated surfaces (Fig. 2.4). Typical horizontal
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 23

Fig. 2.4. A large dust devil in Arizona (Courtesy of NASA)

velocities are about 10 m s−1, their diameters are tens of metres and normally
they persist for a matter of minutes (Warner 2004). They are visible because
the horizontal wind speeds are sufficient to entrain surface dust and because the
main upward motion in the outside of the vortex, combined with turbulence,
causes the dust to rise. Quantitative field measurements have shown that the
wind shears generated by dust devils are sufficient to lift all sizes of aeolian
particles (Balme et al. 2003a). Haboobs, the name of which comes from the
Arabic habb, meaning ‘wind’ or ‘to blow’, are convection-generated dust
storms associated with thunderstorm activity. The colder outflow propagat-
ing ahead of a mature thunderstorm has high velocities (as large as 50 m s−1)
and a large vertical shear, which together may generate a dusty gust front
24 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

(Fig. 2.5). They are common, for example, in Sudan and Arizona. The dense
wall of dust that is generated typically reaches a height of ca. 1000 m above
the ground and the duration of the event tends to be a few hours.
We will now consider dust-raising conditions in the context of the main
source regions, starting with the Southern Hemisphere. In Australia, dust
storms generally follow the passage of strong low-pressure fronts tracking
eastward across the south-eastern portion of the continent (Loewe 1943). The
spectacular Melbourne dust storm of 1983 was generated by a non-precipitat-
ing cold front, ahead of which were extremely hot, low-level northerly winds.
The frontal line represented a strong demarcation between a hot, north-west
flow preceding the front and a west-south-west cooler flow following it (Shao
2000). Dust storms in February 2000, which transported dust from the Eyre
Peninsula and New South Wales to New Zealand, were associated with a well
developed summertime trough over the western half of Australia, preceded by
a westerly trough-line associated with a surface level cold front and parent
depression in the Southern Ocean. The trough-line marked the boundary
between hot and dry pre-trough north-westerly airflow and colder westerly
winds. The passage of such weather systems (McGowan et al. 2005) is associ-
ated with strong, turbulent surface winds, but with limited precipitation.
During the summer monsoon, the convergence zone between high- and low-
pressure systems may serve to channel dust from the interior of the Simpson
Desert across Alice Springs and out over the Indian Ocean. Such a conver-
gence may occur simultaneously with the movement of a low-pressure front

6
Cumulonimbus
Height (km)

clouds Dust

4
Ou
tflo
w boundary
2 Head
Wake
se

Co
ol out
No

flow Warm
Strong wind air
0

Gust front

Fig. 2.5. Cross-section schematic of a haboob caused by the cool outflow from a thunderstorm,
with the leading edge that is propagating ahead of the storm called an outflow boundary. The
strong, gusty winds that prevail at the boundary are defined as a gust front. The leading edge of
the cool air is called the nose and the upward protruding part of the feature is referred to as the
head. Behind the roll in the windfield at the leading edge is a turbulent wake. The rapidly mov-
ing cool air and the gustiness at the gust front raise dust (shaded) high into the atmosphere.
Modified after Warner (2004, Fig. 16.10)
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 25

across south-eastern Australia (Sprigg 1982). In addition, tropical cyclones


which cross the northern coastline of Australia may generate dust as they
track inland towards the dry interior (as with Hurricane Cecile in March 1984).
In New Zealand, dust transport is associated with a range of conditions which
include föhn winds, the passage of non-precipitating cold fronts and post-
frontal south-westerlies (Marx and McGowan 2005).
In southern Africa, dust movement in Namibia tends to be caused by the
Berg winds, a warm, dry, off-plateau, partially katabatic phenomenon. They
occur primarily in winter, when a strong anticyclone occupies the interior
and produces a strong outflow across the rim of the Great Escarpment down
to the coastal plain. On the Andean Altiplano of Chile, north-western
Argentina and southern Bolivia, dust is raised from salars and alluvial fans by
superimposed westerlies across the region, with localized deflation accentu-
ated by airflow around peaks. Dust is raised in the valleys of the Argentine
foothills, especially in winter, by katabatic airflows known as Zonda. On the
loessic plains of the Pampas (Wolcken 1951), the dust-raising winds are
called the Pampero. They are caused by a low situated above Patagonia or the
Falkland islands. Coming from the South Pacific, the cold front of this east-
ward-moving depression gives up much of its moisture on the western flanks
of the Andes and then, when it meets the warm, humid air over the
Argentinian plains, instability is created, which in turn creates a squall line of
supercell thunderstorms.
When we turn to the Northern Hemisphere, in the mountainous regions of
western North America, local katabatic winds generate dust storms in
California (Santa Ana winds; Bowden et al. 1974) and along the Colorado
Rocky Mountain Front. Summer haboobs during the ‘Arizona Monsoon’ are
the primary dust-raising meteorological event in Arizona (Nickling and
Brazel 1984; Brazel 1991) and may occasionally occur in the southern High
Plains. Indeed, convective plumes and vortices lift large quantities of desert
dust in the south-west United States (Koch and Renno 2005). In addition,
low-pressure fronts tracking eastward may transport aeolian materials from
agricultural regions of Texas and New Mexico into the Atlantic Ocean off the
south-eastern coast (Henz and Woiceshyn 1980; McCauley et al. 1981).
Surface cyclones crossing Texas may also raise dust palls. In addition, about
20% of the dust entrainment into the atmosphere over this region is associ-
ated with easterly wave activity.
In Morocco, Algeria and Libya, intense depressions may sweep bands of
dust across the eastern Atlantic and central Mediterranean. Low-pressure
fronts tracking across the North African coast carry dense dust palls to the
Middle East (Yaalon and Ganor 1979). In Egypt, dust storms are associated
with the passage of depressions and fronts tracking from western North
Africa and across the Mediterranean (Banoub 1970). The convergence asso-
ciated with the summer monsoon over eastern Africa channels the dust from
Ethiopia, Somalia and northern Kenya across the Arabian Sea to the region
north of Karachi. Farther north, in Sudan, a similar convergence creates dust
26 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

storms crossing the Red Sea into Saudi Arabia, while the classic haboob of the
Khartoum area remains the primary dust-moving system (Freeman 1952).
By far the most important global dust transport occurs with the passage of
low-pressure fronts across the southern Sahara and Sahel. These depressions
tend to track along a southerly course during the northern hemisphere win-
ter, with more zonal easterly transport occurring during summer months.
Throughout the year, trans-Atlantic export of dust from the Sahara may
occur (Prospero and Nees 1977; Prospero et al. 1981), much of it within a well
defined layer that extends up to altitudes of 5–7 km and is called the Saharan
Air Layer (Prospero 1981). The role of easterly waves in dust entrainment and
transport over north-western Africa is discussed by Jones et al. (2003, 2004).
They argue that around 20% of the dust entrainment into the atmosphere
over North Africa is associated with easterly wave activity.
The major meteorological conditions promoting dust storms in the Middle
East are depressions moving eastwards from the Mediterranean across
Turkey (Kubilay et al. 2005), the Levant (Michaelides et al. 1999) and north-
ern Iraq. The shamal winds lifting dust from Iraq, Iran and adjacent regions
(Fig. 2.6) are usually associated with low pressure anchored over southern
Iran that forms a strong baroclinal gradient with a semi-permanent anticy-
clone over northern Saudi Arabia. The convergence zone between the two
pressure systems induces high-velocity, turbulent winds for regional dust
transport during a time of intense convection over the Tigris–Euphrates
floodplain due to very high surface temperatures (Membery 1983).
Moving across Eurasia to the arid steppes and interior deserts of the for-
mer Soviet Union, low-pressure fronts following an easterly trajectory are
again the primary agents of long-distance transport. Katabatic air flow may
be locally important, such as the Garmsil wind that blows down the northern-
facing slopes of Kopetdag, raising dust in Turkmenistan (Nalivkin 1983).
Crossing the Hindu Kush and Karakoram Ranges, katabatic winds deflate the
plains of the Indus and its tributaries and the Quaternary lakebeds and allu-
vial fans of Afghanistan and eastern Iran. These point-source dust storms can
be characterized by extremely high-velocity surface winds and dense palls
(Middleton 1986a). Within the Thar Desert of India and Pakistan, dust is
transported by the westerly Loo wind in spring, the result of a strong pressure
gradient brought about by a deepening of the seasonal trough, and haboobs,
known locally as andhi (Joseph et al. 1980). Middleton and Chaudhary (1988)
describe the dust storm of May 1986 in Karachi, which was generated by a
thunderstorm associated with the passage of a monsoon depression.
Moving from Eurasia to China, low-pressure fronts transport dust aerosols
over vast areas (Iino et al. 2004) and material may be carried in the upper
westerlies to the Alaskan Arctic (Rahn et al. 1981) and into the Pacific Basin
(Ing 1972). Local storms produced by katabatic winds may occur in the Tarim
and Quaidam Basins, while upper-level westerly airflow probably generates
point-source dust storms over the +4000 m Tibetan Plateau. Haboobs are
known to occur in the Gobi Desert and are probably generated in the Kansu
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 27

Iraq

Iran

Kuwait

100 km

Fig. 2.6. North-westerly ‘shamal’ driven dust plumes over the head of the Arabian Gulf,
11 September 2004 (Seawifs)

region. The pervasive springtime dust events in China are largely driven by
cold frontal systems (Aoki et al. 2005; Takemi and Seino 2005) connected
with an upper-atmospheric trough located over Siberia and the north-eastern
part of China, known as the East-Asian trough (Pye and Zhou 1989). This is
associated with frequent and cold outbreaks from the north-west (Shao
2000). In Mongolia and northern China, the area of maximum dust storm
generation is also associated with a zone of maximum negative vorticity,
which induces a strong upward movement of air (Choi and Choi 2005).

2.6 Long-Range Transport

Most atmospheric dust falls back to earth a short time after entrainment and
not far from its source, but dust storms are capable of transporting sediment
over enormous distances, in many cases over some thousands of kilometres
(Table 2.3). Dust from the Sahara is transported westwards to Amazonia, the
28 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 2.3. Examples of long-distance dust transport

Approximate
Distance (km) Traced from Traced to Reference

6500 Sahara Barbados Delany et al. (1967)


8000 Sahara Miami Prospero (1981)
>1000 Sahara Cape Verde Islands Jaenicke and Schütz (1978)
2000 Sahara Gulf of Guinea Schütz (1980)
6500 Sahara French Guiana Prospero et al. (1981)
4000 Sahara Berlin MWR (1980)
7000 Sahara Illinois Gatz and Prospero (1996)
4000 Sahara Hungary Borbérly-Kiss et al. (2004)
7000 Sahara Fennoscandia Franzen et al. (1994)
10 000 Sahara China Tanaka et al. (2005)
750 Interior Morocco Gibraltar Ward (1950)
4000 Western Sahara Cyprus Gordon and Murray (1964)
2000 Libya and Egypt Negev, Israel Yaalon and Ganor (1975)
3500 Algeria Denmark and USSR VDL (1902)
700 Mkgadikdadi Johannesburg Resane et al. (2004)
10 000 Central Asia Barrow, Alaska Rahn et al. (1977), Andrews
et al. (2003)
11 000 Central Asia Tropical North Turekian and Cochran (1981),
Pacific (Eniwetok Duce et al. (1980)
and Hawaii)
2000 West Kazakhstan Baltic Sea Hongisto and Sofiev (2004)
4000 China Japan Willis et al. (1980)
4000 China Pacific Ocean Ing (1972)
(2500 km from coast)
>16 000 China USA and Canada Husar et al. (2001), McKendry
et al. (2001)
>20 000 China French Alps Grousset et al. (2003)
>16 000 China Greenland Drab et al. (2002)
1500 Middle East Southern USSR Balakirev (1968)
3500 Caucasus Rumania, Bulgaria Lisitzin (1972)
and Czechoslovakia
3500 Australia New Zealand Kidson and Gregory (1930)
3500 Australia Singapore Durst (1935)
2500 Canadian prairies Illinois, USA Van Heuklon (1977)
2500 Nebraska and Washington, D.C. Hand (1934)
Dakotas
6000 Patagonia Antarctica Smith et al. (2003)
>7000 USA Greenland Smith et al. (2003)
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 29

Caribbean (Delany et al. 1967; Prospero et al. 1970), Bermuda (Chester et al.
1971) and the United States (Junge 1958). In Texas, Saharan events with mod-
erate to high fine particulate contents occur on three to six days in the year,
tend to be concentrated between June and August, last for one to three days
and travel from their source in 10–14 days. Saharan dust also travels north-
wards to Europe, eastwards to the Middle East and even as far as China
(Tanaka et al. 2005). Dust from Central Asia and China is regularly trans-
ported to Korea, Japan (Fig. 2.7), Hong Kong, the Pacific Islands and North
America (Rahn et al. 1977; McKendry et al. 2001). Indeed, the frequency with
which Asian dust reaches North America has probably been greatly underes-
timated and “contradicts the episodic characterization derived from short-
term studies and anecdotal reports” (VanCuren and Cahill 2002). It has also
been identified in snow pits at Summit in Greenland (Drab et al. 2002). The
greatest distance desert dust particles have been found from their source is in
excess of 20 000 km: dust from China has been identified as reaching the
European Alps after being transported across the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans
in some 315 h (Grousset et al. 2003).
Dust from the United States has been recovered from ice cores in
Greenland and Patagonian dust from Antarctica (Smith et al. 2003). Material
from Australian deserts crosses the Tasman Sea to New Zealand (Kidson and

N China

Dust

Korea

Fig. 2.7. Dust cloud over the Sea of Japan, 17 March 2002 (Seawifs)
30 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Gregory 1930; Glaisby 1971; McGowan et al. 2000, 2005); and much dust from
the Sonoran and Baja California deserts enters the eastern Pacific (Bonatti
and Arrhenius 1965). Dust from the Caucasus settles in Romania, Bulgaria
and Czechslovakia (Lisitzin 1972). We will treat the question of long-range
transport in greater detail in Chapter 5.

2.7 Wet and Dry Deposition

The distance traveled by dust particles depends upon many factors, including
wind speed and turbulence, dust grain characteristics and their settling
velocities – the latter determined by the mass and shape of each particle.
Atmospheric dust settles to the Earth’s surface both through gravitational set-
tling (dry deposition) and because of wet deposition with precipitation. Wet
deposition can occur either below a cloud, when raindrops, snowflakes or hail-
stones scavenge dust as they fall, or within a cloud when dust particles are cap-
tured by water droplets and descend to earth when the precipitation falls. Wet
deposition can sometimes be manifested in the phenomenon of ‘blood rains’.
The relative importance of wet and dry deposition varies with the seasons,
with rainfall amounts and with location. Wet deposition can be measured
directly, but dry deposition is normally estimated by measuring aerosol dust
concentrations and settling velocities (Prospero 1996b). A range of different
methods is available, however, and these can give differing results (Torres-
Padrón et al. 2002).
In the Mediterranean basin, dry deposition appears to be dominant, espe-
cially in the summer months, when typically the dust concentrations are at a
maximum and rainfall amounts are low. The ratio of wet to dry deposition
there is typically below 0.2 and the average about 0.1. By way of contrast, in
the case of Asian dust deposition over the North Pacific, wet deposition
exceeds dry deposition by up to a factor of ten (Zhao et al. 2003), whereas
over interior China dry deposition dominates. Away from source, over Korea,
Taiwan and the East China Sea, wet deposition dominates. Ginoux et al.
(2004), using the Global ozone chemistry aerosol radiation and transport
(GOCART) model, calculated that wet deposition accounted for 20.1% of
total dust deposition over the North Atlantic, 10.0% over the South Atlantic,
33.3% over the North Pacific, 17.85% over the South Pacific, 22.56% over the
North Indian and 20.0% over the South Indian. Over the Sahara at 21.25˚ N,
wet deposition amounted to just 1.17%; and over the Sahel belt (<21.25˚ N) it
amounted to 10.17%. The analyses by Torres-Padrón et al. (2002) of dust dep-
osition in the Canary Islands, to the west of the Sahara, showed that the pro-
portion made up by wet deposition varied between 3.4% and 8.6%. As one
moves southwards to the belt more affected by the Intertropical Convergence
Zone and its associated higher rainfall, so the proportion that can be attrib-
uted to wet deposition climbs (Sarthou et al. 2003).
Dust Entrainment, Transport and Deposition 31

Over land, dust is often subject to dry deposition when particles in sus-
pension cross a boundary to terrain with a greater roughness. The presence
of vegetation is thought to be important for trapping dust, while rock frag-
ments also perform the same function, although such terrain probably
retains less than 20% of settled dust (Goosens 1995).

2.8 The ‘Giant’ Dust Particle Conundrum

Generally the bigger a dust particle, the sooner it will fall back to earth after
suspension; and the large majority of particles transported >100 km from
source are <20 µm in diameter, in accordance with conventional theories on
settling velocities (Gillette 1979). However, several workers have found sand-
sized particles (>62.5 µm), or so-called ‘giant’ dust particles, in samples col-
lected at considerable distances from source. ‘Giant’ Saharan dust particles
have been noted in several locations: over the Cape Verde Islands (Glaccum
and Prospero 1980), in Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands, in Corsica and
southern France (Coudé-Gaussen 1989) and in southern Britain (Middleton
et al. 2001). However, some similarly large particles have been recorded at
even greater distance from source. Dust from north-east Asian deserts has
been found >10 000 km out over the Pacific Ocean (Betzer et al. 1988).
Such large mineral grains are unexpected at such great distances from
source because of their high fall velocities. Their aeolian mode of transport is
undeniable (Betzer et al. 1988; Middleton et al. 2001) but these transport
distances cannot be explained using currently acknowledged atmospheric
transport mechanisms.
3 Environmental and Human Consequences

3.1 Introduction

As we saw briefly in the introduction to Chapter 1, the entrainment, transport


and deposition of desert dust interacts with many other processes and forms
in the physical world and has numerous implications for human societies.
This is why the study of dust is becoming so significant in the burgeoning
field of Earth System Science.

3.2 Marine Ecosystems

The movement of desert dust through the atmosphere is an important means


by which numerous elements reach the oceans (Vink and Measures 2001;
Fig. 3.1) and is thus of consequence for both their optical properties (Claustre
et al. 2002) and their biogeochemistry, though large uncertainties about its
effects remain (Jickells et al. 2005). Iron-rich dusts from the Gobi have been
shown to cause a big increase in marine phytoplankton in the North Pacific
(Bishop et al. 2002), while Saharan dust outbreaks provide an explanation for
blooms of Trichodesmium (a filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacterium) on
the West Florida Shelf (Lenes et al. 2001a, b). More generally Saharan dust, by
supplying iron and phosphorus, promotes nitrogen fixation and hence
oceanic primary productivity in the eastern tropical North Atlantic (Mills
et al. 2004), the South Atlantic (Sañudo-Wilhelmy and Flegal 2003) and the
Mediterranean. Guieu et al. (2002) suggest that Saharan dust outbreaks
account for 30–40% of the total atmospheric flux of phosphorus in the west-
ern Mediterranean. Much of the aluminium flux to the Arabian Sea comes
from dust deposition (Schüsssler et al. 2005) and Subba Row et al. (1999) have
shown that dust from Arabia provides essential micronutrients for phyto-
plankton in the Arabian Gulf. Algal blooms (red tides) may also be triggered
as a result of nutrient delivery by dust (for example, for the Arabian Sea, see
Banzon et al. 2004). Dimethylsulfide (DMS) released from phytoplankton
produces cloud condensation nuclei in the marine troposphere. This in turn
increases cloud albedo and so can promote cooling of the atmosphere
(Henriksson et al. 2000).
34 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Makran Coast

Dust

Oman

Fig. 3.1. A major dust event over the north-west Indian Ocean with the plume extending from
Qatar over the Oman peninsula to the Rann of Kutch in north-west India, 13 December 2003
(SeaWifs)

Interestingly, however, not every outbreak of dust appears to generate a


resulting increase in phytoplankton growth. Meskhidze et al. (2005) tracked
two events that carried dust from the Gobi out over the Pacific and noted
enhanced growth of phytoplankton after one event but not the other. They
concluded that the difference was a function of the fact that the iron in desert
dust is usually in a mineral form that has low solubility in seawater, hence it
is not readily available to phytoplankton. These authors found that the dust
event that did increase phytoplankton growth had been acidified by sulphur
dioxide pollution from industrial plants in China, which had converted the
iron to a more soluble form. Dust can also have an impact on ocean biogeo-
chemistry by accelerating or inducing carbonate sedimentation by adsorp-
tion, ballasting and possibly aggregation of marine particles such as detritus
or faecal pellets (Neuer et al. 2004).
Desert dust may contain living micro-organisms such as bacteria and
fungi (Prospero 2004). The transport of dust from North Africa to the
Caribbean has been implicated in the decline of corals in the region (Shinn
et al. 2000; Garrison et al. 2003; Weir-Brush et al. 2004). The soil fungus,
Aspergillus sydowii, which has been found in African dust samples, causes
Black Band disease in a type of soft coral called the Sea Fan; and there appears
Environmental and Human Consequences 35

to be a correlation between increased amounts of dust and the outbreak of


the disease. Other diseases that may be related to dust are White Plague and
White Pox. African dust containing pathogens could also be the cause of the
widespread demise of reef-building staghorn corals and the sea urchin
Diadema, which protects corals from being overgrown by algae. Dusts may
also contain chemical contaminants which may alter the resistance of coral
reef organisms to disease pathogens, affect reproduction or survival of larvae,
interfere with calcification, or act as toxins (Garrison et al. 2003).
Dust blown from deserts and which settles on the sea floor may also have
been involved in the formation of bedded sedimentary chert deposits (Cecil
2004). It may also have stimulated the growth of algal bioherms in the Late
Paleozoic (Soreghan and Soreghan 2002).

3.3 Aeolian Erosion of Soils

As we saw in the last chapter (Section 2.4), dust storms result from the
erosion and deflation of surface materials. This erosion has a number of con-
sequences that can be classified into on-site and off-site effects (Goossens
2003; Table 3.1). The on-site effects include the preferential removal of fine
particles. This leads to a gradual coarsening of topsoil, which is a cause of
serious degradation for several reasons: soil nutrients are largely held by the
fine particles and coarse sandy topsoil dries quickly.
More generally, extreme erosion can remove the entire surface soil, leaving
behind sterile bedrock; and it can also remove soil organic carbon (Yan et al.
2005) and key nutrients (Masri et al. 2003). The eroded material may cause
serious damage to crops and natural vegetation by abrasion (Woodruff 1956),
a problem that can be particularly critical for young shoots when fields are
poorly protected by vegetation cover. Young plants buried during dust storms
can be adversely affected by the weight of the material deposited, consequent
reduced photosynthesis and high soil temperatures during daytime. The result-
ing damage varies from a reduction in growth and development to a total
destruction of crops, forcing farmers to resow their fields (Michels et al. 1993).
Soil material lost from one area and subsequently deposited elsewhere may also
contain potentially deleterious chemical residues, pathogens, weed seeds and
the like. The off-site effects are dealt with more generally in this chapter.

3.4 Aeolian Contamination of Soils

The distinctive particle size and chemical constituents of dust, and the some-
times rapid rates at which dust accumulates, means that some soils owe much
of their character to dust inputs. The contribution that dust makes to soil
36

Table 3.1. Some on-site and off-site effects of wind erosion (from Goossens 2003, Table 1)

On-site effects Off-site effects

Soil degradation Short-term effects


1. Fine material may be removed by sorting, 1. Reduced visibility, affecting traffic safety
leaving a coarse lag 2. Deposition of sediment on roads in ditches, hedges, etc.
2. Evacuation of organic matter 3. Deposition of dust in houses, on cars, washing, etc
3. Evacuation of soil nutrients 4. Penetration of dust in machinery
4. Degrading water economy in the topsoil 5. Deposition of dust on agricultural and industrial crops ruining their quality
5. Degrading soil structure Long-term effects
6. Stimulated acidification of the topsoil 1. Penetration of dust and its constituents in the lungs, causing lung diseases and other
Abrasion damage respiratory problems
1. Direct abrasion of crop tissue, resulting in lower 2. Absorption of airborne particulates by plants and animals, leading to a general
yields and lower quality poisoning of the food chain
2. Infection of crops due to the penetration of pathogens 3. Deposition of heavy metals and other eroded chemical substances infecting the soil
3. Stimulated dust emission due to sand-blasting 4. Contamination of surface and groundwater via deposition of airborne particles
of the surface layer 5. Increased eutrophication of surface and groundwater
Other damage 6. Infection of remote uncontaminated areas, transforming these into
1. Infection, with pathogens or soil constituents, new potential sources
of adjacent uncontaminated fields and crops
2. Accumulation of low-quality wind-blown
deposits on fields
3. Building of sand accumulations at field borders,
covering of drainage ditches
4. Burial of plants
5. Loss of seeds and seedlings
A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton
Environmental and Human Consequences 37

profiles depends in part on topographic position. Goossens and Offer (2005)


found that, in the Negev Desert of Israel, the highest rates of long-term accu-
mulation occurred in valleys, especially those having a large catchment area,
and on flat surfaces in a plateau position. Less, but still significant accumula-
tion took place on concave windward slopes; and the lowest accumulation
rates were on convex windward and lee slopes.
Information on dust characteristics is given in Chapter 6. Yaalon and
Ganor (1973) introduced the term ‘aeolian contamination’ to describe the
process by which soil properties have been modified by aeolian increments.
They argued that the presence of significant amounts of quartz in soils
derived from quartz-free substrates (e.g. basalts or limestones) could be
indicative of such contamination. Since that time, numerous mineralogical
studies have been undertaken which support this view: see, for example,
Reheis (1990) on fan soils in Wyoming, Rex et al. (1969), Jackson et al. (1971)
and Kurtz et al. (2001) on the lava soils of Hawaii, Naruse et al. (1986) on var-
ious soil types from Japan, Herwitz et al. (1996) on clay-rich palaeosols in
Bermuda, Muhs et al. (1990) on the soils and bauxites of the Caribbbean, Vine
(1987) on the ferralitic soils of southern Nigeria, Tiessen et al. (1991) on fer-
ruginous soils in northen Ghana and Lee et al. (2004) on the soils of the South
Shetland Islands (Antarctica). The terra rossa soils in southern Europe and
the Levant (Yaalon and Ganor 1973; Mcleod 1980; Rapp 1984; Delgado et al.
2003) may also owe some of their features to aeolian accessions.
What is remarkable about such studies is their indication that soils at very
substantial distances from desert margins are affected by dust, and not just
those on the immediate desert margins (McTainsh 1984; Melis and Acworth
2001; Harper and Gilkes 2004). Thus, on a priori grounds, one might expect
the soils in a dry continent such as Australia to show many types of soil in
which aeolian deposition has played a role (Hesse and McTainsh 2003),
including the clay-rich parna, but it comes as a surprise that recent studies
have suggested that Saharan dust flux is crucial in Amazonia (Swap et al 1992;
Kaufman et al. 2005) and that inputs of phosphorus derived from desert dust
is vital for the maintenance of the long-term productivity of the rainforest
(Okin et al. 2004).
In more general terms, desert dust can supply soils with many essential
plant nutrients (e.g. Na, P, K, Mg), as well as substances that affect the avail-
ability of these nutrients (e.g. carbonates). This may stimulate the preferen-
tial growth of some plants over others, for example very saline dust may favour
halophytes at the expense of other types (Blank et al. 1999). An assessment of
the aeolian contribution to the fertility of soils on the Colorado Plateau
(USA), where as much as 20–30% of surficial deposits comprise aeolian dust,
found that the current plant community composition was heavily influenced
by dust-derived nutrients (Reynolds et al. 2001). Dust inputs to the Colorado
Plateau have enhanced the concentrations of P and Mo (both essential to nitro-
gen fixation) relative to bedrock values, P having doubled and Mo increased by
a factor of 5. After identifying the minerals in atmospheric dust from ten
38 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

widely scattered sites around the world, Syers et al. (1972) concluded that dust
accessions can rejuvenate strongly leached and highly weathered soils.
Feldspars, chlorites and micas brought in desert dust add K, Ca and Mg to
soils over the long term.
Aggradation also plays a role in soil carbon sequestration, since the accu-
mulation of dust buries the landscape and increases solum thickness. In the
process, new soil organic carbon (SOC) is accumulated in the freshly
deposited dust, while previously acquired SOC is buried below the shallow
depth at which it originally formed. Some of this may persist for hundreds to
thousands of years because of slow decomposition rates below the depth of
greatest biological activity, especially under dry climatic conditions (Jacobs
and Mason 2005).
Dust plays a fundamental role in the storage of water, particularly in rocky
deserts, because its storage capacity is much larger than that of most desert
lithosols.

3.5 Stone Pavements

Stone or desert pavements are a widespread surface type in arid regions and
consist of an armour of coarse particles that overlies a profile containing a
substantial content of fines (Fig. 3.2). Although the surface armour may be
produced by a number of mechanisms (such as deflational or sheet flood
removal of fines, or the vertical migration of coarse particles as a result of
frost action, wetting and drying), recent studies have suggested that dust
additions from above contribute substantially to their formation. Through
processes such as rain-splash and surface wash, dust continually accumulates
below coarse clasts, leading to the development of underlying vesicular hori-
zons. The clasts, according to this model, have never been buried as was once
assumed, but rise upward on a vertically accreting aeolian mantle (McFadden
et al. 1987; Wells et al. 1987; Anderson et al. 2002). Gravel surfaces certainly
appear to be effective at promoting dust accumulation (Li and Liu 2003;
Li et al. 2005).

3.6 Duricrusts

The input of aeolian dust has been suggested as important to the composition
and formation of several types of duricrust, a form of hardened surface crust
or nodular layer found in many dryland situations. Calcretes, calcium car-
bonate-rich crusts that occur in arid and semi-arid areas, can form in many
ways, but one of the key models is that they are produced by aeolian additions
of dust which are translocated downwards and then accumulate in the soil
Environmental and Human Consequences 39

Fig. 3.2. A stone pavement in the Farafra oasis of Western Egypt. The vehicle has broken the
dark armoured surface lag, exposing the finer grained, light-coloured material beneath. This
material is then susceptible to deflation (from ASG)

profile (the per descensum model; Goudie 1983). Dust can contain significant
amounts of calcium carbonate (Champollon 1965; Schlesinger 1985) and
mass balance and strontium isotope studies have demonstrated its role
(Chiquet et al. 2000) in Spain, in New Mexico (Capo and Chadwick 1999)
and in other parts of the south-west United States (Mayer et al. 1988; Naiman
et al. 2000).
Gypsum crusts (gypcretes) are another important component of surface
materials in arid regions and, as with calcretes, per descensum models have
received some support, although there are many possible mechanisms for
their formation. It is probable that gypsum, deflated as dust from saline
closed basins (pans, playas, etc.), accumulates down-wind and becomes con-
solidated into a pedogenic gypsum crust (Watson 1979), as demonstrated in
Tunisia (Coque 1962), Australia (Chen et al. 1991) and the Namib Desert
(Eckardt et al. 2001). The gypsum content of dust in southern Nevada and
California ranges from 0.1% to 7.0%, equivalent to a flux of 0.02–1.5 g m−2
year−1 (Reheis and Kihl 1995).
Examination of the micromorphology of bauxite in Western Australia,
together with mass balance equations, suggested to Brimhall et al. (1988) that
the accumulation of dust derived from chemically mature soils could explain
the development of such material. This finding challenged the prevalent view
that bauxite was formed by simple in situ residual enrichment by weathering.
40 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

The study attributed most of the bauxite’s Al and Fe, present in much higher
proportions than could have been derived from the weathering of local
bedrock, to additions of dust. Appropriately weathered surface materials
were found to be exposed in various locations to the east of the Darling Range
bauxite deposit investigated.
Brimhall et al. (1991) later applied the same approach to the study of a lat-
erite in Mali, West Africa, and concluded that its composition, like that of the
bauxite in Western Australia, had been determined by the nature of aeolian
inputs. The study found that the weathering of local rocks had contributed
only a minor fraction of the laterite’s Al, Fe, Si and Au. The bulk of these
elements was attributed to additions of strongly weathered material brought
to the site as airborne dust.

3.7 Salinization and Acidity

In addition to contributing to the formation of calcrete and gypcrete, dust


may lead to accumulation of more soluble salts in soil profiles and thus con-
tribute to salinization (see Goudie and Viles 1997, p. 67). On the Red Sea coast
of Sudan, aeolian dust consists of aggregates cemented by halite (sodium
chloride) (Schroeder 1985); and large quantities of saline dust are being
blown off the desiccating bed of the Aral Sea. The most comprehensive sur-
vey of dust additions of saline materials to desert surfaces is that undertaken
in the western United States by Reheis et al. (1995). Reheis and Kihl (1995)
monitored the salt content in dust in southern Nevada and California from
1984 to 1989 and found the average soluble salt content (excluding gypsum)
ranged from 4% to 19%, equivalent to a salt flux of 0.3–2.4 g m−2 year−1.
Dust that is rich in soluble salts and bases may be quite strongly alkaline.
Calcitic dust has been shown to contribute not only to calcretes, as discussed
above, but also to speleothems found in various cave sites (Goede et al. 1998;
Frumkin and Stein 2004). In addition to reducing the incidence of acid pre-
cipitation, including snow (Roda et al. 1993; Avila et al. 1997; Avila and Roda
2002; Rogora et al. 2004; Delmas et al. 2005), such alkaline dust may also
change the pH of soil layers through direct deposition and by reducing the
acidity of precipitation. Dust collected from the Harmattan in Ghana, for
instance, had pH values that were strongly alkaline, ranging over pH 8.0–9.4
(Breuning-Madsen and Awadzi 2005). Modaihsh (1997) found that dust from
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, averaged pH 8.9. Acid precipitation has long been
regarded as a major environmental problem because of its adverse and
diverse effects upon ecosystems. It is also implicated in building-stone decay.
The acidity of precipitation may, however, be reduced by desert aerosols,
which are often rich in calcium and other bases and are frequently alkaline.
Recent studies in southern Europe have shown that the pH of rainfall has
increased in some areas (Fig. 3.3) at the same time as Saharan dust incursions
Environmental and Human Consequences 41

a) 6

5.5
Annual median pH

4.5

4
1983 1985 1987 1989 1991 1993 1995 1997
Year

b) 24 5.2
Alkaline events
20 Saharan events 5.0
pH (median values)
Number of events

16 4.8

pH
12 4.6

8 4.4

4 4.2

0 4.0
1975 1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001
Year

Fig. 3.3. Trends in pH of dust events over Europe. a) Evolution of the median pH of rain for
1983–1997 at Montseny, north-east Spain. The median pH is calculated for hydrologic years
beginning on 1 August. Modified after Avila and Peñuelas (1999, Fig. 3). b) Number of alkaline
and Saharan events at Pallanza, north-west Italy, since 1975 and the trend of median pH values.
Modified after Rogora et al. (2004, Fig. 3)

have increased (see, for example, Avila and Peñuelas 1999; Rogora et al.
2004), though decreasing anthropogenic sulphate emissions over the same
period may also have played a role. Nevertheless, significant inputs of
Saharan dust have been suggested as a viable explanation for the fact that
42 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

many low-alkalinity lakes in the Alps and the Pyrenees did not become acidic
in the late twentieth century, unlike numerous lakes in areas rarely influ-
enced by such dust depositions, for instance in Scandinavia (Psenner 1999).
Given the important effects of desert dust on the chemical and nutrient bal-
ances in the oceans (see above), the study of similar impacts in freshwater
bodies deserves much more attention than it currently attracts.

3.8 Desert Depressions and Yardangs

Arid regions are frequently characterized by large numbers of closed depres-


sions (Fig. 3.4). This is particularly the case in the High Plains of the United
States, the interior of Southern Africa, the Pampas and Patagonia in South
America, the Manchurian and West Siberian plains and substantial parts of
Australia (Goudie and Wells 1995). Although such depressions can result
from a wide range of mechanisms (e.g. animal excavation, solution, tectonics),
it has for long been proposed that many of them are caused by deflation (see,
for example, Gilbert 1895) and that the production of fine-grained material
by processes like salt weathering creates material that can then be removed in

Pan

Lunette

Wind direction

Fig. 3.4. An air photograph of a large series of pans (closed depressions) deflated out from old
river channels in the interior of Western Australia (from ASG)
Environmental and Human Consequences 43

suspension downwind (see, for example, Du Toit 1906; Woodward 1897;


Pelletier and Cook 2005). Closed deflation depressions also occur under cold
climate conditions, where limited vegetation cover, surface disturbance by
needle-ice formation and strong local winds can cause the excavation of
suitable materials to occur (Seppälä 2004).
Yardang is a Turkmen word introduced by Hedin (1903) for wind-abraded
ridges of cohesive material. Yardangs result from a number of formative
processes, including wind abrasion, deflation, fluvial incision, desiccation
cracking and mass movements (Laity 1994), but deflation is probably highly
important in their formation and yardang areas are probably major sources
of dust. They show a considerable range in scales, from micro-yardangs
(small, centimetre-scale ridges), through meso-yardangs (forms that are
some metres in height and length) to mega-yardangs (features that may be
tens of metres high and some kilometres long; Cooke et al. 1993, pp. 296–297;
Halimov and Fezer 1989; McCauley et al. 1977). These mega-yardangs are
ridge and swale features of regional extent, called crêtes and couloirs in the
French literature (Mainguet 1972).
The type site for yardangs is the Tarim Basin, for it is here that they were
named by Hedin (McCauley et al. 1977). In his travels to Lop Nor, Hedin
encountered these distinctive forms and called them yardang, the ablative
form of the Turkestani word yar, which means ridge or steep bank. These
yardangs appear to have developed in old lake and alluvial sediments. Major
mega-yardangs also occur to the south-east of the Tarim Basin.
The Lut Desert of Iran contains classic mega-yardangs (Gabriel 1938)
developed in Pleistocene basin fill deposits (silty clays, gypsiferous sands).
The area involved is ca. 150 km long and 50 km wide. The ridges (kaluts) run
from the north-west to south-east and attain heights of 60 m. They extend for
tens of kilometres.
Mega-yardangs are extensively developed in northern Saudi Arabia, where
they are formed in the Cambrian Sandstones and some other bedrocks. They
are in excess of 40 m high and hundreds of metres long. Satellite images sug-
gest that the bulk of them lie in an area extending over around 5˚ of latitude,
which is bounded on the west by the marginal mountains or escarpment of
the Red Sea Rift and on the east by the great Nafud Sand Sea. They appear to
have been moulded by winds coming round from the west and west-south-
west. The islands of Bahrain have small areas with large wind flutes. One area
is developed on aeolianites (Jiddah Island), with yardangs 4–6 m high, while
the other is developed on resistant Eocene limestones (Rus Formation) in the
south-west corner of the main island’s central depression. These latter fea-
tures include aerodynamically shaped hills up to 10 m high, as well as larger
hills that rise above the Central Plateau (Doornkamp et al. 1980, p. 200).
Northern Namibia is located in a hyper-arid area, with much of it under-
lain by ancient igneous and metamorphic rocks belonging to the Swakop
Group (570–900 Ma). To the south of the Cunene sand sea, there is a very
large area of wind-fluted basement rock that shows a great expanse of
44 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

narrow, linear yardangs that trend approximately from south-south-east to


north-north-west and appear to have similar orientations in that area to the
barchans that move across their surface and to the orientations of the pre-
dominant sand streams that have been identified in the Skeleton Coast sand
sea to the south. The yardang area covers around 42 km by 25 km (ca. 1311
km2), with individual ridges running typically for distances of 8–10 km, with
a spacing of around 300–350 m. In southern Namibia, between the Namib
Sand Sea and the Orange River, there is a hyper-arid area with mega-
yardangs developed in ancient crystalline and metamorphic rocks with
complex structures. Many of the ridges are in excess of 20 km long and are
ca. 1 km across. Some of the corrasional features near Pomona are 100 m
high. There are at least four main areas where large yardangs occur: just to
the south of Luderitz, near Pomona and inland from Chamais Bay.
The presence of vegetation-free surfaces, combined with the existence of
strong, uni-directional winds from a northerly quarter, make it possible for
wind-fluted surfaces to form in the Western Desert of Egypt. Yardangs are
extensively developed, both in superficial materials and in bedrock. Yardangs
were noted in the Western Desert by Bagnold (1933), who termed them ‘mud
lions’. Yardangs formed in playa sediments are widespread in the Dakhla
depression (Brookes 1993) and in Farafra (Hassan et al. 2001), where the
yardangs are up to 11 m high. Other yardangs occur on bedrock surfaces.
Notable are those on the formations that cap the Libyan Plateau in the vicin-
ity of Dakhla and Kharga (Brookes 1993). The yardangs develop best on those
Tertiary limestones that do not contain a large content of chert. If chert is
present, it armours the surface and lineated terrain is then replaced by
smoooth chert-littered plains.
In the central Sahara, there are large areas of mega-yardangs, most notably
in the Borkou region of Chad, to the north of Faya Largeau. Yardangs west of
the Ounianga Kebir are commonly more than 20 km long, 1 km or more wide
and separated by troughs ranging from 500 m to 2 km (McCauley et al. 1977,
p. 50). Large yardangs occur in the far south of Algeria near the border with
Mali and Niger (ca. 5˚ E, 20˚ N), in southern Algeria to the south of the
Hoggar Massif (ca. 8˚ E 22˚ N) and also in an extensive area to the west of
Tibesti. The features that occur to the south and west of Tibesti have been
mapped by McCauley et al. (1977, Fig. 16). This is a major area of dust storm
generation.
The High Andes of Latin America have extensive yardang fields. Those in
Argentina have formed in ignimbrites or in lavas and show a general orienta-
tion that is from north-west to south-east or from west-north-west to south-
south-east. Most of the ridges are between 2 km and 10 km long.
Another classic area for mega-yardangs is the Peruvian Desert (McCauley
et al. 1977). Although some occur in the Talara region of northern Peru, the
most impressive forms occur in the Paracas-Ica Valley region of central Peru.
They are intermediate in size between those of the Lut of Iran and those of the
central Sahara. There is also an isolated area of yardangs on the coast of
Environmental and Human Consequences 45

central Chile, near Chanaral (70˚ 43′ E, 26˚ 42′ S). They run from south-west
to north-east and the largest are several kilometres long.

3.9 Dust and Radiative Forcing

Dust particles in the atmosphere exert both direct and indirect influences on
climate. An example of the former is the effect that dust particles have on
radiation budgets. Indirect influences include those brought about by the
effects of dust on biogeochemical cycling (Moreno and Canals 2004) and, for
instance, on carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere. In addition, it needs to
be remembered that the relationship between aeolian dust and climate is
bidirectional, since climate plainly has a major impact on dust generation,
transport and deposition. A specific illustration of this is that, in West Africa,
easterly waves generate dust in the atmosphere, but the dust may also in turn
lead to an intensification of easterly waves (Jones et al. 2004). Likewise it is
also possible that radiative heating within a dust layer over Arabia reinforces
the monsoon circulation which, through a positive feedback, raises addi-
tional dust into the atmosphere (Miller et al. 2004a).
Radiative forcing (the perturbation of the radiation balance caused by an
externally imposed factor) by dust is complex (Tegen 2003), since it not only
scatters but also partly absorbs incoming solar radiation; and it also absorbs
and emits outgoing long-wave radiation (Li et al. 1996; Moulin et al. 1997;
Alpert et al. 1998; Miller and Tegen 1998; Haywood et al. 2005). Changes in
the amount of dust in the atmosphere would cause changes in the radiation
balance and thus also in surface temperatures. However, the magnitude and
even the sign of the dust forcing remains uncertain (Arimoto 2001), for it
depends on the optical properties of the dust [which relates to its particle size,
shape (Kalashnikova et al. 2005) and mineralogy], on its vertical distribution
(Fouquart et al. 1987; Meloni et al. 2005), on the presence or otherwise of
clouds (Quijano et al. 2000), on its moisture content (Kim et al. 2004) and on
the albedo of the underlying surface (Nicholson 2000). Darker particles tend
to absorb radiation and to scatter relatively little, so they may warm the air.
By contrast, brighter particles reflect much incoming solar radiation back to
space and thus have a net cooling effect. Further complexity in assessing the
impact of dust results from the fact that dust aerosols have a relatively short
life-time in the troposphere (a few hours to about a week) and show large
variations in their temporal and spatial distribution (Hsu et al. 2000), both
horizontally and vertically. Moreover, the radiative effects of a dust layer are
modified by dynamical effects (e.g. convection) within the atmosphere
(Harrison et al. 2001).
Because of this complexity, there is no clear consensus about whether sub-
stantially increased dust loadings at the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)
around 18 000–20 000 years ago could have caused additional cooling or
46 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

could have caused warming (see, for example, Overpeck et al. 1996; Harrison
et al. 2001; Claquin et al. 2003). In addition, it is possible that dust additions
to ice caps and glaciers could modify their surface albedo, leading to changes
in radiation budgets. Likewise, dust stimulation of phytoplanktonic produc-
tion releases DMS which may increase cloud albedo and so contribute to
cooling of the atmosphere (Henriksson et al. 2000).

3.10 Dust and Atmospheric CO2

The presence of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has been, is and will be a
major influence on the radiation balance of the Earth. Carbon dioxide levels
have varied through time and are believed to be one of the prime determi-
nants of climate change. Dust loadings in the atmosphere may be interrelated
with such changes. Ridgwell (2002), for example, has argued cogently that
dust may affect climate by fertilizing ocean biota which in turn draw down
CO2 from the atmosphere, which in turn reduces the greenhouse effect. He
believes that currently there are some parts of the ocean where a supply of Fe
is a limiting factor in terms of phytoplankton growth. However, during the
Ice Ages, when global dust production and deposition were considerably
greater than today, it is possible that a series of feedbacks could lead to
enhanced climatic change (Fig. 3.5). One scenario is that any intensification
in glacial state would tend to produce an increase in dust availability and
transport efficiency. This in turn could produce a decrease in CO2 (through
Fe fertilization of the Southern Ocean), which would cause further intensifi-
cation in the glacial state and thus enhanced dust supply, and so one. As he
argued (Ridgwell (2002, p. 2922):
“Operation of this feedback loop would come to an end once the global car-
bon cycle has reached a second state, one in which biological productivity
becomes insensitive to further increases in aeolian Fe supply, perhaps through
the onset of limitation by NO3. If aeolian Fe supply were then to decrease
sufficiently to start limiting biological productivity again, the feedback loop
operating in the opposite direction would act so as to reverse the original
climatic change. That the Earth system might exhibit two distinct states, one
of ‘high-xCO2 low-dust’ and the other ‘low-xCO2 high-dust’, is consistent with
developing views of the climate system as being characterized by the presence
of different quasi-steady-states with abrupt transitions between them”.
It is also possible, though as yet largely unproven, that dust may have
encouraged growth of iron-hungry N2-fixing cyanobacteria such as
Trichodesmium, thus alleviating nitrate limitations (Pedersen and Bertrand
2000). In contrast, Maher and Dennis (2001) and Röthlisberger et al. (2004)
suggested that the evidence for dust-mediated control of glacial–interglacial
changes in atmospheric CO2 is weak. They argue that dust peaks and CO2
levels in the Vostok and Dome C ice cores show a mismatch and that, even in
Environmental and Human Consequences 47

Global
Sea level
ice volume

Hydrological Vegetation
cycle strength cover

Dust
Temperature
deposition

Atmospheric CO2 Southern Ocean


mixing ratio productivity

Fig. 3.5. Schematic diagram of the hypothetical glacial dust–CO2–climate feedback system.
Different components of the Earth system can directly interact in three possible ways: a positive
influence (whereby an increase in one component directly results in an increase in a second –
indicated by red arrows in the diagram), a negative influence (an increase in one component
directly results in a decrease in a second – black arrows), or no influence at all. An even num-
ber (including zero) of negative influences occurring within any given closed loop gives rise to
a positive feedback, the operation of which will act to amplify an initial perturbation. For
instance, the two-way interaction apparent between temperature and ice volume is the
‘ice–albedo’ feedback. Conversely, an odd number of negative influences gives rise to a negative
feedback, which will tend to dampen any perturbation. Primary interactions in the dust–CO2–
climate subcycle are indicated by thick solid lines, while additional interactions (peripheral to
the discussion here) are shown dotted for clarity. Four main (positive) dust-CO2-climate feed-
back loops exist in this system. 1. Dust supply → productivity → xCO2 → temperature → ice
volume → sea level → dust supply (four negative interactions). 2. Dust supply → productivity
→ xCO2 → temperature → hydrological cycle → vegetation → dust supply (two negative inter-
actions). 3. Dust supply → productivity → xCO2 → temperature → hydrological cycle → dust
supply (two negative interactions). 4. Dust supply → productivity → xCO2 → temperature →
ice volume → dust supply (two negative interactions). Modified after Ridgwell (2002, Fig. 11)

glacial periods, the dust flux supplied to the Southern Ocean was modest.
Ridgwell and Watson (2002) believed this argument was overstated.
This ‘iron hypothesis’, first advanced by Martin et al. (1991), is the subject
of considerable ongoing research (see, for example, Ridgwell 2003; Fan et al.
48 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

2004; Gao et al. 2003a); and the extent to which dust-stimulated phytoplankton
growth leads to CO2 drawdown of the magnitude shown in ice cores is still
an uncertainty, though changes in the relative contribution of phytoplankton
to total productivity during glacial cycles have been established through
analysis of Tasman Sea cores by Calvo et al. (2004). Bopp et al.’s (2003) model
indicated that the maximum impact of high dust deposition on atmospheric
CO2 must be less than 30 ppm.

3.11 Dust and Tropospheric Ozone

Another important way in which desert dust particles can affect the atmos-
phere is through their role in the photochemical production of ozone in the
troposphere. Ozone concentrations have a whole suite of implications for
humans and for other organisms.
Mineral dust appears to reduce the photolysis rates for ozone production
by as much as 50% and provides reaction sites for ozone and nitrogen mole-
cules. When being transported through the atmosphere, dust is frequently
associated with nitrate and sulphate, the concentrations of which can increase
with transport time (Savoie and Prospero 1982). This increase has been inter-
preted as implying that mineral aerosols may provide a reactive surface that
is able to support heterogeneous processing of trace gases (Arimoto 2001).
The measurement of ozone concentrations in dust plumes has confirmed
these thoughts. Analysis over the Apennines in Italy showed that the lowest
concentrations of ozone occurred during Saharan dust events (Bonasoni et al.
2004). In this study, the lowest ozone concentrations were recorded when the
Saharan air masses were rich in coarse particles.

3.12 Dust and Clouds

Dust nuclei may modify cloud characteristics (Levin et al. 1996; Sassen et al.
2003). As Toon (2003, pp. 623–624) explained: “Dust may affect clouds in two
ways. All water droplets start off by forming on pre-existing particles. As the
number of particles increases, for instance due to a dust storm, the number
of cloud droplets may increase. If there are more cloud droplets, the droplets
will be smaller because the mass of condensing water is usually fixed by air
motions and ambient humidity. Smaller cloud droplets make for a greater
surface area and hence brighter clouds . . . A less well-studied phenomenon is
that smaller droplets are also much less likely to collide with each other and
create precipitation . . . By acting as nuclei for triggering ice formation, dust
particles can also affect clouds by causing the water droplets to freeze at higher
temperatures than expected . . . Dust may thus be triggering precipitation in
Environmental and Human Consequences 49

low-altitude clouds that otherwise would be too warm to have produced rain,
or be triggering rain at lower levels in convective clouds that otherwise would
not have produced rain until reaching much higher altitudes where it is
colder . . . Dust may therefore inhibit precipitation by making more and
smaller droplets, or enhance it by adding ice particles to warm clouds”.
Rosenfeld et al. (2001) argued that the inhibiting effect on precipitation
was most likely and that Saharan dust provides very large concentrations
of cloud condensation nuclei, mostly in the small size range, which mean
that clouds are dominated by small droplets so that there is little coales-
cence. This results in suppressed precipitation, drought enhancement
and more dust emissions, thereby providing a possible desertification feed-
back loop.
Desert dust is also undoubtedly associated with strong ice-nucleating
behaviour (Sassen et al. 2003; Sassen 2005) and high concentrations of dust
particles acting as ice nuclei in clouds could lead to changes in cloud micro-
physical and radiative properties, latent heating and precipitation. Interest
has started to build in recent years in the possible role that Saharan dust plays
in modifying convective storm activity – anvil cloud development and pre-
cipitation – over Florida (Van Den Heever et al. 2005).
Another way in which rainfall may be affected is through changes in con-
vective activity brought on by the modification of temperature gradients in
the atmosphere created by the presence of dust (Maley 1982). In addition, the
radiative effects of dust may lead to the intensification of easterly waves in
North Africa (Jones et al. 2003) with consequent effects on numerous climatic
parameters, including precipitation. One study of outbreaks of dust-laden
Saharan air over the Atlantic – the so-called Saharan air layer, or SAL –
suggests that they may inhibit the intensification of tropical waves, tropical
disturbances, or pre-existing tropical cyclones due to the SAL’s dry air, tem-
perature inversion and strong vertical wind shear associated with the mid-
level easterly jet (Dunion and Velden 2004). They may suppress convection
(Wong and Desler 2005). It is probable that dust loadings in the atmosphere
were both affected by past climatic changes and had an effect on such changes
through complex feedback processes (Harrison et al. 2001).

3.13 Economic Effects

The entrainment, transport and deposition of dust can present a variety of


problems to inhabitants in and around desert areas (see Tables 1.1 and 3.1),
many of which have a deleterious economic impact. Such hazards have
affected dryland peoples since time immemorial. Folk (1975), for example,
suggests that the ancient Macedonian town of Stobi, which flourished
between 400 BC and 400 AD, was abandoned because of the severe affects of
dust storms.
50 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

A more recent example of the mix of impacts a dust storm can bring is
provided for China by Yang et al. (2001, p. 49):
“A major sand-storm on May 5th 1993 caused serious economic loss and
was as hazardous as a disaster caused by an earthquake. According to ground
observation and investigation made by the expert group of the Ministry of
Forestry, a total of 85 people died, 31 people were lost and 264 were injured
(most of these victims were children). Agriculture and animal husbandry
were most severely hurt. In total, 373,000 ha of crops were destroyed. 16,300
ha of fruit trees were damaged. Thousands of greenhouses and plastic
mulching sheds were broken. 120,000 heads of animals died or were irrecov-
erably lost. The fundamental agricultural installations and grassland service
facilities were ruined. More than 1,000km of irrigation channels was buried
by sand accumulation. Many water resource back-up facilities, such as reser-
voirs, dams, catchments, underground canals and flood control installations
were filled up with sand silts. About 6,021 communication poles and electric-
ity grids were pushed down and electricity transports and communication
services in some regions were stopped for several days. Some sections of rail-
way and highway were interrupted due to deflation and sand accumulation.”
Another major dust and sandstorm event took place in April 2002 and led
to airport closures in Mongolia and Korea. The total damage cost of this event
in Korea alone was put at U.S.$ 4.6 billion (or about 0.8% of GDP; Asian
Development Bank 2005, pp. 1–5).
In a similar vein, dust storms have regularly been associated with deaths
in India. In April 2005, ten people and 50 head of cattle were killed by fires
fanned by dust storm winds in Uttar Pradesh. In March 2005, six people were
killed and 40 injured in a dust storm in Bihar.
Some progress has been made in identifying the offsite costs of wind ero-
sion. In South Australia, for example, the costs include damage to houses and
the need for redecoration, the need to clean power transformers, deaths and
damage caused in traffic accidents, road disruption, impacts on the costs of
air travel and impacts on human health (especially because of raised asthma
incidence – see Section 3.14 below; Williams and Young 1999).
The reduction in visibility caused by dust storms is a hazard to aviation,
rail and road transport (Fig. 3.6). The severe pre-frontal storm of 7 November
1988 in South Australia, for example, caused road and airport closures all
across the Eyre Peninsula (Crooks and Cowan 1993). In the United States, in
November 1991, a series of collisions involving 164 vehicles occurred on
Interstate 5 in the San Joaquin Valley in California (Pauley et al. 1996), while
in Oregon a dust storm in September 1999 set off a chain reaction of 50 car
crashes that killed eight people and injured more than 20 (State of Oregon
2004). The loss of visibility may be very sudden when caused by the arrival of
a dust wall associated with a dry thunderstorm. Such Haboob dust walls were
responsible for 32 multiple accidents between 1968 and 1975 on Interstate 10
in Arizona (Brazel and Hsu 1981). The seriousness of the problem inspired
the development of a Dust Storm Alert System involving remote-controlled
Environmental and Human Consequences 51

Fig. 3.6. Dust and sand storms pose considerable problems for transport links, here the block-
ing of the main railway line between Walvis Bay and Swakopmund in Namibia (from ASG)

road signs and special dust-alert messages broadcast on local radio (Burritt
and Hyers 1981).
Some fatal commercial air crashes have also been attributed to visibility
reduction or to the adverse mechanical effects of dust storms. On 7 May 2002,
for example, an EgyptAir aircraft crashed near Tunis, killing 18 of 60 people
on board. On 30 January 2000, a Kenya Airways Airbus crashed in the Ivory
Coast with the loss of 179 lives.

3.14 Health

A number of medical conditions can be traced to the impact of desert dust;


and the effects of fine wind-borne particles on human health have recently
been the subject of considerable interest (Griffin et al 2001; Garrison et al.
2003). On 9 August 2005, a dust storm in Baghdad led to nearly 1000 cases of
suffocation being reported to the city’s Yarmuk Hospital, one of whom died.
The straightforward inhalation of fine particles can cause and/or aggravate
diseases such as bronchitis, emphysema and silicosis. High incidences of
silicosis and pneumoconiosis have been reported in Bedouins in the Negev
(Bar-Ziv and Goldberg 1974), while dust blown by the Irifi wind of the Western
(formerly Spanish) Sahara is responsible for the conjunctivitis that is common
52 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

among the nomads of the country (Morales 1946). High concentrations of


atmospheric dust in many desert areas often exceed generally recommended
health levels for particulate matter (see also Section 6.1 on PM10 values). In
Mali, for example, Nickling and Gillies (1993) found that the mean ambient
air concentrations during April–June were 1176 µg m−3, exceeding the rec-
ommended international health standard by an order of magnitude. Similar
concentrations can also occur during particularly severe long-range trans-
port events. In certain parts of Spain, the levels of particulate matter associ-
ated with frequent incursions of dust from North Africa means that it is not
possible to meet European Union directives on acceptable levels of air pollu-
tion (Querol et al. 2004). Rodriguez et al. (2001) indicated that these Saharan
dust events can induce up to 20 days a year in which PM10 standards are
exceeded in southern and eastern Spain. Intrusions of desert dust from the
Hexi Corridor in northern China also make a significant contribution to par-
ticulate pollutants in the Lanzhou Valley, an urban area that is among the
worst in China for its poor air quality (Ta et al. 2004b).
Dust may also be otherwise contaminated by organisms, such as bacteria
and fungi (Kellogg et al. 2004), and by toxic chemicals that can harm people
when it settles on the skin, is swallowed or inhaled into respiratory passages.
The increase in dust storm activity in Turkmenistan, for example, linked to
the desiccation of the Aral Sea, has probably caused severe respiratory prob-
lems for children in the area, but the dust from the dry sea bed also happens
to contain appreciable quantities of organophosphate particles (O’Hara et al.
2000). Dust blown from another former lake bed, that of the desiccated
Owens Lake in California, contains arsenic derived from nineteenth-century
mining operations (Raloff 2001). Dust storm material in Saudi Arabia has been
found to contain an array of aeroallergens and antigens which could trigger a
range of respiratory ailments (Kwaasi et al. 1998). Other possible conse-
quences of airborne dust include an increase in asthma incidence (Rutherford
et al. 1999), as reported for Barbados and Trinidad when Saharan dust
outbreaks occur (Monteil 2002; Gyan et al. 2005), and also an increase in the
incidence of meningococcal meningitis in the Sahel zone and Horn of Africa
(Molesworth et al. 2002). The annual meningitis epidemics in West Africa,
which affect up to 200 000 people between February and May, are closely
related to the Harmattan season in their timing (Sultan et al. 2005).
Coccidioidomycosis, a disease caused by a soil-based fungus (Coccidioides
immitis) transported in airborne dust, is endemic to parts of the south-
western United States (especially in the San Joaquin Valley of California,
southern Arizona, southern New Mexico and west Texas) and northern
Mexico (Gabriel et al 1999). In the United States, where it is known as Valley
Fever, an estimated 50 000–100 000 persons develop symptoms of the disease
each year (Leathers 1981); and a dramatic increase in the incidence of coc-
cidioidomycosis during the early 1990s in California was estimated to have
cost more than U.S.$66 million in direct medical expenses and time lost in
one county alone (Kirkland and Fierer 1996).
Environmental and Human Consequences 53

Dust can also contain dried rodent droppings or urine which can cause the
spread of Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome. In Ladakh and China, dust may
contribute to a high silicosis incidence (Derbyshire 2001); and fungal spores
from China reach high ambient levels in Taiwan during dust events and may
have health implications (Wu et al. 2004). Some recent epidemiological studies
indicate that long-range dust transport events are closely associated with an
increase of daily mortality in Seoul, Korea (Kwon et al. 2002), and Taipei, Taiwan
(Chen et al. 2004), and caused cardiovascular and respiratory problems (Kwon
et al. 2002), including an increased incidence of strokes (Yang et al. 2005).
Given the great distances over which dust can be transported, it is not sur-
prising to learn that the intercontinental dispersal of material may include
pathogens of crop plants. Long-distance dispersal of fungal spores by the
wind can spread plant diseases across and between continents and re-
establish diseases in areas where host plants are seasonally absent (Brown
and Hovmøller 2002). While monitoring aerosols on the Caribbean island of
Barbados, Prospero (2004) reported that concurrent detection of bacteria and
fungi only occurred in air that contained Saharan dust.

3.15 Dust Storms in War

Large-scale military movements in desert environments can be both the


cause and the victim of dust events. The disruption of desert surfaces during
the North African campaign in the 1940s increased the occurrence of dust
storms in the region to a considerable extent (Oliver 1945). The significance
of dust storms for military activities again became apparent during the Gulf
War of 1990–1991 and the Iraqi War of 2003–2004. In April 2005, 18 people
were killed when a United States military Chinook helicopter came down in a
heavy dust storm in Ghazni, Afghanistan.
The human implications of dust storms were graphically illustrated during
the North African campaign. In the summer of 1941, Titch Cave, member of
a Long Range Desert Group (LRDG) patrol that had just come in from the
desert, witnessed a storm at Siwa oasis in Egypt just as he and his colleagues
were to sit down and have a rare meal of fresh meat (Morgan 2000, p. 85):
“The mutton was carefully cooked, while we all waited in anticipation, and
after being carved was just ready to be served when an excited voice from
outside shouted, ‘**** me! Come and look at this.’
“We all dashed out not knowing quite what to expect and there, all across
the northern horizon, was a huge rolling cloud which must have been over
100 feet high. We watched in awe, our dinner forgotten, as the cloud rolled
down over the northern cliffs and advanced towards us across the oasis. The
air was quite still as the cloud approached, then, when it was closer, the wind
began to rise, the temperature dropped and it was upon us, filling the air and
every nook and cranny of our hut with dust and sand.
54 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

“It was the father and mother of a sandstorm which was beyond the
experience of even the oldest members of our patrol. Of course, our dinner
was ruined . . .” Field Marshal Rommel also wrote graphically about a storm,
locally called the Ghibli, which took place in Libya in March 1941, an account
that also reinforces the dust hazard to transport (Liddell Hart 1953, p. 105):
“After taking off . . . we ran into sandstorms near Taourga, whereat the
pilot, ignoring my abuse and attempts to get him to fly on, turned back, com-
pelling me to continue the journey by car from the airfield at Misurata. Now
I realized what little idea we had of the tremendous force of such a storm.
Immense clouds of reddish dust obscured all visibility and forced the car’s
speed down to a crawl. Often the wind was so strong that it was impossible to
drive along the Via Balbia. Sand streamed down the windscreen like water.
We gasped in breath painfully through handkerchiefs held over our faces and
sweat poured off our bodies in the unbearable heat. So this was the Ghibli.
Silently I breathed my apologies to the pilot. A Luftwaffe officer crashed in a
sandstorm that day.”
Sandstorms are not only uncomfortable for the military personnel forced
to endure them. They can also be damaging to their vehicles and armaments
as well. This was well described by one of the soldiers in Popski’s Private
Army, a special unit that operated behind enemy lines in the Second World
War. As Park Yunnie wrote (Yunnie 2002, p. 20):
“It hit us like a whip-lash, taking our breath, leaving us cowed and
defenceless, whimpering with pain. We couldn’t breathe. Hot, smarting dust
clogged our nostrils, seared the backs of our throats, coated our tongue and
gritted in our teeth; drifts of fine-blown sand formed in the folds of our cloth-
ing, blew into our pockets and found its way through to our skins; sand piled
up in the trucks, forming miniature dunes, stuck to the oily and greasy parts
of the chassis, blew under the bonnet and sifted into the carburetor, the mag-
neto, the unsealed working parts; grating sand filtered into the Vickers guns,
jamming the ammunition pans; sand found its way into everything, every-
where. Each truck was isolated in its own drift, cut off from the others by an
impenetrable wall of frenzied shrieking grit . . .”
The side of his truck was polished like a mirror, every vestige of paint
sanded off.
4 The Global Picture

4.1 Introduction

The fact that dry, unprotected sediments can be entrained by wind in almost
any physical environment is reflected in the large number of names in com-
mon use for dust-bearing winds (Table 4.1). Nonetheless, the major source
regions of contemporary mineral dust production are found in the desert
regions of the northern hemisphere, in the broad swathe of arid territory that
stretches from West Africa to Central Asia, while lesser sources are found in
the world’s other major desert areas. This global picture of desert dust pro-
duction has been pieced together using satellite imagery and standard terres-
trial meteorological observation data, but the details are still not complete.
Satellites represent the only data source with truly global coverage and
analysis of their data has produced some of the best global surveys of dust
storm distribution. The Total ozone mapping spectrometer (TOMS) has proved
to be among the most effective instruments for detecting atmospheric mineral
dust (Herman et al. 1997; Prospero et al. 2002; Washington et al. 2003). We also
have global or near-global maps of aerosol optical thickness (a measure of
aerosol column concentration) derived from satellites such as the NOAA
Advanced very high resolution radiometer (AVHRR) and MODIS (see, for
example, Chin et al. 2004; Ginoux et al. 2004; Yu et al. 2003). Global images
are available on http://www.osdpd.noaa.gov/PSB/EPS/Aerosol/Aerosol.html
(accessed 22 June 2005).

4.2 Major Global Sources

TOMS data have been used to derive an Aerosol Index (AI), values for which
are linearly proportional to the aerosol optical thickness. The world map of
annual mean AI values (Fig. 4.1) has certain clear features. First, the largest
area with high values is a zone that extends from the eastern subtropical
Atlantic eastwards through the Sahara Desert to Arabia and southwest Asia.
In addition, there is a large zone with high AI values in central Asia, centred
over the Taklamakan Desert in the Tarim Basin. Central Australia has a rela-
tively small zone, located in the Lake Eyre basin, while southern Africa has
56 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 4.1. Dust-bearing winds. After Olbruck (1973), Goudie (1978), Nalivkin (1983),
Middleton (1986c) and other sources

Region Wind (location)

Asia Afganets (Tadjikistan)


Garmsil (Turkmenistan)
Kara Buran (Central Asia)
Ibe (Kazakhstan)
Balkhash Bora (Kazakhstan)
Loo (India)
Andhi (India)
Kyzyl Buran (China)
Yaman (China)
Hyi Fyn (China)
Huan Fyn (China)
Shachenbao (China)
Fuhjin (Japan)
Kosa (Japan)
Huang Sa (Taiwan, Korea)
Middle East See Table 5.8
Europe Calina (Spain)
Leveche (Spain)
Kossava (Hungary)
Scirocco (S. Europe)
Sukhovey (S. Russian steppe)
Chernye Buran (Russia and Ukraine)
Blow (England)
Mistur (Iceland)
Latin America Chubasco (Mexico)
Tolvanera (Mexico)
Paracas (Peru)
Pampero Sucio (Argentina)
Volcan (Argentina)
Zonda (Argentina)
N. America Chinook (USA – Rocky Mountains)
Keeler Fog (USA – California)
Palouser (USA – Idaho, Montana)
Santa Ana (USA – California)
Wasatch (USA – Utah)
Australia Bedouries (W. Queensland)
Brickfielder (Victoria)
Cobar Shower (New South Wales)
Darling Shower (New South Wales)
E. and S. Africa Kharif (Somalia)
Gobar (Ethiopia)
Berg Wind (Namibia)
Sahara See Table 5.1
The Global Picture 57

60N

40N

20N

20S

40S

60S
180 120W 60W 0 60E 120E 180

0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30
TOMS Aerosol Index

Fig. 4.1. The world map of annual mean aerosol index values determined by TOMS

two zones, one centered on the Mkgadikgadi basin in Botswana and the other
on the Etosha Pan in Namibia. In Latin America, there is only one easily iden-
tifiable zone. This is in the Atacama and is in the vicinity of one of the great
closed basins of the Altiplano – the Salar de Uyuni. North America has only
one relatively small zone with high values, located in the Great Basin. Other
satellite-derived maps of aerosol optical thickness show a generally very sim-
ilar picture of dust loadings in the atmosphere.
The importance of these different dust ‘hot spots’ can be gauged by look-
ing not only at their areal extents, but also at their relative TOMS AI values.
Table 4.2 lists the latter. This again brings out the very clear dominance of the
Sahara in particular and of the Old World deserts in general. The Southern
Hemisphere as a whole and the Americas are both notable for their relatively
low AI values. So, for example, the AI values of the Bodélé Depression of the
south central Sahara are around four times greater than those recorded for
either the Great Basin or the Salar de Uyuni. However, the best way to assess
the relative importance of dust source areas on a global basis is to combine
their areas and their AI values (Fig. 4.2). This again brings out the enormity
of the Saharan dust source in comparison with those of Arabia, China and
the Thar.
Thus, analysis of TOMS data enables a global picture of desert dust sources
to be determined. It demonstrates the primacy of the Sahara and highlights
the importance of some other parts of the world’s drylands, including the
Middle East, Taklamakan, southwest Asia, central Australia, the Etosha and
Mkgadikgadi pars of southern Africa, the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia and the
Great Basin in the United States. One characteristic that emerges for most of
these regions is the importance of large basins of internal drainage as dust
sources (Bodélé, Taoudenni, Tarim, Seistan, Eyre, Etosha, Mkgadikgadi, Etosha,
58 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 4.2. Maximum mean AI values for major global dust sources determined from TOMS

Location AI value Average annual rainfall (mm)

Bodélé Depression of south central Sahara >30 17


West Sahara in Mali and Mauritania >24 5–100
Arabia (Southern Oman/Saudi border) >21 <100
Eastern Sahara (Libya) >15 22
Southwest Asia (Makran coast) >12 98
Taklamakan/Tarim Basin >11 <25
Etosha Pan (Namibia) >11 435–530
Lake Eyre Basin (Australia) >11 150–200
Mkgadikgadi Basin (Botswana) >8 460
Salar de Uyuni (Bolivia) >7 178
Great Basin of the USA >5 400

Uyuni and the Great Salt Lake). Related to this is the fact that many sources
are associated with deep and extensive alluvial deposits (Prospero et al. 2002).
In contrast, sand dune systems are not good sources of fine-grained dust.
Dust storms also occur under cold climate conditions. They have been
described, for example, from outwash plains in Iceland (Fig. 4.3), deltas in
Alaska, sandurs in Baffin Island and braided river beds in New Zealand
(Seppälä 2004).

450

400

350
Veil area (km2 ⫻ 103)

300

250

200

150

100

50

0
6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44
TOMS Aerosol Index

Fig. 4.2. Area average TOMS aerosol index values for the main dust regions: Sahara (solid line),
Arabia (heavy dashed line), Thar (light dashed line), northwest China (heavy solid line)
The Global Picture 59

ICELAND

Dust

Fig. 4.3. Dust blowing into the North Atlantic from southern Iceland, 28 January 2002 (MODIS)

Estimates of the total soil dust emissions to the atmosphere on a global


scale (Table 4.3) show a large range (see the excellent review by Prospero
1996a), largely because models vary with regard to such factors as the rate of
scavenging of particles from the air. A discussion of the relative contributions
made by the Sahara and other major sources can be found in Section 5.5.

4.3 Dust Storms and Rainfall

Because rainfall amounts affect two important controls of dust storm activity –
soil moisture and vegetation cover – it is to be expected that dust storm
occurrence will broadly be inversely correlated with rainfall amount. Plainly,
very wet areas removed from dust source areas by some distance do not have
many dust storms (Goudie 1983). Indeed, Goudie (1983), on the basis of
analysis of terrestrially observed meteorological data, argued that dust storm
60 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 4.3. Estimates of dust emissions to the global atmosphere

Author (s) Annual quantity (×106 t) Atmospheric turnover time (days)

Peterson and Junge (1971) 500


Schütz (1980) <5000
D’Almeida (1986) 1800–2000
Tegen and Fung (1994) 3000
Andreae (1995) 1500 4.0
Duce (1995) 1000–2000
Mahowald et al. (1999) 3000 5.1
Luo et al. (2003) 1654 5.1
Zender et al. (2003) 1490 4.3
Ginoux et al. (2004) 1950–2400 7.1
Liao et al. (2004) 1784 3.9
Miller et al. (2004b) 1019 5.2

frequency is at a peak in areas where the rainfall is between 100 mm and 200
mm per annum and that in areas with rainfall <100 mm, dust storm fre-
quency appears to decline. He advanced three possible explanations for this
decline: (1) such areas may have smaller amounts of alluvium supplied by
streams which could act as a dust source, (2) in very dry areas there is insuf-
ficient exposure to dust-producing atmospheric conditions associated with
convective activity or the passage of fronts and (3) the reservoir of available
source material may have been depleted by long-continued wind activity and
by the formation of some wind-stable surfaces, such as stone pavements.
Additionally, such areas may suffer from less human disturbance than more
humid areas, which tend to be heavily grazed and farmed.
However, TOMS data indicate that many of the world’s major dust source
regions are areas of hyperaridity. The prime global source, the Bodélé
Depression, has a mean annual rainfall of some 17 mm (at Faya Largeau),
while the large West Sahara source has annual precipitation levels between
5 mm and 100 mm. In Arabia, dust storms are most prevalent where the mean
annual rainfall is <100 mm (Goudie and Middleton 2001); and the great
Taklamakan dust source in north-west China has large areas where the rain-
fall totals are <25 mm per annum.
Two coherent explanations of this contradiction – between Goudie’s con-
clusions and those based on the TOMS data – involve appraisals of the
sources of data used. The terrestrial meteorological stations on which Goudie
(1983) based the relationship between dust-raising and annual rainfall are
relatively sparse in many of the driest desert regions (Fig. 4.4) and thus the
relationship may be more apparent than real. However, this is not to say that
TOMS is a perfect data source. The TOMS AI is known to be sensitive to the
The Global Picture 61

Morocco

Western N
Sahara

Fig. 4.4. Curved dust plumes emanating from southern Morocco and northern Western Sahara,
an area with very few terrestrial meteorological observing stations, on 12 March 2003 (MODIS)

height of the aerosol layer (Torres et al. 1998) and may underestimate the
importance of further dust sources on the edge of deserts, areas where
boundary layer heights are lower (Mahowald and Dufresne 2004).
For North Africa, location of the largest global sources, this quandary is
not new. Prospero (1996b) raised the question of ‘Sahara vs Sahel’ as the pri-
mary source for transatlantic dust transport. The fact that dust concentra-
tions at Barbados are inversely related to the previous year’s rainfall in
Sahelian Africa suggests a link with sources in the Sahel. Indeed, several stud-
ies have shown the importance of areas in Sahelian latitudes as sources that
have increased their dust output during recent periods characterized both by
prolonged drought and intensified land use, in places leading to desertifica-
tion (Middleton 1985a, b; Goudie and Middleton 1992; N’Tchayi et al. 1997).
Indeed, generally the link between drought phases and enhanced dust pro-
duction is well established, though there will be different time-lags in differ-
ent areas (Zender and Kwon 2005). This relationship is close in Australia,
62 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

where peaks in annual dust storm frequency seen in the meteorological


records are clearly related to drought phases (McTainsh et al. 2005).
However, the relationship becomes less certain in the light of the character of
the Sahara’s two main dust source areas as highlighted by TOMS. While
Harmattan dust blown from the Bodélé Depression tends not to travel far
over the Gulf of Guinea, dust entrained in the West Sahara source area does
make a significant contribution to transatlantic flows. However, while the
effect of drought on dust-raising in Sahelian latitudes can be established, ref-
erence to ‘drought’ in an area receiving less than 100 mm in mean annual
rainfall is less sound.
Two explanations for the established increase in trans-Atlantic dust trans-
port in recent decades can be proposed. Firstly, that flows from a constant
West Sahara source area have been augmented by material from more
southerly, drought-affected sources. Secondly, it is possible that the relation-
ship between Barbados dust concentrations and Sahelian rainfall reflect other
changes in atmospheric circulation associated with drought in the Sahel. As
Prospero (1996b) has pointed out, both the Hadley circulation and the mid-
tropospheric easterly jet are more intense during Sahelian dry spells
(Nicholson 1986; Newell and Kidson 1984). The second hypothesis is not nec-
essarily incompatible with the first. Stronger winds, be they low-level entrain-
ing airflows, upper tropospheric transporting flows, or both, could mean more
material being transported from the West Sahara source area and/or from
Sahelian source areas. Indeed, work in Australia indicates that drought peri-
ods may be associated with higher overall wind speeds (McTainsh et al. 1999).
Part of the conundrum in North Africa may have been explained by Moulin
and Chiapello (2003) who found that the interannual variability of TOMS
atmospheric dust optical thickness over the Atlantic in the summer months
(June–August) was very largely controlled by dust emissions in the northern
Sahel (15–17˚ N). These authors also established a large-scale correlation
between summertime Atlantic dust export and the occurrence of drought in
the Sahel, suggesting that the variability of Sahelian dust emissions are prima-
rily controlled by the position of the vegetation boundary with the Sahara, a
border that other satellite-based studies have demonstrated is highly dynamic
from one year to the next (Tucker and Nicholson 1999).

4.4 Vegetation and Dry Lake Beds

At the global scale, Engelstädter (2001) analysed the importance of dry lake
beds (Fig. 4.5) and vegetation type in controlling the occurrence and fre-
quency of dust storms. Vegetation types were derived from the BIOME
4 model and from the satellite-derived NDVI (Normalized difference vegeta-
tion index). The extent of palaeolake beds was based on the surface hydro-
logical transport model HYDRA (Hydrological routing algorithm).
The Global Picture 63

Fig. 4.5. A small dust storm being generated from the dry floor of an old lake bed in the Wadi
Rum area of southern Jordan (from ASG)

The results of his analyses of dust storm frequency in relation to vegeta-


tion types are shown in Tables 4.4 and 4.5. As might be anticipated there is a
general tendency for areas of limited vegetation cover to be associated with
high dust storm incidence. The results of his analyses of the effect of dry
palaeolake beds are shown in Table 4.6. Areas with a high percentage covered
by such depressions have markedly higher dust storm frequencies than those
that do not.

4.5 Diurnal and Seasonal Timing of Dust Storms

Various observers have established that dust storms tend to be concentrated


in certain parts of the day. For example, in Turkmenistan, Orlovsky and
Orlovsky (2001) found that the number of dust storms was greatest in the late
morning and afternoon (Fig. 4.6) and was caused by a wind speed maximum
at that time and drying of the soil in the daylight hours. Similarly in the Gobi
of Mongolia (Fig. 4.7), most dust storms occur in the afternoon and relatively
few by night (Middleton 1991; Natsagdorj et al. 2003). Wang et al. (2005a)
identified a similar pattern in China. Tsunematsu et al. (2005), working on
the Taklamakan Desert, suggested that many dust outbreaks occurred follow-
ing the breakdown of a nocturnal inversion (which developed over the basin
at night and promoted atmospheric stability) during the late morning.
64 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 4.4. Dust storm frequency in relation to vegetation types and net primary productivity
(NPP) modelled from BIOME4. From Engelstädter (2001, Section 4.2.2., Table 1)

Average (median)
Number of dust storm Average annual NPP
Biome type stations frequency (days year−1) (g C m−2 year−2)

Desert and barren 96 5.7 119.5


Temperate xerophytic 95 2.1 292.0
shrubland
Temperate evergreen 11 0.4 299.0
needleleaf open woodland
Grassland 47 2.0 466.0
Tropical xerophytic shrubland 57 1.4 424.0
Temperate schlerophyll 35 0.3 576.0
woodland and shrubland
Forest 95 0.2 828.0
Tropical savanna 10 0.1 904.5
Temperate deciduous 6 0.2 1059.5
broadleaf savanna

In Belarus, the majority of dust storms take place before 1500 hours
(Chizhikov and Kamlyuk 1997).
In the Middle East, Middleton (1986a) established that much of the area
witnessed dust storm maxima during daylight when intense solar heating of
the ground surface creates a high degree of turbulence and very strong pres-
sure gradients locally. This is shown dramatically for Kuwait, where about
50% of the dust storm hours occur between about 1200 hours and 1700 hours
(Safar 1985; Fig. 4.8).

Table 4.5. Average annual dust storm frequency and number of stations for different vegeta-
tion types derived from the DeFries data set. From Engelstädter (2001, Section 4.2.2., Table 2)

Average (median) annual dust


Vegetation type Number of stations storm frequency (days year−1)

Bare ground 71 6.8


Shrubs and bare ground 96 2.6
Grassland 181 1.6
Cultivated crops 140 0.8
Wooded grassland 69 0.1
Broadleaf deciduous forest 23 0.3
and woodland
Forest 28 0.1
The Global Picture 65

Table 4.6. Statistical data of potential dry lake bed fractions for: (a) areas of desert and barren,
temperate xerophytic shrubland, grassland and tropical xerophytic shrubland and (b) areas of
desert and barren. From Engelstädter (2001)

Dry palaeo-lake Average (median) dust storm


bed fraction (%) Number of stations frequency (days year−1)

Group (a) areas


0–20 222 2.3
20–40 36 2.2
40–60 14 6.1
60–80 5 14.9
80–100 10 24.5
Group (b) areas
0–20 61 3.5
20–40 14 6.2
40–60 6 14.0
60–80 5 14.9
80–100 10 24.5

In the United States, Orgill and Sehmel (1976) found that the afternoon
maximum in dust frequency is common and occurs when the atmosphere
boundary layer is normally deep and turbulent mixing is more pronounced.
This was confirmed for North Dakota by Godon and Todhunter (1998) who
found that nearly 70% of dust events occurred between 1200 hours and 1800
hours. Stout (2001), working in the High Plains, recognized that there was

10

8
Frequency (%)

0
0 4 8 12 16 20 24
Local time (h)

1 2 3 4 5

Fig. 4.6. Diurnal pattern of dust storms in Turkmenistan for five stations during 1981–1995.
Modified after Orlovsky and Orlovsky (2001, Fig. 3)
66 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

25

20
Frequency (%)

15

10

0
0−3 3−6 6−9 9−12 12−15 15−18 18−21 21−24
Time interval (hours)

Fig. 4.7. The daily variation of dust storms for spring in the Gobi. Modified after Natsagdorj
et al. (2003, Fig. 6)

typically a daily cycle of relative humidity driven by daily temperature varia-


tions with the lowest relative humidities occurring around mid-afternoon.
This would be when surface soil moisture would be least and the potential for
blowing dust at its maximum.
In the Saharan source regions, the dust maximum occurs between late
morning and mid-afternoon (N’Tchayi et al. 1997).
The seasonality of dust storms is affected by a number of factors. These
include: rainfall regimes (which control soil moisture conditions), seasonal

12
11
Percentage frequency of number of

10
9
hours of dust storms

8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Hour

Fig. 4.8. Diurnal variation of dust storms at Kuwait International Airport (1962–1982).
Modified after Safar (1985, Fig. 18)
The Global Picture 67

snow cover (which may prevent soil deflation in winter months), the desicca-
tion of closed lake basins, wind energy conditions, convectional activity and
the passage of dust-raising depressions, and agronomic practices (which
leave the soil bare in certain seasons). Littmann (1991a) attempts to catego-
rize patterns of dust storm seasonality and shows, for example, the domi-
nance of spring dust storms in China, the prevalence of pre-south westerly
monsoon dust storms in India and the summer (dry season) maximum in the
Middle East. Areas with a Mediterranean rainfall regime tend to have limited
dust activity in the wet, winter months, whereas tropical regions with a strong
summer rainfall regime have limited dust storm activity at the height of
the wet season. Details of seasonality are given for each major region in
Chapter 5, and are summarized in Table 4.7.

Table 4.7. Seasons or months of maximum dust storm activity

Location Season (months)

Argentina Winter (April–Aug.)


Arizona Summer
Bahrain Summer (March–July)
Belarus Spring (April–May)
Bodélé Early summer (April–June)
Canada Spring
Chile Winter (May–Sept.)
Egypt Winter/Spring (Dec.–May)
Etosha (Namibia) Autumn (Aug.–Nov.)
Eritrea Summer (June–Aug.)
India/Pakistan Early summer (May–June)
Kazakhstan Summer (May–Aug.)
Korea Spring (March–May)
Mexico City Spring (Jan.–May)
Mongolia Spring (April–May)
Northern Sahara Summer (April–Aug.)
Queensland, northern New South Wales Spring/early Summer
Sahel Winter (Nov.–March)
Seistan basin (Afghanistan) Summer (May–Sept.)
Taklamakan Late Winter/Spring
Tokar delta (Sudan) Summer (June–July)
Turkmenistan Spring
United States of America Spring
Victoria, southern New South Wales Summer
68 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

4.6 Duration of Dust Storms

Dust storms do not generally last for very long. In Turkmenistan, for exam-
ple, the frequency of dust storms with a duration of 12 h or more is only about
3%, though occasional examples lasting three days have been observed there
(Orlovsky and Orlovsky 2001). In the Gobi of Mongolia, the average dust
storm lasts 1.6–6.0 h (Natsagdorj et al. 2003), while in China’s Taklamakan,
the most serious dust storm conditions persist for 2–4 h (Yoshino 1992).
More generally in China, Wang et al. (2005a) suggest that most dust storms
last <2 h.

4.7 Dust Storms on Mars

Although this book is about dust storms on Earth, aeolian processes are
active on other planets in the solar system (Greeley and Iversen 1985) and the
transport and deposition of dust is particularly important on Mars, which has
become the focus for a growing body of research. The ‘Red Planet’ could just
as easily be called the ‘Dust Planet’, for yellowish brown dust gives the planet
its colour. Dust storms occur almost daily, with thousands occurring each
year (Cantor 2003). Telescopic observations since the eighteenth century and
images delivered by spacecraft missions have shown Mars to be an arid planet
dominated by the presence of dust both suspended in the atmosphere and
deposited widely over the planet’s surface. Features like meso-scale linear
streaks, up to 400 km in length, are indicators of the power of dust entrain-
ment (Thomas et al. 2003).
Dust events on Mars have been observed at all scales, ranging from local
dust devils (Balme et al. 2003) to storms that envelop the entire planet,
dubbed Mars global dust storms, or GDSs (Fig. 4.9). These planet-encircling
dust storms occur approximately one year in three, usually in late southern
spring, (i.e. near perihelion) when Mars is closest to the Sun (Zurek and
Martin 1993; Pankine and Ingersoll 2004). During the Martian summer, in the
lower boundary layer of its clear, thin, cold atmosphere, the large tempera-
ture gradient that exists above the relatively warm surface may support
intense free convection and the formation of dust devils. These can be greater
than those found on Earth, commensurate with the deeper convective bound-
ary layer on Mars during summer, reaching several hundred metres across
and 8 km high. Regional dust storms may be produced whenever the pole-
ward temperature gradient is sufficiently large to generate intense zonal cir-
culation across the mid-latitudes in the form of baroclinic waves. Other
regional dust storms are produced by katabatic outflow from receding frost
outliers of the polar caps, with winds descending from areas of high relief
(Fig. 4.10). Regional dust storms affect the radiation budget and this can lead
to feedback effects that may cause the development of dust storms of global
The Global Picture 69

Fig. 4.9. The surface of Mars on a relatively clear day (left, 26 June 2001) in contrast to a global
dust storm (right, 4 September 2001). Both images from the Hubble space telescope

Ice Cap

Dust

Fig. 4.10. Regional dust storms over Mars on the margin of the great polar ice cap
70 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

dimensions (Wells and Zimbelman 1997). Such an event was detected by the
Hubble Space telescope in June 2001 (Strausberg et al. 2005, Plate 4.4). What
was to become the biggest event for about a quarter of a century began as a
small dust cloud inside the Hellas Basin (a deep impact crater in Mars’s
southern hemisphere). By early July, the dust cloud had spilled out of the
basin and engulfed the whole planet. It is possible that airborne dust particles
absorb sunlight and warm the Martian atmosphere strongly in their vicinity.
Warm pockets of air spread quickly towards colder regions, thereby generat-
ing strong winds. These lift more dust off the ground and so create a positive
feedback. In this model, dust heating seems to play a broadly analogous role
to the release of latent heat in moist convection during the development of
tropical storms and hurricanes on Earth (Read and Lewis 2004, p. 207).
It seems that dust has long played a fundamental role in the Martian cli-
mate (Greeley et al. 1992) and that, although the quantity of material in the
Martian atmosphere varies with the seasons, it never drops entirely to zero.
As on Earth, mineral dust affects the radiation balance of the Martian atmos-
phere, its thermal structure and atmospheric circulation (Leovy 2001). Dust
in the Martian atmosphere, for example, reduces diurnal temperature varia-
tions near the ground (Read and Lewis 2004).
Wind is the most active geomorphological agent currently operating on
Mars and it seems likely that dust has had long-term effects on the planet’s
surface. The omnipresence of dust in the atmosphere is also a potential haz-
ard for any instrumentation delivered to the Martian surface for in situ analy-
ses. Suspended particles readily adhere to all types of surfaces causing optical
obscuration and potential damage to both mechanical and electrical systems
(Landis and Jenkins 2000). This problem is made acute by the chemical activ-
ity of Martian dust, which is thought to be highly oxidizing (Plumb et al.
1989), although its mineralogy is not adequately known.
5 The Regional Picture

5.1 Introduction

In this chapter we discuss the regional geography of dust storms in the


world’s drylands, using available climatological data and information from
the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) and other types of remote
sensing. We discuss such issues as annual frequency, seasonality and trans-
port trajectories.

5.2 North America

Dust-raising is a common feature of the dryland climate characteristic of


large parts of the United States (Fig. 5.1), but meteorological observations at
ground stations suggest that the greatest frequency of dust events occurs in
the panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma, Nebraska, western Kansas, eastern
Colorado, the Red River Valley of North Dakota (Godon and Todhunter
1998) and northern Montana (Fig. 5.2). These areas combine erodible mate-
rials with a moderately dry climate and high values for wind energy (Gillette
and Hanson 1989). The spring months are the time of maximum dust activ-
ity over much of the area (Orgill and Sehmel 1976; Stout 2001) but a summer
peak occurs in parts of Arizona (Brazel 1991) due to convective or thunder-
storm activity. In Late Pleistocene times dust storm activity may have been
even greater, leading to loess deposition (Muhs et al. 1999).
Large amounts of dust are also blown off the bed of the former Owens
Lake following its anthropogenically caused desiccation (Reheis 1997) and
from shrunken Mono Lake (Gill and Cahill 1992). However, land manage-
ment techniques are probably important in determining the variability of
dust storm occurrence. Lee et al. (1993) and Todhunter and Cihacek (1999)
document a decline in dust storm occurrence in Texas and North Dakota,
which they attribute to the adoption of improved land-use practices. A dis-
cussion of the spatial and temporal variability of dust storms in the Mojave
and Colorado deserts is provided by Bach et al. (1996), who identify the
Coachella Valley as being the dustiest region. A detailed study of dust
deposition in Nevada and California is provided by Reheis and Kihl (1995).
72 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Fig. 5.1. A dust storm at Zabriskie Point, Death Valley (Calif., USA; from ASG)

From time to time, dust events are recorded further to the east in the
United States, as has happened during drought years like 1981 in Illinois
(Changnon 1983).
The TOMS data show only one area with maximum AI values greater than
5.0 – parts of the Great Basin. This is an area of fault-bounded blocks and
troughs which contains over 150 basins separated from each other by
north–south trending mountain ranges. Most of the basins were occupied
by Pleistocene lakes that covered an area at least 11 times greater than the area
they cover today (Grayson 1993, p. 86). One of these was Bonneville, which
was roughly the size of present-day Lake Michigan. Another was Lahontan,
which covered an area roughly as great as present-day Lake Erie. Their desic-
cation, the presence of extensive areas of salty lake floor (Blank et al. 1999) and
the existence of large expanses of alluvial fans running into the many basins
may account for the importance of this area as a dust source.
Much of the dust in the High Plains may occur at low levels and so may be
inadequately detected by TOMS. Three synoptic patterns are associated
with dust events in the southern High Plains (Wigner and Peters 1987). One
of these is convective modification of the boundary layer. This accounts for
42% of dust events at Lubbock and causes strong winds at low levels, par-
ticularly in late morning (Lee et al. 1994). Another 19% of all events are
caused by thunderstorm outflows, which again may have a limited vertical
extent. The passage of cold fronts usually limits the vertical spread of dust.
a)

>1 %
0.4- 1%
0.2 - 0.4 %
0 600 km

b)

40

30
Percent of stations

20

10

0
Jan. Feb.Mar. Apr. May Jun. Jul. Aug. Sep.Oct. Nov. Dec Jan.

Fig. 5.2. Dust storms in the United States. a) Annual frequency of dust hours with visibility less
than 11 km. b) The percentage of observation stations that have a maximum frequency of air-
borne dust during a particular month. Modified after Gillette and Hanson (1989, Fig. 8) and
Orgill and Sehmel (1976, Fig. 3)
74 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

In addition, while the map of dust storm occurrence in the United States is
based on the work of Orgill and Sehmel (1976), the TOMS data relate to an
entirely different and more recent period. Over that time, changes in land use
have caused a decrease in dust storm activity in some areas, including the
Lubbock region of Texas (Ervin and Lee 1994) and North Dakota (Todhunter
and Cihacek 1999).
Possibly the most famous case of soil erosion by deflation was the Dust
Bowl of the 1930s in the United States. In part this was caused by a series of
hot, dry years associated with anomalous sea surface temperatures (Schubert
et al. 2004) which depleted the vegetation cover and made the soils dry
enough to be susceptible to wind erosion. The effects of this drought were
gravely exacerbated by years of intensive grazing and unsatisfactory farming
techniques. However, perhaps the prime cause of the event was the rapid
expansion of wheat cultivation in the Great Plains (see Chapter 7). The dust
settled at great distances from source, including Canada, New Hampshire
(Page and Chapman 1934), Illinois (Van Heuklon 1977), Philadelphia
(Watson 1934), New York (Anon 1935), Wisconsin (Winchell and Miller
1918) and Louisiana (Russell and Russell 1934).
Dust storms are still a serious problem in various parts of the United
States: the Dust Bowl was not solely a feature of the 1930s. Thus, for example,
in the San Joaquin Valley area of California in 1977, a dust storm caused
extensive damage and erosion over an area of about 2000 km2. More than
25×106 t of soil were stripped from grazing land within a 24-h period. While
the combination of drought and a very high wind (as much as 300 km h−1)
provided the predisposing natural conditions for the stripping to occur,
intensive grazing and the general lack of windbreaks in the agricultural land
played a more significant role. In addition, broad areas of land had recently
been stripped of vegetation, levelled or ploughed up prior to planting.
Elsewhere in California dust yield has been considerably increased by mining
operations in dry lake beds (Wilshire 1980).
Dust storms also occur in the Canadian Prairies (Wheaton and
Chakrabarti 1990), most notably in southern Saskatchewan, where they occur
on average on over five days per year (Fig. 5.3a). The peak season for dust
storms is the spring, when wind speeds are high, vegetative cover is sparse
and precipitation amounts are lower than in the summer (Fig. 5.3b). They can
cause considerable loss of top soil (Wheaton 1992) and were particularly
virulent in the 1930s (Wang 2001).
Large areas of Mexico have a dryland climate but the study of dust storms
has been concentrated in only a few locales, notably Mexico City (Jauregui
1960, 1989; see also Chapter 7). Remote sensing imagery suggests dust-raising
may be widespread (Fig. 5.4); and the country’s northern deserts have been
identified as important contributors to eastern Pacific sediments (Bonatti
and Arrenhius 1965). Inputs of dust from Mexican deserts have also been
identified in soils locally (Slate et al. 1991) and in the United States south-west
(Reynolds et al. 2003).
a) 110⬚W 108⬚ 104⬚ 102⬚W
106⬚

56⬚N 56⬚N

NORTHERN
ADMINISTRATIVE
DISTRICT
54⬚ 54⬚

Prince Albert
2.0 Nipawin
2.0 North 1.5
Battleford
2.5
2.0
52⬚ Saskatoon 52⬚
3.0 4.6 3.0
Wynyard
Kindersley 4.2
4.0
3.6 Yorkton
4.3
4.0
Moose Jaw Regina
4.0 4.8 5.0
50⬚ Swift Current Broadview 50⬚
4.2 3.5

Estevan
3.8 49⬚N
49⬚N
110⬚W 5.0 108⬚ 104⬚ 5.0 4.0 102⬚W
106⬚

b) 13
Dust storm days (monthly mean)

12 Saskatchewan
11 Alberta
10 Manitoba
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Fig. 5.3. a) Annual dust storm frequency (days), Saskatchewan (1977–1983). b) Seasonal distri-
bution of the mean frequency of days with dust storms for each prairie province (1977–1985).
Modified after: (a) Wheaton and Chakrabarti (1987, Fig. 4), (b) Wheaton and Chakrabarti
(1990, Fig. 6)
76 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

USA

Mexico

Fig. 5.4. Multiple dust plumes from Baja California, 10 February 2002 (Seawifs)

5.3 South America

Information on the occurrence of dust storms in South America is sparse.


However, Johnson (1976) suggests that dust storms are frequent in the
Altiplano of Peru, Bolivia and Chile. In Iquique (Chile), most dust activity
occurs in the winter months (May to September). Middleton (1986c) noted
their importance on the Puna de Atacama where salt basins – salars – appear
to be important sources. The presence of extensive areas of closed depres-
sions and of wind-fluted topography, combined with the probable impor-
tance of salt weathering in the preparation of fine material for deflation
(Goudie and Wells 1995), suggest that the dry areas of the Altiplano should
indeed be major source areas for dust storms. TOMS identifies one area in
South America where aerosol values are relatively high. This is the Salar de
The Regional Picture 77

Uyuni, a closed basin in the Altiplano of Bolivia which is located in an area


with 178 mm of annual rainfall. This salar, the largest within the Andes, is
possibly the world’s largest salt flat, though in the Late Pleistocene it was the
site of a huge lake, pluvial Lake Tauca (Lavenu et al. 1984). The pluvial lake
was more than 600 km long; and it is likely that the fine sediments from its
desiccated floor are one of the reasons for the existence of high aerosol val-
ues in this region. It is of the same order of size as some of the other major
basins that are major dust sources (e.g. Bodélé/Chad, Eyre, Taklamakan and
Mkgadikgadi).
In addition, as Middleton (1986c) has shown, there is a tract to the west of
Buenos Aires in Argentina where dust storm activity is substantial, with
extensive areas experiencing more than eight dust storms per year (Fig. 5.5).
In Mendoza, where there is a winter (Mediterranean) rainfall regime, the
dustiest months run from April to August. Rates of dust accretion in the
Pampas are appreciable at the present day (Ramsperger et al. 1998). In addi-
tion, this arid zone has the most extensive spreads of loess in the southern
hemisphere (Teruggi 1957; Kröhling 1999; Sayago 2001). Large numbers of
closed depressions attest to the power of deflation. Dust trapped in the West
Antarctic glaciers and on surfaces in the South Shetland Islands may have a
Patagonian origin (Iriondo 2000; Gaiero et al. 2004; Lee et al. 2004).

5.4 Southern Africa

Southern Africa is not a major area of dust production from a global


perspective, even though it has large areas of arid terrain both in the coastal
Namib and in the interior (Kalahari and Karoo). There are extensive areas of
pans (Goudie and Wells 1995), many of which are, at least in part, the result
of deflation; and there are many windstreaks and yardangs known from the
Namib. Examination of satellite images has shown the presence of dust
plumes driven by Berg winds blowing westwards off the Namib (Fig. 5.6) and
the Kalahari towards the South Atlantic (Eckardt et al. 2002). In addition,
sedimentological studies have shown the presence of loess and loess-like
deposits in parts of Namibia (Eitel et al. 2001).
TOMS analyses indicate that there are two relatively small, but clearly
developed dust source areas in southern Africa (Fig. 5.7). The most intense of
these is centred over the Etosha Pan in northern Namibia (Bryant 2003). The
other centre is over the Mgkadikgadi Depression in northern Botswana.
The Etosha Pan, which covers an area of about 6000 km2, comprises a salt
lake that occupies the sump of a much larger fault-controlled basin. The
salt lake often floods in the summer, but is for the most part dry enough in
the winter for deflation to occur, as is made evident by the presence of exten-
sive lunette dunes on its lee (western) side (Buch and Zoller 1992). It is fed by
an extensive system of ephemeral flood channels – oshanas – that have laid
78 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

70⬚ 68 2 60⬚
4 46
2
4 8
2
6
2

8
6
4
2
30⬚
30⬚

Buenos Aires

42

6
4
2
40⬚
40⬚

2 Dust storm days / year 1968–1978

Dust storm frequency / year


4
>8 dust storm days / year
2
Land over 2000m

50⬚
50⬚
0 200 km
2

80⬚ 70⬚ 60⬚ 50⬚

Fig. 5.5. The distribution of dust storms in Argentina. Note that no visibility limit is used. From
Middleton (1986c, Fig. 11.15)
The Regional Picture 79

Angola

Etosha

Namibia

Fig. 5.6. Plumes of dust blowing off the Namib Desert of Namibia and southern Angola, 9 June
2004 (MODIS)

down large tracts of susceptible fine-grained alluvial and lacustrine


sediments. In the past it is possible that it has also received large inputs of
material from the highlands of Angola via the Cunene River (Wellington
1938). Flood events have a marked effect on immediate and subsequent dust
emissions (Bryant 2003).
The Mkgadikdadi depression of northern Botswana is another major
structural feature, the floor of which is now occupied by a series of saline
sumps. In dry years these present surfaces from which deflation can and does
occur. The pans are, however, but shrivelled remnants of a former pluvial
lake, Lake Palaeo-Mkgadikgadi, which at its greatest extent covered 120 000
km2 (Thomas and Shaw 1991). It was second in Africa only to Lake Chad at
its Pleistocene maximum. It was fed with water and sediment from the
Okavango and, perhaps, Zambezi systems and by more locally derived rivers
(mekgacha) flowing from the south.
80 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

10S

20S

30S

10E 20E 30E 40E

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
TOMS Aerosal Index

Fig. 5.7. Annual average TOMS aerosol index (AI) values for southern Africa. Modified after
Washington et al. (2003, Fig. 14)

Dust events in the southern African source regions are invariably associated
with enhancement of the low-level easterly circulation over the interior
(Eckardt et al. 2002). Transient eddies, in the form of west-to-east migrating
anticyclones travelling to the west of a Rossby wave-trough axis, are confined
to the oceanic areas immediately to the south of the subcontinent as a result of
the unbroken escarpment (De Wet 1979; Tyson and Preston-Whyte 2000). The
migration of mass in these systems leads to an enhanced east–west gradient
and the corresponding anomalous easterlies, which, over the western half of the
subcontinent, are associated with dust storms and plumes over the subtropical
The Regional Picture 81

southeast Atlantic. One particularly intense storm that transported large


amounts of material across the interior of South Africa, probably originating in
the Mkgadikdadi salt pans, occurred in August 2003 (Resane et al. 2004).
Figure 5.8 shows an overlay of TOMS values, potential sand flux (q) and
elevation derived from a digital elevation model at 0.5˚ resolution. Data for
TOMS AI values and for potential sand flux relate to July–September, which
corresponds with the season of largest AI values in Etosha and Mkgadikgadi.
Unlike the cases of the AI maxima in the Sahara and China, there is no clear
association between a maximum of potential sand flux and AI values. Neither
of the two pans is located in a region where topographic channelling of
the wind would accelerate it sufficiently to produce a large dust source.

10S
6
4
70

20 2
20 0
22

20
20 2
18
2
16
4
14 6

12

10 30
10 8 2
20S 4
8 4 6
30
8
6

4
2 2

0
50

60

30S
10E 20E 30E

0 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.1


Elevation (km)

Fig. 5.8. TOMS aerosol index (AI) values (white contours, contour interval 2), scaled potential
sand flux (black contours, contour interval 10) and elevation in km (shaded) for southern
Africa, long-term means, July–September. Modified after Washington et al. (2003, Fig. 15)
82 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

The region is remarkably flat. Instead, it is likely that the southern Africa dust
sources are supply-limited, with suitable material available only from the two
pans (Washington et al. 2003). Much of the rest of northern Botswana and
northern Namibia, which is relatively moist, with mean annual precipitation
levels of around 400–800 mm, is covered by savanna woodland and grassland,
and so is not readily susceptible to deflation.

5.5 The Sahara

The Sahara and its margins are the world’s major source of aeolian mineral
aerosol (Morales 1979; Brooks 1999; Kaufman et al. 2005; Fig. 5.9). This
amounts to almost half of all aeolian desert material supplied to the world’s
oceans. There are many different dust-bearing winds in the region (Table 5.1);
and the power of these winds as deflational agents is particularly great north
of 15˚ (Clark et al. 2004). On the south side of the Sahara winds exceed the
threshold velocity for sediment particle movement during two distinct sea-
sons. During the dry season from October to April the area is subject to north
easterly trade winds, locally called Harmattan. In the early rainy season the
atmosphere is very unstable and strong convectional activity occurs. Fully
developed thunderstorms associated with large cumulonimbus clouds pro-
duce strong vertical downdrafts that cause a vigorous forward outflow of
cold, dust-raising air.
One of the most important needs in furthering our understanding of
the Saharan production of dust is to identify the major source areas (Stuut

Dust

Canary
Islands

Sahara

Fig. 5.9. A Seawifs image of a Saharan dust storm on 26 February 2000


The Regional Picture 83

Table 5.1. Local names for Saharan dust-bearing winds (after Middleton 1986c)

Name (derivation Meteorological


when known) Area affected Season Direction from conditions

Irifi Western Sahara SE Frontal


Ghibli (free Tripolitania Pre-frontal
translation:
‘wind from
south Mecca’)
Guebli (south Tunisia and All year, but S Pre-frontal with
wind) Algeria most prevalent katabatic
(northern parts) May–October effects from
interior uplands
to coastal plains
Sahel Morocco SW Frontal
Harmattan Bilma/Faya October–April ENE Pressure surge
(Fantee: Largeau area after cold air
‘aharaman’ to plus much of outbreaks from
blow and ‘ta’ 20˚ N mid-latitudes
grease locally,
used to cover
skin)
Brume sèche West Africa October–April Harmattan haze
(French: ‘dry in light winds
haze’)
Haboob (Arabic: Sudan (but May–July Single-cell
‘to blow’) has become thunderstorm
almost generic downdraft
in its use)
Khamsin Egypt Spring Pre-frontal
(Arabic: ‘fifty’a)
Chili Tunisia and Spring SW Pre-frontal
Algeria
Shekheli Algeria Spring
Chergui Moroccan Sahara Summer NE
Dschani Southern Sahara
Kharif Somalia June–September SW
Gobar Ethiopia
Sirocco Southern Europe Spring S Frontal
Leveche Spanish Spring SE–SW Frontal
Mediterranean
coast: Malaga–
Alicante
Leste Maderia Frontal
Levanto Canary Islands
a
Variously taken to refer to the average duration of the wind (50 h), its annual frequency (50 times) and
its season of maximum onset (the 50 days either side of the spring solstice)
84 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

et al. 2005). Hermann et al. (1999) attempted to survey previous studies of


Saharan dust sources but remarked (p.142): “Astonishingly, the results with
regard to source areas are totally different. No overlapping can be detected
which could serve as a confirmation of results”. One reason for this situation
is the range of source identification methods that have been used by different
workers: remote sensing, analysis of surface dust observations, back trajec-
tory analysis of isobar data and the use of mineral tracers. This lack of agree-
ment over source areas is evident from comparison of various attempts at
their delimitation shown in Fig. 5.10.
However, in recent years, some progress has been made in identifying
source areas by measurements of infra-red radiances such as those acquired
by METEOSAT. These can be used to produce the Infra-red Difference Dust
Index (IDDI; Brooks and Legrand 2000). This method has highlighted the
Bodélé Depression between Tibesti and Lake Chad (centred on 16˚ N and
18˚ E) as an important source region throughout the year, together with a large
swathe of country covering portions of Mauritania, Mali and southern Algeria.
It also suggests that the Horn of Africa (see also Léon and Legrand 2003) and
the Nubian Desert in southern Egypt and northern Sudan are important
sources. The importance of the Bodélé region was also shown by Kalu (1979)
and Hermann et al. (1999), but the status of the other regions is less clear.

5.5.1 Saharan Sources

TOMS data (Fig. 5.11) confirm that the Bodélé is the most intense source
region, not only in the Sahara, but also in the world (Giles 2005), with AI val-
ues that exceed 30. It also demonstrates the presence of a large but less
intense area (AI values over 24) in the West Sahara. This extends through to
the Atlantic coast of Mauritania. Relatively high AI values are also observed
in the interior of Libya, where numerous dust plumes have been observed with
SeaWifs (Koren et al. 2003).
Because of the high correlation between TOMS AI values and dust optical
thickness (DOT) as determined by sun photometer readings, it is possible to
construct maps of DOT (and thus total atmospheric dust load) over the
Sahara (Moulin and Chiapello 2003; Fig. 5.12). This highlights the importance
of the zone between 15˚ N and 22˚ N and confirms the high level of dustiness
developed over the western Sahara.
The importance of Bodélé as a dust source is related to various factors.
First, the region is very dry (Faya Largeau receiving an average annual rain-
fall of just 17 mm), but is fed with silty alluvium by streams draining from the
Tibesti Massif. There may also be susceptible silty materials that were laid
down in an expanded Lake Chad during early Holocene and Pleistocene plu-
vials, together with extensive spreads of ancient diatomites, many of which
are furrowed by yardangs. In addition, Mainguet and Chemin (1990) have
argued that deflational activity downwind from Tibesti may be substantial
The Regional Picture 85

a) b)
10˚W
10⬚W 0 10˚
10⬚ 20˚
20⬚ 30⬚E
30˚E
0 1500 km

30⬚
30˚ Ahaggar 30˚
30⬚
Massif

Tibesti

Dakar Tamanrasset
20˚
20⬚
Bilma
Bilma Bilma
Niamey Faya-Largeau
Zinder
Legend:
10⬚N
10˚N Kano Main source 10˚N
10⬚N
of dust
Lagos
Accra Trajectory in
0 1500 km
winter
Trajectory in
G. of Guinea Douala summer 10⬚W
10˚W 0 10˚
10⬚ 20⬚
20˚ 30˚E
30⬚E
c) d)
Major dust sources
Atlas Mtns. Tunis
SUMM. Intermittent source
0 1500 km

.
SPR
R.
Land over 1000m

.
SP

R
SP
Main trajectories of
30⬚N
30˚ Ahaggar seasonal transport
Nouakchott
SUMM Tibesti
ER
SUMM. 20⬚N
SPR Faya-
. Largeau
Bilma
20˚ Khartoum
SPRING ER Lake
NT .
WIChad Darfur MM
Maiduguri ERChad SU
10⬚N
10˚N T
Lagos W IN
Accra
10⬚
10˚ 0 1500 km
10˚W
10⬚W 0 10˚
10⬚ 20˚
20⬚ 30⬚E
30˚E 10⬚W 0 40⬚E
20˚

e) f)
10⬚W
10˚W 0 10⬚E
10˚E 20⬚
20˚ 30⬚
30˚ Key 10⬚W
10˚W 0 10⬚E
10˚E 20⬚
20˚ 30˚
30⬚ 40⬚
40˚
6.5
6.0
30˚
30⬚N 5.5 30˚
30⬚N
5.0

20⬚
20˚ 20⬚

10⬚
10˚ 10⬚
10˚

0 1500 km 0 1500 km

Fig. 5.10. Previous attempts to delimit Saharan dust source areas. a) After Kalu (1979), b) after
D’Almeida (1986), c) after Dubief (1953) d) after Middleton (1986), e) after Brooks and Legrand
(2000), f) composite of a–e. Modified after Middleton and Goudie (2001, Fig. 1)

and help to explain the excavation of Lake Chad itself. There is distinct
topographic funnelling of high velocity winds. Moreover, Washington and
Todd (2005) have pointed to the importance of the Bodélé low-level jet in
creating dust emissions from the area. This is a feature which uniquely over-
lies the greater Bodélé region rather than areas surrounding it.
86 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

0 1500 km
0 0 0
0

0 6

40⬚N 0
0

0 3
3
6
12
9 9 3
3 12
3 3
6 6 6
15 6
9 12 9
12 15
15 6 9

6 3
18
6
20⬚N 30 12 9 21
9 27
21 12 6 12 18
15 18 21 12
15
15 18 24 9
12 15 9 6
12 6 3
12 3 3
9
9 3
0
9

3
6

3 3
6 0 3 0
6
0
20⬚W 0 20⬚E 40⬚E 60⬚E

Fig. 5.11. Mean aerosol index values for Northern Africa and the Middle East from TOMS data
(1980–1993, 1997–2000). Modified after Middleton and Goudie (2001, Fig. 4)

The reasons for the importance of the West Saharan dust source in Mali,
Mauritania and Algeria are less well understood. However, it is an area of low
relief bounded on the north and east by uplands. While such upland areas are
not themselves major dust source regions, ephemeral wadis draining from
them have transported silt-rich alluvium into the area. Likewise, in the past,
the southern part of the region may have received alluvial inputs from the
Niger River prior to its capture by southeast-trending drainage near Tosaye
(Urvoy 1942). It also contains an enormous closed depression some 900 km
long and various ergs that could provide a dust source through winnowing.
The depression contains many ancient lakebeds that show signs of intense
deflation in the Holocene (Petit-Maire 1991). Dubief (1953) maps it as an area
of high aeolian activity; and it is also rather dry, with annual precipitation
levels of 5–100 mm.
Interestingly, both of these two main source areas are little affected by
anthropogenic activities. They have very few settlements and are too dry to
support settled agriculture, each having an extremely arid climate. Although
several studies have shown the importance of areas in Sahelian latitudes as
source areas that have increased their dust output during periods character-
ized both by prolonged drought and intensified land use, in places leading to
The Regional Picture 87

20⬚W 10⬚W 0⬚ 10⬚E 20⬚E

Morocco

30⬚N
Algeria
Libya

20⬚N

Mauritania Mali
Niger
Chad
Sudan

10⬚N Nigeria

0.10 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25


Dust optical thickness

Fig. 5.12. The mean summer DOT over Africa and the North Atlantic (1979–2000) determined
by TOMS. Modified after Moulin and Chiapello (2003, Fig. 2a)

desertification (Goudie and Middleton 1992; N’Tchayi et al. 1997), the


Sahara’s two major dust sources are primarily driven by natural climatic and
geomorphological factors.
However, the relative lack of human activity in these two major Saharan
dust source regions also means a relative dearth of ground-based information
on the wind erosion system in these areas. Data derived from remote-sensing
platforms has helped to fill these information gaps in recent times. Koren and
Kaufman (2004) estimated that a minimum wind speed of 10 m s−1 is needed
to initiate a dust storm in the Bodélé depression following their examination
of some 15 storms in 2003 with Moderate resolution imaging spectroradiome-
ter (MODIS) data from the Terra and Aqua satellites. Since the Aqua passes
over the depression around 3 h after Terra, the authors were also able to mon-
itor the movement of dust plumes from the Bodélé. Their analysis indicates
that the dust clouds are blown along at around 13 m s−1, which is about double
the speed calculated from previous ground-based measurements.
Various attempts have been made to estimate and model the source
strength of the Sahara, using data on mineral loadings in the atmosphere,
surface material characteristics (Callot et al. 2000) and transport models
(Table 5.2). The estimates show a wide range of values that may reflect
88 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 5.2. Estimates of the source strength of the Sahara

Author (s) Annual quantity (×106 t year−1)

Jaenicke (1979) 260


Schütz et al. (1981) 260
Prospero (1996a, b) 170
Swap et al. (1996) 130–460
D’Almeida (1986) 630–710
Marticorena and Bergametti (1996) 586–665
Callot et al. (2000) 760
Ginoux et al. (2004) 1400
Miller et al. (2004) 517

differences in modelling procedures, differences in the time-scales consid-


ered and differences in the areal extent of the source. There are few data avail-
able which allow a comparison with other major source areas. An exception
to this is provided by the work of Zhang et al. (1997) on the Taklamakan
Desert. For this region, they estimate an annual dust production of 800×106 t.
On this basis, they propose that this may be around half of the global pro-
duction of dust. Other data are presented in Table 5.3.
An alternative method that can be used to compare relative source
strengths is the TOMS data. By looking at the AI intensity and its areal extent,
it is possible to gain an indication of the predominance of the Sahara in com-
parison with other desert areas. As Table 4.2 shows, three of the world’s four
most important dust sources occur within the Sahara, and Fig. 5.13 shows the
area and intensity of the Saharan AI compared with those for Arabia, north-
west China and the Thar. It confirms the importance of the Sahara on the
global scale.
The seasonal patterns show great variability. Dust activity appears to be
very limited over the entire area in October, November, December (OND;
Fig. 5.14a). There is minimal activity in the eastern and northern parts and
relatively little dust presence over the North Atlantic. The only area that has
a substantial number of days (27%) with AI values over 19 is the Bodélé
depression, which is active throughout the year. Aerosol presence is greater
in January, February, March (JFM; Fig. 5.14b), especially in the southernmost
part of the area, but it is possible this may partly be the result of smoke from
biomass burning during the dry season. However, once again Bodélé emerges
as that with the highest frequency of dust. April, May, June (AMJ; Fig. 5.14c)
is the period with the greatest level of dust occurrences, with much of the
region being active. Three squares have AI values of over 19 on more than
80% of days; and there is a large area, centred on Mauritania and Mali, where
this is the case for over 60% of days. There is also a moderate level of activity
over the Middle East and on the southern borders of the Mediterranean.
The Regional Picture 89

Table 5.3. Estimates of global and regional dust emissions

Region Tg year−1 %

Global emissions (derived from data in Miller et al. 2004, Fig. 1)


Sahara/Sahel – 50.7
Central Asia – 16.0
Australia – 14.5
North America – 5.2
East Asia – 4.9
Arabia – 4.2
Others – 4.5
Dust emissions (derived from data in Ginoux et al. 2001)
North Africa 1430 69.0
South Africa 322 1.1
North America 9 0.4
South America 55 2.7
Asia 496 23.9
Australia 61 2.9
Total emissions 2073 100
Global Emissions in 1998 (derived from data in Luo et al. 2003)
North Africa 1114 67.4
Arabian Peninsula 119 7.2
Asia 54 3.3
Australia 132 8.0
Miscellaneous 235 14.2
Total emissions 1654 100

In July, August, September (JAS; Fig. 5.14d), the Mauritania–Mali area continues
to dominate, but the southern part of the region (probably as a reflection of
the main rainy season in tropical West Africa) is relatively inactive. It is a sea-
son when dust occurrence over the western Mediterranean is at its highest
and when there are major dust deposition events in Corsica, Sardinia and
their neighbours.
The seasonal pattern of dust activity in the Sahara can also be assessed
through analysis of meteorological data. In Table 5.4 we present data on the
percentage number of days with blowing dust/sand for each month for a lat-
itudinal sequence of stations from Abidjan (Ivory Coast) in the south to
Sousse (Tunisia) in the north. The two months in the year with the highest
percentages of dust days are highlighted. In the south [essentially between
Abidjan and Dakar (Senegal)], the highest percentages occur between
November and March. This is the time of the Harmattan. By contrast, as we
move into the central and northern Sahara, April to August is the time with
the highest percentages. In other words, there is an annual migration of the
dust centre of gravity over the course of the year, a finding that is confirmed
by MODIS observations (Kaufman et al. 2005).
One area in northern Africa that repeatedly generates dust, particularly in
the dry summer months (June and July), when haboobs are common (Tothill
90 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a) b)
500 500
450 450
400 Sahara 400 Sahara
350 Arabia 350 Arabia
300 China 300 China
Area

Area
250 Thar 250 Thar
200 200
150 150
100 100
50 50
0 0
9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42
Aerosol Index Aerosol Index

c) d)
500 500
450 450
400 Sahara 400
350 Arabia 350 Sahara

300 China 300 Arabia


Area
Area

250 Thar 250 China


200 200 Thar
150 150
100 100
50 50
0 0
9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42
Aerosol Index Aerosol Index

Fig. 5.13. The extent and intensity of the AI derived by TOMS for four major desert areas:
Sahara, Arabia, China and Thar. The figure shows the areas (in km2 × 103) covered by different
intensities of the AI. Modified after Goudie and Middleton (2001, Fig. 2)

1948, p. 709), is the Tokar Delta area of Sudan (18.5˚ N, 37.7˚ E; Fig. 5.15).
This 2150 km2 delta, fed by the silt-laden Baraka River, is located on the Red
Sea coast approximately 170 km south of Port Sudan and is in an arid area
(mean annual precipitation of around 74 mm). The delta consists of alluvial
silts across which winds are funnelled through a major gap (ca. 110 km wide)
in the Red Sea Hills. MODIS imagery pinpoints this hot spot for dust genera-
tion repeatedly (Fig. 5.16). Dust storms are also common over parts of Egypt;
and Table 5.5, based on ground observations, provides information on the
distribution and frequency of dust storms in that country (Banoub 1970).
Dust storm activity appears to be greatest between December and May.

5.6 Trajectories of Saharan Dust Transport

Saharan dust is regularly transported from its source areas along four main
transport paths: (a) southwards to the Gulf of Guinea and to countries
such as Ivory Coast and Ghana (Breuning-Madsen and Awadzi 2005), (b)
The Regional Picture 91

a) 50⬚N

45⬚ 0 1500 km

40⬚

35⬚

30⬚

25⬚

20⬚

15⬚

10⬚

5⬚

0
35⬚W 30⬚ 25⬚ 20⬚ 15⬚ 10⬚ 5⬚ 0 5⬚ 10⬚ 15⬚ 20⬚ 25⬚ 30⬚ 35⬚ 40⬚ 45⬚ 50⬚ 55⬚E

0–14 15–29

b) 50⬚N

45⬚ 0 1500 km

40⬚

35⬚

30⬚

25⬚

20⬚

15⬚

10⬚

5⬚

0
35⬚W 30⬚ 25⬚ 20⬚ 15⬚ 10⬚ 5⬚ 0 5⬚ 10⬚ 15⬚ 20⬚ 25⬚ 30⬚ 35⬚ 40⬚ 45⬚ 50⬚ 55⬚E

0–14 15–29 30–44

Fig. 5.14. Seasonal 1999 TOMS maps. Percentage of days with AI values >1.9: a) October,
November, December (OND), b) January, February, March (JFM),
92 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

c) 50⬚N

45⬚ 0 1500 km

40⬚

35⬚

30⬚

25⬚

20⬚

15⬚

10⬚

5⬚

0
35⬚W 30⬚ 25⬚ 20⬚ 15⬚ 10⬚ 5⬚ 0 5⬚ 10⬚ 15⬚ 20⬚ 25⬚ 30⬚ 35⬚ 40⬚ 45⬚ 50⬚ 55⬚E

0–14 15–29 30–44 45–59 60–74 75–89

d) 50⬚N

45⬚ 0 1500 km

40⬚

35⬚

30˚

25⬚

20⬚

15⬚

10⬚

5⬚

0
35⬚W 30⬚ 25⬚ 20⬚ 15⬚ 10⬚ 5⬚ 0 5⬚ 10⬚ 15⬚ 20⬚ 25⬚ 30⬚ 35⬚ 40⬚ 45⬚ 50⬚ 55⬚E

0–14 15–29 30–44 45–59 60–74 75–89

Fig. 5.14. (continued) c) April, May, June (AMJ), d) July, August, September (JAS). Modified
after Middleton and Goudie (2001, Fig. 3)
Table 5.4. Seasonality of blowing sand/dust in North Africa. Source: Weatherbase.com

Location (latitude) J F M A M J J A S O N D
The Regional Picture

Abidjan (5˚ 15′ N) 45.5 9.1 9.1 – – – 9.1 – – – – 27.3


Zaria (11˚ 08′ N) 15.9 12.6 12.6 7.3 2.0 2.0 1.3 3.3 3.3 9.9 15.2 14.6
Maiduguri (11˚ 51′ N) 16.1 13.3 15.0 11.1 3.9 1.1 1.1 0.6 1.1 7.2 13.9 15.6
Sokoto (13˚ 01′ N) 13.2 12.0 15.0 11.4 6.0 2.4 1.8 1.2 1.8 7.8 14.4 13.2
Niamey (13˚ 29′ N) 13.7 11.8 14.3 11.8 7.5 4.3 1.9 1.2 2.5 8.1 10.6 12.4
Zinder (13˚ 47′ N) 11.8 10.8 11.8 10.3 8.7 7.2 3.1 1.0 4.1 9.7 10.8 10.8
Mopti (14˚ 31′ N) 13.6 12.8 14.4 12.0 8.0 8.0 4.0 0.8 2.4 6.4 6.4 11.2
Dakar (14˚ 44′ N) 15.7 13.0 14.8 13.0 9.3 3.7 1.6 0.9 2.8 6.5 7.4 11.1
Timbuktu (16˚ 43′ N) 9.0 7.8 10.1 10.1 9.6 11.7 9.6 6.4 6.4 6.4 4.8 7.8
Agadez (16˚ 58′ N) 8.1 7.7 9.9 9.0 10.8 10.8 10.7 6.3 5.9 6.8 7.2 7.2
Nouakchott (18˚ 06′ N) 9.2 8.4 9.9 9.9 10.6 9.5 7.7 6.2 7.0 7.3 6.6 7.7
Bilma (18˚ 41′ N) 8.3 8.3 10.6 9.3 9.3 9.3 10.2 8.8 6.9 6.0 6.0 6.9
Atar (20˚ 31′ N) 8.1 6.7 9.1 7.7 7.7 9.6 12.4 12.0 9.6 5.7 5.3 6.2
Nouadhibou (20˚ 56′ N) 7.7 7.3 9.8 9.8 10.6 10.6 10.2 8.9 8.1 6.1 5.3 5.7
Ad Dakhla (23˚ 42′ N) 8.4 6.7 7.6 4.2 6.7 8.4 13.4 14.3 8.4 6.7 6.7 8.4
Sousse (35˚ 46′ N) 9.7 7.5 6.0 9.0 9.0 9.7 17.2 12.7 6.7 3.7 7.5 1.5
93
94 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a)

0 20 km N
Suakin

ob
K. G w

t
ihna
Aaks
SK.u

ra Tokar
tian
aSki
KS.u

Red Tokar
Sea
Hills
Aqiq

Adobana

ut
ar
a

rabl
rak

tBe
KA.f
kBaar

Afterba
Ko.
T

b)
30 40

35
25
30
Temperature (⬚C)

20
Rainfall (mm)

25

15 20
Rainfall
15
10 Temperature
10
5
5

0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Fig. 5.15. a) The location of the Tokar delta, Sudan. b) Temperature and rainfall data for Tokar

westward over the North Atlantic Ocean (NAO; Carlson and Prospero 1972:
Moulin et al. 1997) to the islands of the eastern Atlantic such as the Canaries
(Alastuey et al. 2005), North America (Perry et al. 1997) and South America
(Swap et al. 1992), (c) northward across the Mediterranean (Löye-Pilot et al.
The Regional Picture 95

1986) to southern Europe, sometimes as far north as Scandinavia and the


Baltic (Franzen et al. 1994; Papayannis et al. 2005; Barkan et al. 2005) and (d)
along easterly trajectories across the eastern Mediterranean (Herut and Krom
1996; Kubilay et al. 2000, 2005) to the Middle East (Ganor et al. 1991) and pos-
sibly as far as the Himalayas (Carrico et al. 2003) and East Asia as far as Japan
(Tanaka et al. 2005).

5.6.1 North Atlantic Trajectories

The westward flow of material over the NAO is the most voluminous,
accounting for 30–50% of output (Schütz et al. 1981; D’Almeida 1986).
Numerous papers have documented the transport and deposition of Saharan

a) 250 km

Sudan

Saudi Arabia

Tokar Delta
Plume

Fig. 5.16 Two MODIS images of the Tokar delta, bordering the Red Sea in Sudan, showing
plumes of dust blowing westwards towards Saudi Arabia. a) 11 July 2002, b) 1 September 2004
96 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

b)
N

Saudi Arabia

Port
Sudan O

Tokar Delta

Sudan

Fig. 5.16. (continued)

dust to distant regions of the NAO and to the Americas (for reviews, see Duce
1995; Prospero 1996a). Kaufman et al. (2005), using MODIS, calculated that
around 240 Tg of dust are transported annually into and across the Atlantic
Ocean, with 50 Tg of this fertilizing the Amazon Basin.
In his voyage on the Beagle, Charles Darwin reported that the atmosphere
was generally hazy over the Cape Verde Islands and stated (1893, p. 18):
“I have found no less than fifteen different accounts of dust having fallen
on vessels when far out in the Atlantic. From the direction of the wind when-
ever it has fallen, and from its having always fallen during those months when
the harmattan is known to raise clouds of dust high into the atmosphere, we
may feel sure that it comes from Africa”.
Large dust outbreaks during the summer appear to be associated with strong
convective disturbances that develop over West Africa at about 15–20˚ N
The Regional Picture 97

Table 5.5. Dust storm frequencies in Egypt (1964–1968). Processed from data provided by
Meteorological Dept, Cairo, Arab Republic of Egypt

Location Annual frequency

>1000 m visibility <1000 m visibility

Sallum 40 10.0
Mersa Matruh 38 9.6
Alexandria 13 3.4
Port Said 12 1.6
Tanta 0.5 0.2
Cairo 46 6.5
Fayum 5 0
Minya 17 0
Assyout 33 1.6
Luxor 32 2.2
Aswan 68 6.6
Siwa 25 1.4
Baharija 16 2.4
Farafra 32 2.8
Daklha 47 0.6
Kharga 49 2.0
Hurghada 23 2.0
Qusier 30 1.6
Mean value 29.2 3.0

and move westward, carrying material entrained in Saharan and Sahelian lat-
itudes. Resultant dust plumes over the NAO are usually associated with east-
erly waves that emerge from the African coast every 3–4 days. Their complex
structure produces intricate distribution patterns, including northward
branches that can transport material to Western Europe. Remote sensing
images over the NAO have also demonstrated the importance of the develop-
ment of the Azores–Bermuda high-pressure system in summer in drawing
dust-laden air from the tropical North Atlantic into the subtropical region
(Jickells et al. 1998).
Saharan dust outbreaks over the NAO commonly start over North Africa
in a deep, well mixed, dry adiabatic layer of air that is undercut by cool, moist
low-level air as it advances westward and emerges from the African coast to
become a discrete Saharan air layer (SAL). The SAL, which is usually charac-
terized by a temperature inversion at its base, is often associated with a
mid-level easterly jet. Outbreaks of the dust-laden SAL commonly persist
for several days but exceptionally can last for tens of days (Carlson 1979).
98 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

The longer-lived plumes transport material the furthest. Transport to the


Caribbean, where an estimated 20×106 t of Saharan dust is deposited annually
(Schlatter 1995), typically takes 5–7 days (Prospero and Carlson 1981). The
duration of individual Saharan dust events, monitored at Trinidad in the
West Indies, can vary between 3 days and 5 days; and sometimes back-to-
back episodes can last as long as 20 days (Rajkumar and Chang 2000).
The latitudinal pathways of transatlantic transport vary seasonally. Hence,
the maximum Saharan aerosol concentrations monitored at Barbados and
Miami are in July and August (Prospero and Carlson 1981; Prospero et al.
1987; Prospero 1999), while the highest concentrations monitored at Cayenne
(Prospero et al. 1981) are in March (Fig. 5.17). Sal Island lies in a zone that is
affected by both of these seasonal pathways, displaying a bimodal peak
(March and August/September) in atmospheric turbidity (Schütz 1979).
TOMS analysis shows this clear seasonal pattern of dust export over the NAO
(Table 5.6). The zone of dust export is most intense between 10˚ N and 25˚ N,
but it migrates seasonally. In JFM, the zone of maximum AI is between 5˚ N
and 10˚ N. By AMJ, it is between 10˚ N and 20˚ N, whereas in JAS, it is
between 15˚ N and 25˚ N. By OND, a southward retreat has begun, but
dust export is relatively modest in amount. This seasonal pattern is com-
parable to that obtained from AVHRR aerosol optical thickness data
(Swap et al. 1996) and from ship observations of haze made prior to the 1930s
(McDonald 1938).
Specific sources for transatlantic dust plumes are not well known. They are
perhaps most likely to be in the Mauritania–Mali area and further north in
Western Sahara/Southern Morocco, although the clear seasonal signals found
in dust concentrations on the western side of the Atlantic are not simply
related to the seasonality of dust events recorded on the West African coast
(Fig. 5.17). At Nouakchott, dust storms are a feature of the first six months of
the year, before the annual rains; and hence it is unlikely that this station lies
in the pathway of the strong summer flow that reaches Miami and Barbados.
Further north, dust event frequencies at Nouadhibou and Dahkla are much
less obviously seasonal, although the month of maximum dust activity at both
stations is February. Harmattan dust blown from the Bodélé depression tends
not to travel far over the Gulf of Guinea, as it is efficiently scavenged by rain-
fall associated with the Intertropical Convergence Zone, which typically
descends no further than 5˚ N (Afeti and Resch 2000). The implication in var-
ious remote-sensing studies (e.g. Swap et al. 1996; Husar et al. 1997) that dust
reaching South America may be from Bodélé is investigated further in
Fig. 5.18, using data from the only period, 1977–1979, when regular monitor-
ing of mineral dust was carried out at Cayenne (Prospero et al. 1981). The link
with Bodélé dust is not confirmed by comparing the seasonality of mineral
dust concentrations in surface level air at Cayenne with that of thick dust haze
at Maiduguri in Northern Nigeria, a station directly within the Harmattan
trajectory. A better, though still far from complete, link to potential sources is
made with Nouakchott. However, the number of sites and length of data
35 Miami 35 Dahkla

30 30

25 25

20 20

15 15

10 10
The Regional Picture

Monthly frequency of mean


Monthly frequency of mean
5 5

annual blowing dust days (%)

mineral dust concentration (%)


0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

35 Barbados 80⬚W 60⬚ 40⬚ 20⬚ 0⬚ 35 Nouadhibou

30 30⬚N 30
Atlantic
25 Miami O ce a n 25
Dahkla
20 Nouadhibou 20
Barbados Sal Island Nouakchott
15 15
10⬚
10 10
Cayenne

annual dust storm days (%)

Monthly frequency of mean


Monthly frequency of mean
5 5

mineral dust concentration (%)


0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

35 Cayenne 35 Nouakchott
35 Sal Island
30 30
30
25 25
25
20 20
20
15 15
15
10 10 10

mean turbidity (%)


Monthly frequency of

Monthly frequency of mean


annual dust storm days (%)
Monthly frequency of mean

5 5 5

mineral dust concentration (%)


0 0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Fig. 5.17. Seasonality of dust events over the North Atlantic and west coast of Africa. Modified after Goudie and Middleton (2001, Fig. 3)
99
100 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 5.6. Dust over the North Atlantic from 1999 TOMS data (percentage of days with AI >19)

Latitude (˚N) Season

JFM AMJ JAS OND

45–50 0 0 0 0
40–45 0 0 0 0
35–40 0 0 0 0
30–35 0.44 0 2.24 0
25–30 0.22 8.64 9.78 0
20–25 0 24.58 29.52 0.68
15–20 0.68 33.1 29.12 2.26
10–15 3.44 30.0 8.7 0.68
5–10 11.9 11.7 1.32 0.44
0–5 3.44 0.68 0 0.22

considered are too limited for firm conclusions to be drawn and it may be that
a combination of sources contributes to the Cayenne record.

5.6.2 European Trajectories

Saharan dust is often deposited over southern Europe in precipitation (Blanco


et al. 2003) or in the dry form and has been reported since ancient times
(Bücher and Lucas 1984). In southern Iberia, for example, the frequency of
African dust outbreaks averages 16–19 episodes per year (Querol et al. 2004).
In Mallorca, 253 Saharan dust rains were recorded between 1982 and 2003
(Fiol et al. 2005). In Italy, lidar observations in Naples suggest that the atmos-
pheric aerosol load is influenced by Saharan dust about 15% of the time
(Pisani et al. 2005). On 17 April 2005, a severe dust cloud enveloped Athens in
Greece. Less frequently, deposition occurs further north, on the British Isles
(Wheeler 1986), the Netherlands (Reiff et al. 1986), Germany (Jaeger et al.
1988; Littmann 1991b), Switzerland (Schwikowski et al. 1995), the French Alps
(Aymoz et al. 2004), Hungary (Borbély-Kiss et al. 2004) and Northern
Scandinavia (Franzen et al. 1994). Individual events can be large, such as the
dustfall in March 1991, which covered at least 320 000 km2, stretching across
Europe from Sicily to Sweden and Finland (Burt 1991a; Bücher and Dessens
1992; Franzen et al. 1995). A Europe-wide study between 2000 and 2003, using
a co-ordinated aerosol lidar network based on 21 stations as part of the EAR-
LINET project, observed 90 significant events of free tropospheric dust layers
in Europe during that period (Papayannis et al. 2005).
The Saharan source strength for dust transport to Europe was estimated at
80–120×106 t year−1 by D’Almeida (1986), based on sun photometer readings
The Regional Picture 101

a)
30

25
Dust concentration (µg/m3)

20

15

10

0
S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D
1977 1978 1979

b)
10
Days with thick dust haze

0
S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D
1977 1978 1979

c)
16
14
12
Dust storm days

10
8
6
4
2
0
S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D
1977 1978 1979

Fig. 5.18. a) Monthly mean mineral dust concentrations at Cayenne, French Guiana. Modified
after Prospero et al. (1981). b) Monthly numbers of days with thick dust haze at Maiduguri,
Nigeria. c) Monthly number of dust storm days at Nouakchott, Mauritania. Modified after
Goudie and Middleton (2001, Fig. 4)
102 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

taken in the early 1980s, while the annual aeolian flux to the Western
Mediterranean basin has been put at 3.9×106 t by Löye-Pilot et al. (1986) who
extrapolated from their monitoring of deposits at Corsica.
The seasonality of Saharan dust transport to Europe is shown for several
parts of the continent in Fig. 5.19. An analysis of data from Hungary,
Switzerland and Corsica indicates that the main period is from February to
June, with a secondary maximum in the late autumn and early winter
(Borbély-Kiss et al. 2004). For Britain, in the twentieth century (see Table 5.7),
there is a similar bimodal distribution of activity, with a peak in March and
another peak in September/October. By contrast, at Lannemezan in south-
west France there is a clear peak in the summer months, with July having most
outbreaks of Saharan dust and very few dust incursions occurring in the win-
ter (Dessens and van Dinh 1990). The pattern in mainland Spain also has a
peak of activity during the summer (i.e. May to August; Escudero et al. 2005),
although generally it is more evenly distributed throughout the year
(Rodriguez et al. 2001). This is also the case in Mallorca, where March to
September is the prime season (Fiol et al. 2005). Similarly in Italy, May, June
and July are the peak months for Saharan dust events (Rogora et al. 2004;
Kischa et al. 2005). Interestingly, of 38 Saharan dustfall events noted in Britain
in the twentieth century, not one occurred in the month of December. A dep-
osition event that took place over Anglesey in North Wales in December 2003
(Perkins 2004) was the first on record for that month. Not surprisingly,
Saharan dust falls on Britain have continued into the twenty-first century and
include events on 25–26 February 2003, 17 September 2003, 12–13 February
2004, 1 April 2004, 1 April 2005, 30 April to 1 May 2005 and 31 August 2005.
A major source area for transport to Western Europe was identified by
D’Almeida (1986) in southernmost Algeria, between Hoggar and Adrar des
Iforhas. Another source, where material is particularly rich in palygorskite
(Molinaroli 1996), is in Western Sahara–Southern Morocco. These sources
have been confirmed by back-trajectory analysis for dust deposited over
Northeastern Spain. Avila et al. (1997) traced deposition events back to three
main areas: Western Sahara, the Moroccan Atlas and central Algeria. These
sources have also been identified for transport to the British Isles (Tullet
1978; Wheeler 1986). A common trajectory for transport to Britain is over the
Bay of Biscay, in mid-tropospheric winds skirting an anticyclone over
Western Europe. A similar synoptic pressure distribution can deliver Saharan
dust to the Iberian Peninsula (Rodriguez et al. 2001). Less commonly, dust is
transported to Britain from Algerian sources across the Mediterranean and
France in association with a low-pressure system centred over the Bay of
Biscay (Wheeler 1986; Coudé-Gaussen et al. 1988). Again, such pressure sys-
tems also deliver material to Spain. Algeria was found to be by far the most
common source of Saharan dust deposited at Jungfraujoch in the Swiss Alps
(Collaud Coen et al. 2004).
Transport to southern Europe occurs more frequently than to areas further
north. A year of monitoring on Corsica, for example, revealed 20 dust events
35 Britain 35 Hungary

30 30

25 25

20 20

15 15

dust events (%)


dust events (%)
10 10
10⬚
10˚ 0⬚ 10˚
10⬚ 20⬚ 30˚
30⬚
The Regional Picture

5 0 400 km 5

Relative frequency of Saharan


20˚

Relative frequency of Saharan


0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
50⬚ BRITAIN
35 Spain 35 Turkey
50⬚
30 30
HUNGARY
25 SWITZ. 25
FRANCE
20 (Lannemezan) 20

15 40⬚ 15
SPAIN 40⬚
40˚

dust events (%)


dust events (%)
10 CORSICA 10
TURKEY
5 5

Relative frequency of Saharan


Relative frequency of Saharan
0⬚ 10⬚
10˚ 20⬚
0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

35 France 35 Corsica 35 Switzerland


(Lannemezan)
30 30 30

25 25 25

20 20 20

15 15 15
dust events (%)

dust events (%)


dust events (%)
10 10 10

5 5 5
Relative frequency of Saharan

Relative frequency of Saharan


Relative frequency of Saharan
0 0 0
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Fig. 5.19. The seasonality of Saharan dust events in various parts of Europe
103
104 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 5.7. Known Saharan dust falls in the British Isles over the twentieth century

Date Areas affected References

9 March 1901 Central England Mill (1902)


22–23 January 1902 South-west England Mill (1902)
21–27 February 1903 Wales, south-west/central Mill and Lempfert (1904)
England, East Anglia
28 November 1930 English Channel coast Alexander (1931)
1 July 1968 England and Wales Pitty (1968), Stevenson
(1969)
6 March 1977 Ireland, west Scotland Tullett (1978), Bain and
Tait (1977)
15 May 1979 Ireland Tullett (1980)
28–29 November 1979 Ireland, North-west and central Pringle and Bain (1981)
England, north Wales, south
Scotland
28–29 January 1981 North-west England, Northern Richardson (1981), George
Ireland (1981)
11 February 1982 South-eastern England Thomas (1982), Moon(1982)
26–27 January 1983 Southern England, Somerset to Kent Thomas (1983)
24 September 1983 Berkshire Pike (1984)
29 September 1983 Northern Ireland Tullett (1984)
22 April 1984 South Wales, Devon Middleton (1986)
9 November 1984 Much of England and Wales, plus Thomas (1985), File (1986),
eastern Scotland Wheeler (1986), Cinderey
(1987)
4 April 1985 South-east England Thomas (1985)
(Kent, Cambridgeshire)
5–6 March 1987 Southern England Burt (1991b)
17–18 August 1987 England and Wales Tullet (1988)
1 September 1987 Northern Ireland, Western Scotland Tullet (1988)
17 September 1987 Southern England (Berkshire) Burt (1991b)
6 October 1987 England and Wales Tullet (1988)
26–27 October 1987 Eastern and Southern England Smith (1988)
8 May 1988 Southern England (Berkshire) Burt (1991b)
18 October 1988 Southern England (Berkshire) Burt (1991b)
19 March 1990 Southern England Burt (1991b)
(Berkshire, Hampshire)
7–8 March 1991 Southern England Bücher and Dessens (1992),
Burt (1991a)
25 March 1991 Kent Thomas (1993)
6 September 1991 Kent Thomas (1993)
The Regional Picture 105

Table 5.7. Known Saharan dust falls in the British Isles over the twentieth century—cont’d

Date Areas affected References

11 October 1991 Southern England (Berkshire, Kent) Burt (1992)


5 March 1992 Kent Thomas (1993)
30 June 1992 Sheffield Thomas (1993)
8 August 1992 Devon, Kent Thomas (1993), Burt (1995)
17–18 September 1992 Devon, Berkshire, Kent Knightley (1993),
Thomas (1993)
16–17 March 1993 Berkshire Burt (1995)
21 April 1994 Berkshire Burt (1995)
24 September 1994 Central Southern England Burt (1995)
14 February 1998 Ireland (Co. Mayo) Sweeney (1998)
13 March 2000 Oxfordshire Middleton et al. (2001)

(Bergametti et al. 1989) originating in three source areas: eastern Algeria/


Tunisia/western Libya, Morocco/western Algeria and ‘south of 30˚ N’.
The general synoptic pattern associated with dust transport from Africa
towards Europe is discussed by Barkan et al. (2005). They suggest that the
central importance lies in: (a) the strength and position of the trough ema-
nating southward from the Icelandic low and (b) the eastern cell of the
sub-tropical high. A deep, well developed trough near the Atlantic coasts of
Europe and Africa, penetrating well to the south, and the strong eastern cell
of the subtropical high situated to the north east of North Africa near the
Mediterranean coast cause strong south western flows with the potential to
carry dust northwards into the Mediterranean and on into Europe.

5.6.3 Eastern Mediterranean Trajectories

Dust transport from North Africa to the eastern Mediterranean (Fig. 5.20)
occurs predominantly during the spring and is often associated with the east-
ward passage of frontal low-pressure systems – Sharav cyclones (Kubilay
et al. 2003). These cyclones are principally formed by differential heating
between relatively colder oceanic waters to the north and warmer landmasses
to the south. Analysis of 23 heavy dust falls in Israel over a 20-year period
suggests that the North African type is by far the most common (Ganor et al.
1991) and North Africa is also the main source of desert dust transported to
Turkey (Mace et al. 2003; Kubilay et al. 2005). These storms are usually asso-
ciated with a cold front with a significant downward-flowing jet stream and
are often accompanied by rain (Alpert and Ganor 1993). Typically, the fronts
are characterized by the presence of Saharan air at upper levels, above air
from other source regions in the boundary layer, a situation confirmed by
106 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Syria

Cyprus

Dust

Jordan

Fig. 5.20. Suspended dust in the atmosphere over the eastern Mediterranean, 19 October 2002
(MODIS)

back-trajectory analysis conducted at 850 hPa and 500 hPa for air masses
arriving at Erdemli in Turkey by Koçak et al. (2004). Dust from sources in the
Middle East, by contrast, is more typically transported to the Mediterranean
in the autumn (Dayan 1986; Kubilay et al. 2000, 2005) and tends to occur at
higher altitudes (700 hPa and higher) than dust derived from North Africa.
Long-range transport of Saharan dust to the central Mediterranean basin is
characterized by events lasting 2–4 days, compared to an average duration of
just 1 day for events reaching the eastern Mediterranean from Arabia (Dayan
et al. 1991). There is some seasonal variation in the source areas of dust reach-
ing Israel, with Chad being the spring source, Egypt and the Red Sea the source
in July/August and Libya in the autumn (Israelevich et al. 2003).
Central Algeria is the most frequent source area for Saharan dust reaching
Israel (Ganor et al. 1991); and Ganor and Foner (1996) distinguish between
material commonly transported from sources in the Hoggar Massif and the
Tibesti mountains in Northern Chad, the latter also picking up material from
the Western and Sinai Deserts.
The Regional Picture 107

5.7 Middle East

Dust storms are important phenomena over large tracts of the arid and semi-
arid regions of the Middle East (Middleton 1986a; Kutiel and Furman 2003;
Leon and Le Grand 2003). Indeed, Arabia was identified by Idso (1976) as one
of the five major world regions where dust storm generation is especially
intense. A number of dust-bearing winds have been identified (Table 5.8).
A preliminary analysis of the distribution and seasonality of dust storms is
provided by Middleton (1986a), who, on the basis of the analysis of meteoro-
logical data established that southern Iraq (Al-Najim 1975) and Kuwait (see
also Abdulaziz 1994) had the highest number of dust episodes (Fig. 5.21). At
stations in Qatar, Kuwait and Iraq, dust activity is at its highest from April to
August. A thorough analysis of the situation in Kuwait is provided by Safar
(1985). Subsequently, on the basis of the study of aerosol geochemistry over
the Arabian Sea, Pease et al. (1998) suggested that the Wahiba Sands area of
Oman is also a major dust source region. Dust storms are common in the
Saudi Arabian city of Riyadh (Modaish 1997), where 41 days with a visibility
less than 1.6 km occur each year. There is also considerable dust storm

Table 5.8. Dust-bearing winds of the Middle East

Name Area affected Season Direction Meteorological conditions

Shamal (north) Mesopotamia and Feb./Oct. N Blows between Azores


Arabian Gulf high and Indian
monsoon low
Sad-ou-bist bad South-eastern Iran May/Sept. N–NW Circulates around main
(wind of 120 days) (especially Seistan) low of Indian monsoon
Belat South-eastern mid-Dec./ N–NW
Arabia especially mid-March
between Ras Sajar
and Masira Island
Simoom Kuwait Summer NW
(poison wind)
Khamsin (fifty)a Egypt Spring and Predomi- Local wind caused by
winter nantly S particular air masses
drawn into region by
passage of a cyclone and
its associated fronts
Sharav Israel April–June SW–S or SE Khamsin-type
Shlour Syria and Lebanon Spring and
winter S–SW
Shargi Ira Spring SE
a
Variously taken to refer to the average duration of wind (50 h), its annual frequency (50 times) and its
season of maximum onset (the 50 days either side of spring solstice). From: Middleton (1986a Table 1)
108 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

0
1.8 1.3
9 5
0.2 0.1
0.1
5.5 Tehran
5
0.4 0.9 4.0 14.9
Mediterranean 0 0.4
1.4 1.0 Damascus 17 1
Sea 0.8 5 10
0.1 Baghdad
0.4 3 19.3 24.4 18
4.1 3
3.4 12.8
33
6.3 25 5
18.9 5
4.7 5.9 1
13.0
27.1
11.4
2.0 Th
e G
0.9 4.6 5.5 ulf
3.8
7.6 6.6 5.6
1.2 0.0
1.6 Riyadh
5.8
1.0
Re

5.9 0.0
d

2.2
Se

2.5 3.3
a

1.0
0.9 0.0
6.2
6.6 Dust storm days /year 5.3
INDIAN
12 Dust storm events /year 3
OCEAN
0 400 2
Aden
km 3

Fig. 5.21. The distribution of dust storms (visibility less than 1 km) in the Middle East as deter-
mined from meteorological data. Modified after Middleton (1986a, Fig. 4)

activity in the Negev (Offer and Goossens 2001) and studies of dust deposition
have also been made over the Dead Sea (Singer et al. 2003). Leon and Le
Grand (2003), using IDDI from Meteosat, give a regional picture for the whole
of the North Indian Ocean region.
Dust deposition contributes to the formation of loess deposits at various
locations in the Middle East, including the Negev Desert, Yemen, Saudi
Arabia, Syria, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates (Goudie et al. 2000). It
also contributes to sedimentation in the Arabian Gulf (Sugden 1963; Foda
et al. 1985), the Eastern Mediterranean (Kubilay et al. 2000), the Red Sea and
the Arabian Sea (Stewart et al. 1965; Prins et al. 2000). Dust is also a major
hazard for engineering structures and for air quality in the region (Jones 2001).
Some of the dust in the Middle East is locally derived (Fig. 5.22), but
significant quantities come into the Levantine Basin (Krom et al. 1999), Turkey
(Güllü et al. 2005) and Israel (Ganor and Foner 1996) from the Sahara.
Figure 5.23 shows simplified maps of seasonal changes in the AI determined
by TOMS. In January, February and March (JFM), the area with AI >6 lies
largely in the south and east of the Arabian Peninsula south of latitude 32˚ N.
The most intense area of activity, with a small stretch where AI >15, is on the
Oman–Saudi Arabia border at ca. 20˚ N. In April, May and June (AMJ),
The Regional Picture 109

Fig. 5.22. A dust storm at Jazirat al Hamra, near Ras al Khaimah, United Arab Emirates
(from ASG)

the situation is dramatically changed, with much of the Middle East south of
ca. 37˚ N experiencing AI values >5. An area of AI >5 has also developed on
the east side of the Caspian Sea and the same is true of Iran. The area with
AI >15 has expanded to include a large swathe of interior Arabia and part of
the Makran coast of Iran. The Oman–Saudi border region continues to be the
most developed area of dust, but the AI values now exceed 25. In July, August,
September (JAS), the situation is broadly similar to that in AMJ. However, by
October, November, December (OND), the area with AI >6 has shrunk very
noticeably, being restricted to southern and eastern Arabia. There is only a
very small area, the Oman–Saudi border region, where AI >15. The contrac-
tion of the area with high AI values in the winter season (JFM, OND) is related
in all probability to the occurrence of rainfall in the northern part of the
region during the winter months. However, this is also the season when
cyclonic activity is most likely to occur; and Offer and Goossens (2001,
Fig. 21) suggest that the peak of dust storm activity in the Negev in February
may be related to this cause. The intensification of dust storm activity in the
southern part of the region during the summer months (AMJ, JAS) may be
related to a variety of factors, including dust inputs from the Sahara, for these
are the months when the northern part of ‘the Saharan dust machine’ is most
active (Goudie and Middleton 2001). It is also a time of intense atmospheric
instability because of the extreme surface temperatures that are achieved.
In addition, it is a time when strong north-westerly winds – the Shamal –
occur. In Arabia as a whole (Table 5.9), OND has the lowest wind velocities,
110 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

JFM AMJ

>5
>6 >15
>9 >20
>15 >25

JAS OND

>6
>15
>21 0 500 >6
>24 km >15

Fig. 5.23. The seasonal pattern of dust storm activity in the Middle East, derived from TOMS.
The values are long-term values of the aerosol index (AI). Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(2002, Fig. 1)
The Regional Picture 111

Table 5.9. Seasonality of Arabian Wind (mean wind speed; m s−1)

Location J F M A M J J A S O N D

Dhahran 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.1 1.0 1.2 0.9 0.9 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.7
Jeddah 0.9 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.9 0.8 0.6 0.5 0.5
Madinah 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.4
Riyadh 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3
Taif 0.7 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.8 0.1 0.9 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.4
Bahrain 5.2 5.4 5.0 4.6 4.9 5.8 4.3 4.3 3.7 4.0 4.3 5.0
Doha 4.5 4.7 4.9 4.8 5.0 5.5 4.4 4.4 3.5 3.8 4.0 4.2
Abu Dhabi 3.8 4.3 4.6 4.0 4.1 4.1 3.9 4.0 3.6 3.2 3.1 3.5
Dubai 3.0 3.6 3.6 3.6 3.8 3.9 3.6 3.6 3.3 3.0 2.8 3.0
R.A.K. 2.2 2.3 2.6 2.8 2.9 2.8 2.8 2.8 2.3 2.0 2.0 2.0
Sharjah 3.3 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.7 3.6 3.5 3.2 2.9 3.0 3.0
Amman 3.2 3.6 3.6 3.6 3.5 3.9 4.1 3.6 2.7 2.3 2.5 2.9
Deir-Alla 2.2 1.9 1.8 1.9 1.8 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.6 2.2 2.3
Irbid 6.9 7.2 7.1 6.9 7.0 8.8 9.7 8.8 6.7 4.9 5.4 6.0
Kuwait 3.7 4.1 4.5 4.5 4.7 5.8 5.6 4.8 3.7 3.5 3.5 3.5
Monthly mean 2.78 2.96 3.01 2.93 3.13 3.32 3.17 3.17 2.49 2.27 2.35 2.51
Quarterly mean 2.92 3.13 2.94 2.37

whereas the highest velocities occur in MJJA. This seasonal pattern is con-
firmed by visibility data for Masirah Island off Oman. Mean monthly visibil-
ity is at its lowest in MJJA. Likewise, data from the ground-based Aerosol
robotic network (AERONET) show that the maximum dust aerosol loading in
Bahrain occurs in the March–July period (Smirnov et al. 2002).

5.7.1 The Spatial Pattern of Dust in the Middle East from TOMS

The mean annual AI values for Arabia and neighbouring areas are mapped in
Fig. 5.24. It is clear that substantial dust loadings occur over much of the
Arabian Peninsula and that the values are comparable to those obtained over
large tracts of the eastern Sahara. By looking at the AI values and their areal
extent, it is possible to gain an indication of the strength of dust loadings over
Arabia in comparison with other desert areas. As Table 4.2 indicates, the dust
source on the Oman/Saudi Arabia border is the third strongest in the world,
only being exceeded by the western and central Saharan sources.
There is a clear tendency for the highest AI values to occur in the south and
eastern Arabia. One intense area is on the borders of Oman and Saudi Arabia
centred at ca. 19˚ N and 54˚ E. This is a very dry, low-lying area fed by a series
112 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

35
12

15
30

15
25

15
12
15
20
18
> 21 18

15
15

12
12 10
40 50

Fig. 5.24. The annual pattern of dust storm activity in the Middle East, derived from TOMS AI
values. Modified after Goudie and Middleton (2002, Fig. 2)

of ephemeral wadis that have their sources in the mountain rim of Yemen
and Oman. It also includes a large area of closed drainage with numerous
playas, including the Umm and Samim and the Sabkhat Aba ar rus. Glennie
and Singhvi (2002) show the extent of the 100-m closed contour in their Fig. 1
and outline it in their geomorphological map of SE Arabia as a ‘deflation’
plain. The other dust ‘hot spot’, which is larger in extent but less intense, is in
eastern Saudi Arabia to the north of the great Rub Al Khali sand sea. The
mountainous rims of Arabia (Fig. 5.25) and the more humid areas of the
Middle East are not major dust source regions. Dust storms are most preva-
lent where the mean annual precipitation is less than 100 mm and mean
annual potential evapotranspiration is over 1140 mm. The concentration of
dust storms in areas where the mean annual rainfall is less than 100 mm con-
firms a picture that emerges from the Sahara (Middleton and Goudie 2001)
but is at variance with the suggestion of Goudie (1983), based on analysis of
meteorological observations, that the driest areas are not as important for
dust storm generation as those with rather higher amounts.
The Regional Picture 113

a) b)
40˚
40⬚ 50˚
50⬚ s. E
tn lb s E. I

.
35⬚
35˚ M u r z Mtn ra
12 Ta u r us Dasht- ni

an
Z a e-Kavir
gro Dasht- i g

H
15 s hla
30⬚
30˚ Tigris-Euphrates M e-Lut nds
tns.
Lowlands

Sin
Th
eG

ai
ulf

Re
15 25˚
25⬚

dS
ea
15 Jebel al
12 18 Akhdar

Hil
18

ls
Wahiba

Re
15 20⬚
20˚
Sands

d
R ub al
>21

As
Se
Khal i

ir
a

Mt
15˚
15⬚ INDIAN

ns
15 OCEAN

.
12 Sand seas 0 800
12 10⬚
10˚ Mountain axes km
G. of Aden

c) d)

200 m contour
100 m contour

Mean annual
precipitation
50
m

>1500mm 0 800
m

1000−1499
600−999 km
400−599 100−199 0 800
200−399 <100mm km

Fig. 5.25. a) The annual pattern of dust storm activity in the Middle East in relation to: b) the
topography, c) the precipitation of the region, and d) areas below 200 m. Modified after Goudie
and Middleton (2002, Fig. 3)

When one compares the TOMS picture with that obtained from ground
meteorological observations (Fig. 5.21), certain major differences are appar-
ent. However, it has to be remembered that such differences are partly a
result of the paucity of meteorological stations in some parts of inner Arabia,
most notably in the south-east quarter where TOMS shows the highest AI
values. Nevertheless, some of the highest dust storm occurrences recorded by
ground stations occur in the vicinity of Kuwait, Baghdad and Basra
(Middleton 1986a), yet this is not an area identified by TOMS as having very
high dust loadings, though they are still appreciable.

5.7.2 Dust Transport from the Sahara to the Middle East

Although much dust is raised locally over the Middle East, it is apparent that
substantial amounts of dust come from the Sahara. The type of synoptic
114 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

situation responsible is the passage of an advancing cold front and the


associated strong surface winds ahead of it penetrating south-eastwards from
the Mediterranean Sea deep into the northern Sahara and Libyan Desert
(Michaelides et al. 1999). This can be illustrated by the situation in mid-
March, 1998, when a major dust event caused ports and airports to be closed,
created breathing problems for inhabitants of Amman and led to fatal motor-
ing accidents in Egypt and Jordan. Mean visibility in Amman was reduced to
4.2 km. A large, deep depression moved eastwards from North Africa and
then deepened further over the Middle East as it encountered cold polar air
pushing across Turkey. The progress of this system can be traced by looking
at the daily TOMS maps for the period 14–20 March (Fig. 5.26). The sequence
starts with an area in eastern Algeria, southern Tunisia and north-western
Libya generating AI values greater than 26. The following day, it has moved
across Libya into Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean. On 16 March, the
main area with high AI values covers Cyprus and the Levant. Mean visibility
at Amman airport was reduced to 3.2 km. On 17 March, the area with high AI
values has broken down into a group of small, deep clusters and by 19 March,
most of the area has AI values less than 10.
Another example is provided by a TOMS sequence for late March 1999
(Fig. 5.27). On 27 March, a deep system developed over northern Libya,
and achieved AI values that exceeded 27. The system moved rapidly east-
wards across northern Egypt on 28 March and to northern Saudi Arabia on
29 March. It then weakened as it moved down the Gulf, reaching Bahrain and
Qatar on 30 March.
The Red Sea shore of Africa can be another major source over western
Saudi Arabia, particularly the plain of the ephemeral Baraka river and the
Tokar delta. The TOMS image for 24 March (Fig. 5.28) shows the presence of
an area of relatively high AI values heading across the Red Sea into Saudi
Arabia in the vicinity of Jiddah, Makkah and At Ta’if. Similarly, in late June
2000, a series of dust pulses travelled from the northern Sudan across the Red
Sea into Saudi Arabia and could be traced both on TOMS (Fig. 5.29) and on
AVHRR imagery.
Yet another example of the movement of a dust storm from the northern
Sahara to the Middle East is provided by the events of April 2000 (Fig. 5.30).
On 18 April, TOMS showed a large area of dust over southern Libya and far
western Egypt. On the following day this reached eastern Egypt, Israel and
Lebanon, causing the closure of the port of Alexandria and the cessation of
flights to Aswan. The mean visibility at Cairo airport was reduced to 4.6 km
and that at Luxor to 3.7 km. In Israel, mean visibility in Beersheva was
reduced to 2.6 km. Limassol in Cyprus was also badly affected, as were flights
in southern Turkey.
In March 2002, a large dust storm blew from north eastern Africa across to
Iran (Fig. 5.31). On 19 March, the system had intensified over Israel and
Palestine and by 20 March it had moved eastwards to the Tigris–Euphrates val-
ley and the north-east of Iran. On 21 March, dust remained over southern Iraq.
The Regional Picture 115

14/3/98 15/3/98

16/3/98 17/3/98

18/3/98 19/3/98

10 14 18 22 26 30 34>
Aerosol Index

Fig. 5.26. The passage of dust systems from North Africa to the Middle East, mid-March 1998,
based on TOMS AI values. Modified after Goudie and Middleton (2002, Fig. 5)
116 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

25 / 3 / 99 26 / 3 / 99

27/3 / 99 28 / 3 / 99

29/3 / 99 30 / 3 / 99

High ground
7 11 15 19 23 27 31>
Aerosol Index

Fig. 5.27. The TOMS AI sequence for late March 1999. Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(2002, Fig. 6)
The Regional Picture 117

24/3/00

High ground
7 11 15 19 23 27 31>
Aerosol Index

Fig. 5.28. The TOMS AI sequence for 24 March 2000. Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(2002, Fig. 7)

5.8 South West Asia

Dust storms are widespread in the northern part of the Indian sub-continent
and neighbouring areas (Léon and Le Grand 2003; El-Askary et al. 2005).
Middleton (1986b) used ground station observations to examine the fre-
quency and seasonality of dust storms in south-west Asia. Figure 5.32 is his
map of dust storms in the region. It shows that the highest frequencies occur
at the convergence of the common borders between Iran, Pakistan and
Afghanistan. Other high-frequency areas occur on the Arabian Sea coast of
Iran (Makran) and across the Indus Plains of Pakistan into north-west India
(Hussain et al. 2005) and the Indo-Gangetic basin (Dey et al. 2004). Littmann
(1991a) also mapped the frequency of Asian dust storms and examined some
of the climatic factors that control their seasonal occurrence. The geochem-
istry of the dust aerosols in the vicinity of the Thar Desert are discussed by
Yadav and Rajamani (2004).
Multiple dust sources are discernible on the annual mean map of TOMS
data (Fig. 5.34). These sources are broadly concurrent with those mapped by
Middleton (1986b; Fig. 5.32). Figure 5.33 shows four major source areas with
118 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

22 / 6/00 23/6/00 24/ 6/ 00

25 / 6/00 26/6/00 27/ 6/ 00

28 / 6/00 29/6/00

7 11 15 19 23 27 31>
Aerosol Index
High ground

Fig. 5.29. The TOMS AI sequence for late June 2000. Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(2002, Fig. 8)
The Regional Picture 119

17/4/00 18/4/00

19/4/00

7 11 15 19 23 27 31>
Aerosol Index

High ground

Fig. 5.30. The TOMS AI sequence for mid-April 2000. Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(2002, Fig. 9)

AI values of >8: (a) the Makran coastal zone, stretching from south-eastern
Iran into neighbouring Pakistan, (b) a broad area of central Pakistan, (c) an
area at the convergence of the borders of Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan that
comprises the Seistan Basin (Fig.5.35), the Registan sand sea and north-
western Baluchistan and (d) an area approximately coincident with the Indus
delta. A broad “tongue” of dust-raising activity stretching south westwards
down the alluvium of the Gangetic plain is also clearly defined on both maps.
Some of the dust loading in this latter area may come from as far away as the
Arabian Gulf (Dey et al. 2004) or the Sahara (El-Askary et al. 2005).
120 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

18/3/02 19/3/02

20/3/02 21/3/02

High ground
7 11 15 19 23 27 31>
Aerosol Index

Fig. 5.31. The TOMS AI sequence for mid-March 2002. Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(2002, Fig. 10)

Coastal Baluchistan/Makran appears as the most active source area


according to the TOMS data, whereas Middleton’s (1986b) map (Fig. 5.32)
shows the Seistan Basin area to have the most frequent dust storm activity.
Middleton does not record the Indus Delta as a significant area for dust storm
activity, having fewer than five dust storms a year. However, Middleton high-
lights the plains of Afghan Turkestan as an area where annual dust storm
The Regional Picture 121

60˚E 80˚E
Caspian
Sea 30 dust storm days per year
5
10
15 Isoline interval of 5 dust storm
20
15 20 days per year
5
10 Faizabed
5
Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif
5 10
20 1
10 Ghazni Peshawar
15
Rawalpindi
1
10 Bannu
15 Quetta 10
5 5
10 110 10Ganganagar
10 20
1
15 Dalbandin
Jacobabed 10
2515 Panjgur Bikaner Delhi 30˚N
5

Karachi Kanpur
5 Allahabad
Arabian Sea
5
Jamshedpur
Mumbai

Bay of Bengal

0 600 km
0 400 mls

60˚E 80˚E 10˚N

Fig. 5.32. The number of dust storm days per year in South Asia, based on ground observations.
Modified after Middleton (1986b)

frequency exceeds 30 and two areas in Iran (around Yazd in the centre and
along the border with Turkmenistan) as having 20 or more dust storm days
annually. None of these areas appears significant according to the TOMS data.
The Makran is a hyperarid area of late-Quaternary uplift (Vita-Finzi 1981;
Reyss et al. 1998). Material is supplied to the coastal strip from the mountains
inland; and silt-sized material blown from ephemeral rivers and alluvial fans
southward over the Arabian Sea (Fig. 5.36) dominates near-shore sediments
(Mohsin et al. 1989).
The Iran/Afghanistan/Pakistan border area is known as the Dasht-i-Margo.
Dust sources are found in lowland parts of this mountainous region, includ-
ing the Seistan Basin. This is a huge closed depression, around 450 km across,
so that by analogy with areas like Bodélé, Taklamakan and Eyre, it is perhaps
not surprising that it is a very active dust source. Sediments available for
deflation are fed into the basin from the surrounding mountains. Specific
source areas are likely to be alluvial fans and ephemeral lakes. Indeed,
122 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

45⬚N
4 2 0 0
2

4 2

40⬚N 10
2 8
0 4
2 6 2
Faizabed 4
Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif
2 0
35⬚N Peshawar
0
Ghazni
2 0
4 Rawalpindi
6 Bannu
2
Quetta 4
4 8 6 0 0
Ganganagar
30⬚N Dalbandin
8 Bikaner 0
Panjgur Jacobabed Delhi
8
10 12 4 Kanpur
25⬚N 8
Allahabad 2
4 Karachi
2
6 2 Jamshedpur
8
10 2
12
20⬚N 14
16 Mumbai

15⬚N
0
2

0
10⬚N

0 0

5⬚N
55⬚E 60⬚E 65⬚E 70⬚E 75⬚E 80⬚E 85⬚E 90⬚E 95⬚E 100⬚E

Fig. 5.33. The annual TOMS mean for South Asia. The scale on this and subsequent figures
shows the aerosol index (AI). Modified after Goudie and Middleton (2000, Fig. 2)

MODIS images of the area show that the bed of Lake Hamun and the large
deltaic fan of the Helmand River, which flows into it, are repeated sources of
dust storms. This is probably caused in part by desiccation of the area
brought about by diversion of upstream water for irrigation use (see
www.unep.org/governingbodies/gc22/document/afghanistan4.pdf) and by
extreme droughts in recent years. Dense plumes of dust originating from the
dried lake beds and from the delta of the Helmand are transported by high-
velocity winds coming from the north and funnelled by gaps in the high
mountains. The famous ‘wind of 120 days’ was discussed by early travellers
to the region. McMahon (1906, p. 224), for example, wrote: “ It sets in at the
end of May or the middle of June, and blows with appalling violence, and
The Regional Picture 123

50

(iv)

(iii)

25 25
(ii)

(i)

AI values

>13

>15

50

Fig. 5.34. Dust storm hotspots in the north-west Indian Ocean region 1998–2002 from TOMS

with little or no cessation, till about the end of September. It always blows
from one direction, a little west of north, and reaches a velocity over 70 miles
an hour. It creates a pandemonium of noise, sand and dust”. He noted that it
left old irrigation canal beds, which are more resistant than surrounding sed-
iment, standing above the level of the adjacent land, and that there were some
wind scour features around 6 m deep.

5.8.1 The Seasonal Cycle of Dust from Ground Observations

Table 5.10 presents data on dust storm seasonality for a range of climatolog-
ical stations in Afghanistan, India and Pakistan. There is some variability in
the month with maximum dust activity, with all months between March and
October having at least one station where this occurs. Equally, no stations
124 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Afghanistan

Helmand River

Dust plumes

Iran

Pakistan

N
150 km

Fig. 5.35. A MODIS view of a dust storm blowing off the Seistan Basin of south-west Asia,
17 August 2004

have maximum monthly frequencies between November and February.


When one takes the mean for all 17 stations used, the dustiest period covers
May and June, when just over 40% of all dust storms occur. This is the pre-
monsoon season (Hussain et al. 2005). Only 7.8% of dust storm activity
occurs between November and February.

5.8.2 The Seasonal Cycle of Dust from TOMS

In January, February and March, the area with reasonably high AI values is
small, and the highest AI values are less than 8 (Fig. 5.37). There is one zone
located on the Makran coast of Iran and another in the lower Indus plain
where AI values lie between 6 and 8. By March, April and May (Fig. 5.38), the
situation is transformed and there is now a large belt from Iran across to
north west India where AI values exceed 10. There is a strong zone of dust
activity along the Makran coast where AI values exceed 14 and another along
the Ganges Plain where values exceed 12. In April, May and June, just before
the break of the south west monsoon (Fig. 5.39) the AI values reach their
Table 5.10. Seasonality of dust storms (frequency as % by month) in Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Months with largest frequency of dust storms are
shown in bold

Ave. no.
The Regional Picture

J F M A M J J A S O N D per year

Afghanistan
Bust 4.7 9.5 10.4 13.7 10.4 8.5 10.4 14.2 5.7 4.3 3.3 4.7 30.1
Ghazni 0.0 0.0 2.2 20.0 13.3 11.1 13.3 14.8 8.1 10.3 5.2 1.5 19.3
Mazarisharif 0.8 0.8 4.8 4.8 4.0 15.9 15.1 13.5 7.1 23.0 8.7 1.6 18.7
Faizabed 0.0 0.0 1.4 7.1 4.3 14.3 20.0 22.9 8.6 17.1 4.3 0.0 17.5
Pakistan
Bannu 0.0 1.2 5.9 4.7 19.6 15.7 23.5 15.7 11.8 2.0 0.0 0.0 25.5
Dalbandin 3.5 7.0 14.0 14.0 14.0 14.0 17.5 7.0 4.2 2.8 1.0 1.0 28.6
Jacobabed 1.1 0.0 16.3 12.0 18.5 12.0 21.7 12.0 4.3 0.0 0.0 2.2 9.2
Panjgur 3.4 17.2 31.0 3.4 6.9 17.2 13.8 3.4 0.0 3.4 0.0 0.0 3.6
Peshawar 0 7.4 1.5 3.7 22.2 14.8 22.2 14.8 12.6 6.7 7.4 0.0 13.5
Quetta 0.0 1.8 7.1 5.4 12.5 17.9 5.4 12.5 19.6 16.1 0 1.8 5.6
Rawalpindi 0.0 1.4 4.3 14.2 21.3 21.3 14.2 9.9 7.1 5.7 0.7 0.0 14.1
India
Ganganagar 8.9 0.0 11.1 0.0 33.3 24.4 13.3 8.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 17.0
New Delhi 0.0 0.0 10.0 10.0 40.0 35.0 3.3 0.0 0.0 1.7 0.0 0.0 8.0
Kanpur 4.4 2.2 8.9 13.3 44.4 30.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 4.4 2.0 0.0 5.0
Jamshedpur 0.0 0.0 7.1 23.8 50.0 16.7 2.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 6.0
Bikaner 1.7 6.7 9.5 11.2 16.8 27.9 11.2 7.3 3.4 3.4 0.0 1.1 17.9
Allahabad 0.0 5.9 3.9 13.7 39.2 29.4 5.9 0.0 0.0 2.0 0.0 0.0 5.1
Mean 1.68 3.59 8.79 10.29 21.81 18.60 12.54 9.23 5.44 6.05 1.72 0.81 −
125
126 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Iran
Pakistan

Dust

Fig. 5.36. Plumes of dust from the Makran coast of Iran and Pakistan are captured in this
MODIS image on 14 December 2003

annual peaks. There is a large expanse of country where they are greater than
15 and two locations (the Makran coast and the Sibi Plain of Baluchistan),
where values exceed 18. By July, August and September (Fig. 5.40), the spread
and intensity of the zone of high dust loadings have contracted. The Ganges
Plain is no longer significant and AI values in the Indus Plain are less than 18.
The Makran, however, continues to be important, with some AI values
greater than that figure. In October, November and December (Fig. 5.41), the
Indian region is at its least dusty condition during the annual cycle. AI values
are low throughout the region, and do not exceed 6. The two hot spots – the
Makran coast and the southern Indus valley – are, however, evident.
The Regional Picture 127

45⬚N 0 0
0 0
0
2
0 8
40⬚N 6
0
4
2 0
0
Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif Faizabed
0
0
35⬚N
Peshawar 0
0 Ghazni Rawalpindi
Bannu
0 0
0 2 Quetta Ganganagar
30⬚N
Dalbandin
2 2 Bikaner 0
Panjgur Jacobabed Delhi
64
2 2 2 Kanpur
25⬚N 46
Allahabad 2
Karachi
2 4
6 0 Jamshedpur 2
8
20⬚N 10
12 2
14 0 Mumbai

15⬚N
0

10⬚N 0

0
0

5⬚N
55⬚E 60⬚E 65⬚E 70⬚E 75⬚E 80⬚E 85⬚E 90⬚E 95⬚E 100⬚E

Fig. 5.37. The TOMS monthly mean AI for January, February, March

5.8.3 Climatic Relationships to Dust Seasonality in South Asia

The explanation for the extreme seasonal variation in dust activity revealed
both by ground observations and by TOMS lies with various climatic factors.
The predominant factor is the seasonality of rainfall, which in turn controls
soil moisture content (cohesiveness) and vegetation cover. The south-west
summer monsoon brings a maximum of precipitation to the south and east of
the dry zone, with July and August being especially wet. In the north and west
of the region (e.g. in Baluchistan and the North-West Frontier of Pakistan), the
rainfall maximum may be in late winter. The contraction of the area of dust
activity from the Ganges Plain and elsewhere in July to September (Fig. 5.42)
can be explained by the high number of rainy days at that time.
128 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

45⬚N 0 0
4 2 2
0
6 4 0
2 0
2
18
40⬚N 16 2
14 6
2 2
12
Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif Faizabed
6 10
0 2 4 8
35⬚N Peshawar 2 0
6 2 2 0
4 Ghazni 4 Rawalpindi 0
6 Bannu
8 6 2
10 Quetta 0
4 8 Ganganagar 0
30⬚N 10
6 6 Dalbandin
Bikaner
12 Bikaner
8
Panjgur Jacobabed Delhi
14 12 12
14 Kanpur
10
25⬚N 8 0
Allahabad
4 2 Karachi 2
6 6 6 10 4
Jamshedpur 6
8
20⬚N
6
8 2 Mumbai 4
6
10 4 2
12 4
14
16 2
15⬚N 18

0
2
10⬚N

0
5⬚N
55⬚E 60⬚E 65⬚E 70⬚E 75⬚E 80⬚E 85⬚E 90⬚E 95⬚E 100⬚E

Fig. 5.38. The TOMS monthly mean AI for March, April, May. Modified after Goudie and
Middleton (2000, Fig. 3)

Another important control of dust storm activity is the occurrence of


thunderstorms, for these are one of the main factors that can generate dust
from the ground surface. Although for the area as a whole (Table 5.11) the
highest frequency of thunderstorms is during the wet months of July and
August, there is also substantial activity in May and June, prior to major
precipitation occurring with the onset of the southwest monsoon.
Wind activity, a crude measure of which is wind velocity (Table 5.11), is
closely related to thunderstorm frequency, with the highest mean wind veloc-
ities occurring in early summer. Also important are pressure conditions. The
easterly movement of ‘western disturbances’, low-pressure zones either at
the surface or in the upper westerly wind regime north of the subtropical
high pressure belt, are responsible for two distinct synoptic situations that
The Regional Picture 129

45⬚N 3 3 0
6
0 0
9 0
6
3
3 3
40⬚N 18
0 6
3
15
Faizabed 12
3 Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif
6 3 9
9
6
35⬚N 3 Peshawar 3
6 3 0
9 Ghazni
6 Rawalpindi 0 0
9 Bannu 3
15 12
Quetta 0
6 15 Ganganagar
30⬚N 0
Dalbandin
9 18 Bikaner
12
12 Panjgur Jacobabed Delhi
12 15
9 18 15 Kanpur
12 15 12
25⬚N 6 9 Allahabad
6 9 0
6 Karachi 6
9 9 3
12 3
Jamshedpur
6

20⬚N 3
15 Mumbai
18
21

15⬚N
3
0

10⬚N 3
0
0

0
5⬚N
55⬚E 60⬚E 65⬚E 70⬚E 75⬚E 80⬚E 85⬚E 90⬚E 95⬚E 100⬚E

Fig. 5.39. The TOMS monthly mean AI for April, May, June. Modified after Goudie and
Middleton (2000, Fig. 4)

cause dust-raising over much of the area. These troughs move across Iran
and Turkmenistan to affect the Indian subcontinent north of 30˚ N. Weak
circulations, called induced lows, may simultaneously develop over central
parts of Pakistan and Rajasthan and move east-north-eastwards (Rao
1981).The two dust-raising situations commonly caused by these lows are the
creation of a steep pressure gradient, where strong winds may cause deflation
from parched soils, and the creation of an area prone to thunderstorm gen-
eration, where dust is mobilized by the dry thunderstorm downdraft. Dry,
dust-raising thunderstorms are meso-scale phenomena, typically lasting less
than an hour at any one spot, as the thunderstorm system moves with typical
speeds of 60 km h−1. These storms are most common in north-west India,
130 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

45⬚N
0
6 3
9 0
3
6
3
40⬚N 9
0 3 6 0
9
3 12 6
6 3 0
6 3
Faizabed
9 Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif
35⬚N Peshawar 0
6
Ghazni Rawalpindi
Bannu 3 0
9 0
18 6
6 Quetta 9 Ganganagar
30⬚N Dalbandin 12
9 18 Bikaner
Bikaner
Panjgur Jacobabed Delhi
12
12 15 18 Kanpur
25⬚N Allahabad
9
Karachi 6 3
0

Jamshedpur

20⬚N 21
18 Mumbai
15
12
9 6
15⬚N
3

0
0
10⬚N
0
0
0
5⬚N
55⬚E 60⬚E 65⬚E 70⬚E 75⬚E 80⬚E 85⬚E 90⬚E 95⬚E 100⬚E

Fig. 5.40. The TOMS monthly mean AI for July, August, September. Modified after Goudie and
Middleton (2000, fig. 5)

where they are known as Andhi, the majority of which occur during the pre-
monsoon hot season (April–June).
The pressure-gradient dust storms are synoptic scale features that can
raise dust over large areas throughout Pakistan and north-western India,
often continuing for several days (Middleton 1989). Once raised, dust can
then remain in the atmosphere for several days, being generally transported
towards the east or north-east in the pressure-gradient winds. Such material,
when transported in lighter winds, creates dust haze conditions known as
Loo. This is typically experienced to the east and north-east of Rajasthan, in
Delhi and on the Ganges plain as far east as Bihar.
The Regional Picture 131

45⬚N
0
0
0
2 0
4 2
40⬚N
0 0
0
Mazarisharif
Mazarisharif Faizabed
0
35⬚N
Ghazni Peshawar
Rawalpindi
Bannu
0 0
Quetta 2
0 2
30⬚N Ganganagar
Dalbandin 2
0 Bikaner
Bikaner Delhi
2 Jacobabed
0
2 Panjgur
4 Kanpur
25⬚N Allahabad
Karachi 4
0 2
2 0
Jamshedpur
4

20⬚N 6
8 Mumbai
10
12

15⬚N

10⬚N

5⬚N
55⬚E 60⬚E 65⬚E 70⬚E 75⬚E 80⬚E 85⬚E 90⬚E 95⬚E 100⬚E

Fig. 5.41. The TOMS monthly mean AI for October, November, December. Modified after
Goudie and Middleton (2000, fig. 6)

To the north and east of Rajasthan, the Loo’s role becomes less important
and that of the Andhis more important. Joseph et al. (1980) state that most of
the dust storms occurring at New Delhi are of the Andhi type, a situation
exemplified in Fig. 5.42a, which shows that the peak dust storm months of May
and June correspond to a high frequency of thunderstorms. Although thun-
derstorm frequency rises further in July and August at New Delhi, these
months are also associated with high monsoon rainfall totals. Maximum dust
storm frequencies at Ganganagar are also experienced in May and June
(Fig. 5.42b) but these are not months of elevated thunderstorm frequency.
Dust-raising here is more closely associated with the pressure-gradient winds.
132 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a) Delhi

thunderstorms
Mean monthly
300

Mean monthly
Mean monthly precipitation (mm)

Precipitation

dust storms
Dust storms
Thunderstorms
200 8

3 6

100 2 4

1 2

0 0 0
J F M A M J J A S O N D

b) Ganganagar

Mean monthly
dust storms
300

thunderstorms
Mean monthly
Mean monthly precipitation (mm)

Precipitation
Dust storms
Thunderstorms
200 4

3 6

100 2 4

1 2

0 0 0
J F M A M J J A S O N D

Fig. 5.42. Plots of mean monthly dust storms, thunderstorms and rainfall for: a) New Delhi and
b) Ganganagar. Modified after Goudie and Middleton (2000, Fig. 7)

To summarize, in the winter, although it is dry over most of the region, dust
storm activity is low. This is because of high-pressure conditions, a lack of
thunderstorm activity and the absence of strong winds. In the pre-monsoon
season, conditions are still dry, but wind velocities and thunderstorm activ-
ity increase. This is a time when strong heating of the landmass generates
unstable conditions and convective low-pressure systems, generating maxi-
mum dust activity. The onset of the monsoonal period in July leads to a sharp
decrease in dust activity. Soil water storage and the persistence of a vegeta-
tion cover ensures that dust storm activity remains at low levels into the
winter months.
The Regional Picture 133

Table 5.11. Monthly frequency of dust storms, thunderstorms and mean wind speeds for the
desert region of the Indian sub-continent

J F M A M J J A S O N D

Dust storms 1.68 3.59 8.79 10.29 21.81 18.6 12.54 9.23 5.44 6.05 1.72 0.81
(frequency
as % by month)
Thunderstorms 2.35 2.55 7.85 9.31 10.35 14.07 18.64 16.14 10.84 4.46 1.02 2.4
(frequency
as % by month)
Wind speeds 1.6 1.8 2.1 2.3 2.8 3.2 3.1 2.6 2.2 1.5 1.3 1.3
(mean
velocity m s−1)

5.9 Central Asia and the Former USSR

In the southern portions of the former Soviet Union there is a large zone
where the number of dust storms exceeds 40 per year (Klimenko and
Moskaleva 1979) and some locations where there are more than 80, one of the
highest occurrences in the world (Fig. 5.43). May to August is the period with
greatest activity; and Kazakhstan was identified by Zakharov (1966) as hav-
ing the greatest frequency of occurrence. Human activities have caused dust

St Petersburg
60
0

5
1
600
0

Moscow
60

1 1
1 1
400
600 20
1 20
20 20
20 20 200
600
60
40

0 20
0

40
60 600
400

20 600
40 Isohyets (mm)

0 600 km

Fig. 5.43. The distribution of dust storms in the former Soviet Union. Based on the work of Kes
and Fedorovich, in Goudie (1983a, Fig. 5)
134 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

storm frequencies to be raised both by the extension of cultivation,


particularly during the ploughing up of pastures associated with the Virgin
Lands Scheme of the 1950s and as a result of the desiccation of the Aral Sea.
The ‘white’, saline dust from the former seabed of the Aral region is highly
toxic (O’Hara et al. 2000) and links have been suggested between this atmos-
pheric dust and poor human health in the region (Wiggs et al. 2003; see also
Chapter 7). Sixty per cent of storms in the Aral Sea region carry dust towards
the south-west and 25% travel westward over the Ustyurt Plateau (Micklin
1988); and Aral dust has been reported as far afield as Belarus and Lithuania
to the north-west, Georgia to the west and Afghanistan to the south-east
(Létolle and Mainguet 1993).
Orlovsky et al. (2005) give a detailed treatment of the dust storms that
occur in Turkmenistan, where the highest frequency (Fig. 5.44) occurs in the
Karakum Desert, notably at Repetek (62 days per annum). This is an area
where mountains channel strong winds. The plains have the highest inci-
dence of dust storms in the spring months, when the soils dry out and there
is a great incidence of energetic cyclones and cold-wave intrusions.
There have been few detailed studies of dust storms elsewhere in Central
Asia. North of Turkmenistan, in Kazakhstan, dust-raising occurs in the desert
areas between the Aral and Caspian seas (Fig. 5.45). Mineral dust from the
Ryn Peski desert, north of the Caspian Sea, has been detected 2000 km distant
in countries bordering the Baltic (Hongisto and Sofiev 2004).

0 300 km N

Dashoguz
KARA
BOGAZ 40 20
20 30
UZBEKISTAN
Chagyl Ekedje 40 20
Darvaza
Molla-Kara
30 Nebit-Dag Chardzhou
40 Kazanjik Erbent 20
50 50 50
Cheshme 20
CASPIAN 60
Kara-Kela 60 Rapetek
SEA 50
40
30 2010 Uch-Adji Charshanga
20 30 10 20
10
Kyzyl-Atrek Gaudan Iolotan
Gasan-Kull
10 20 30 Tedjen
20 Serakhs

Meteorological station 20 AFGHANISTAN


Isoline interval of 10 dust storm
20 10
days per year
Kushka
> 40

Fig. 5.44. Distribution of dust storms (visibility <1000 m) in Turkmenistan. Modified after
Orlovsky et al. (2004, Fig. 2)
The Regional Picture 135

Fig. 5.45. A wall of dust approaching the village of Qulandy, north west of the Aral Sea in
Kazakhstan, from the desert clay plains of the Ustyurt plateau to the west, 26th July 2004 (from
NJM)

5.10 China

Dust storms of yellow dust take on particular importance in China because of


their significance for the formation of loess (Derbyshire et al. 1998; Kar and
Takeuchi 2004). They also appear to have been a major source of the dust in
Late Pleistocene ice layers in Greenland (Svensson et al. 2000) and forested
peat bogs from Kalimantan in south-east Asia (Weiss et al. 2002). Moreover,
according to Kes and Fedorovich (1976), the Tarim Basin has more dust
storms than any other location on Earth, with 100–174 per year. There are
stations to the north-west of the 750-mm annual isohyet that have dust
storms on more than 30 days in the year (Goudie 1983). These dust events can
cover immense areas and transport particles to Japan (where the dust haze is
known as kosa, literally “yellow sand” in Japanese), Korea (where the dust
is called Huang Sa), Taiwan and the Pescadores Islands (Yuan et al. 2004) and
beyond (Ing 1972; Willis et al. 1980; Betzer et al. 1988; Chung et al. 2003;
Fig. 5.46a, b). The dust is highly seasonal in occurrence, with the spring
months being the time of greatest activity (Youngsin and Lim 2003; Laurent
et al. 2005). The question of the trajectories of long-distance dust derived
from China is discussed further in Section 5.12.
Studies of dust loadings (Chen et al. 1999) and fluxes have suggested that
there are two main source areas: the Taklamakan and the Badain Jaran
136 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a)

120⬚ 130⬚ 140⬚E


140˚E
00 GMT 7 April 1969
Areas of airborne dust
00 GMT 8 April 1969

Ordos Desert

Beijing 40⬚

N
PA
JA

30⬚

CHINA

Pacific Ocean

0 600 20⬚N
km
110⬚ 120⬚ 130⬚

b)

April 19 April 25
April 21
April 23

Pacific Ocean

Fig. 5.46. a) The progress and location of a large dust storm over China in April 1968. Modified
after Ing, in Willis et al. (1980, Fig. 2). b) The progress of a dust cloud across the Pacific to North
America in April 1998. Modified after Husar et al. (2001, Fig. 2)
The Regional Picture 137

(Zhang et al. 1998). In all, it has been estimated that about 800 Tg of Chinese
dust is injected into the atmosphere annually, which may be as much as half
of the global production of dust (Zhang et al. 1997). The prevalence of yellow
dust haze in the Tarim basin has been noted by many travellers and, in his
Pulse of Asia, Huntington (1907, p. 157) reported that: “Dust fell so fast, that
even on a still day one was obliged to brush his letter-paper every ten or fif-
teen minutes to prevent the pen from becoming clogged. Almost every trav-
eler speaks with exasperation or weariness of the persistence with which the
haze shrouds the land for weeks at a time”.
Figure 5.47 shows two of the best available maps of dust storms in the
region. The predominant importance of the Taklamakan (located in the Tarim
Basin) is evident, though other important centres occur north of Urumqui in
the Junggar Pendi and in the Ordos. Sun (2002a, b) draws attention to the
Tengger, Ulan Buh, Hobq and the Mu Us deserts (generally referred to as the
‘Gobi Deserts’) as sources for the loess deposits of the Chinese Loess Plateau.
Indeed, Zhang et al. (2003), Sun (2000) and Xuan et al. (2004) argue that they
may be as important as, or even more important than, the Tarim Basin. Shao
et al. (2003) concur, suggesting the Gobi to be the strongest dust source in the
region, with dust emission rates of up to 5000 µg m−2 s−1.
The analysis by Shao and Wang (2003) has it that the highest frequency of
dust events occurs in the Taklamakan but that most of these events are clas-
sified as dust in suspension rather than full-blown dust storms (Fig. 5.48).
The Gobi Desert experiences fewer dust events, but they are often severe and
extensive. These authors found atmospheric dust concentrations in the
Tarim Basin and the Gobi regions to be of a similar order of magnitude, with
average maximum values reaching 1 mg m−3.
The TOMS data (Fig. 5.49) confirm the primacy of the Taklamakan/Tarim
source. A large area stretching over 75–94˚ E and 35–42˚ N has relatively high
AI values, which exceed 11 in the centre. The Junggar Pendi shows up as a
secondary source, as do some small areas to the east of the Taklamakan
towards Beijing. The TOMS mean values are in broad agreement with mod-
elled dust production (Xuan et al. 2000), in that both show an east-to-west
increase in dust, with a primary peak in the Tarim and a springtime maxi-
mum. However Xuan et al. (2000) suggest a secondary peak over West
Mongolia, which is not evident in the TOMS data.
The strength of the Taklamakan as a source is scarcely surprising. It is the
largest desert in China, has precipitation that can drop to <10 mm and con-
sists of a closed basin into which mountain-sourced rivers feed sediments.
There are extensive marginal fans and areas of dune sand from which dust
can be winnowed (Zhu 1984; Wang and Dong 1994; Honda and Shimuzu
1998) and lake sediments associated with the wandering and desiccated lake
of Lop Nor. Above all, with an area of 530 000 km2, the Tarim is one of the
Earth’s largest closed basins. However, the TOMS data do not indicate that it
is a source of similar magnitude to northern Africa. The area with high AI
values is both smaller and less intense.
138 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a)

90˚E 100˚ 110˚


Land over 2000m

50˚N

10
15
Junggar

Urumqi
1
105
Kashi
10
Badain
Jaran Ulan 40˚
Taklimakan 35 Buh 20 Beijing
10
20 30 Hobq
35 Tengger 10 10
30 15
20 10 Mu Us
10 20 5
30 2
15 10 2
Lanzhou 3

80˚ Xian

b)

45˚N 250
2.4
250 250
1.9
6.3 33.0 1.1
13.0 0.1
13.0 8.4 3.6 0.3
0.0
32.9 37.3 6.7 19.0 18.5 2.8 750
35˚N 3.3
1.4
8.1 2.0
7.2 750
3.9 1.6
0.0 0.3
0.1
12.8 35.0 0.0 0.0
250 2.3
0.0 0.7 1.0 0.0
25˚N
750 0.0 0.0
0.0 0.0
0.0
0.0
0.3
Mean annual
rainfall (mm)
0.0

85˚E 95˚E 105˚E 115˚E

Fig. 5.47. a) The 30-year mean annual number of sand and dust storm days in North China.
Source: Derbyshire et al. (1998, fig. 13). b) Distribution of surface-observed dust-storm fre-
quencies in China. Modified after Middleton (1986, Fig. 8.2)
The Regional Picture 139

Tien Shan Mountains

Dust

Tibetan Plateau

Fig. 5.48. MODIS image of suspended dust filling the Taklamakan desert of North West China,
18 April 2003

50N

40N

70E 80E 90E 100E 110E 120E 130E

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Aerosol Index

Fig. 5.49. Annual average TOMS AI values for China. Modified after Washington et al. (2003,
Fig. 12)
140 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

The atmospheric circulation associated with dust of Asian origin has been
the subject of numerous studies (see, e.g. Iwasaka et al. 1983; Littmann 1991a;
Zaizen et al. 1995; Husar et al. 2001) and is known to be enhanced during the
boreal spring (Prospero and Savoie 1989; Jaffe et al. 1997; Talbot et al. 1997,
Husar et al. 2001). The circulation over the Taklamakan is highly complex,
owing to the influence of the seasonally reversing monsoon and the extreme
bounding topography, thereby obstructing any through flow of the prevail-
ing winds. Dust loadings are highest in late winter and spring and are
probably associated with cold waves or surges of the north-east monsoon.
A local maximum in surface-wind velocity occurs at the southern edge of
the Taklamakan, presumably where the cold-air advance is blocked. An
additional explanation could be that the dust-laden atmosphere is poorly
ventilated, so that dust products remain trapped in the enclosed basin.
Figure 5.50 shows an overlay of TOMS values, potential sand flux (q) and an
elevation derived from a digital elevation model at 0.5˚ resolution. The largest
potential sand-flux values in the entire domain (20–50˚ N, 80–110˚ E) are in
very close proximity to the maximum in AI values (Washington et al. 2003).

50N

80
0

40 0
0 4
8
40N 40
80
8 120
80
80
80
120
4
40
30N 40
8
8 40
80
8
8 4

20N
60E 70E 80E 90E 100E 110E

0.3 0.6 1.2 1.5 2.1 2.4 3 3.3 3.9 4.2 4.8 5.1
Elevation (km)

Fig. 5.50. TOMS AI values (white contours, contour interval 2), scaled potential sand flux
(black contours, contour interval 20) and elevation in kilometres (grey scale) for China, long-
term annual means. Modified after Washington et al. (2003, Fig. 13)
The Regional Picture 141

The highest potential sand-flux values are only slightly offset to the south
of the AI values and run up against the Tibetan plateau. As in the case of
the Bodélé depression in the Sahara, high potential sand-flux values relate to
regions of extreme topographic channelling of the winds. In this case, the
channelling occurs through one of the largest closed basins in the world.

5.11 Mongolia

The characteristics of dust storms in Mongolia are discussed by Middleton


(1991), who found the most frequent activity was in the southern region of
the Gobi desert, where Zamiin Uud records an average of 34.4 dust storm
days per year. The spring months of April and May are those with the great-
est dust storm activity. It is then that average wind speeds reach a maximum
and the snow cover is receding. In spring, the Siberian High breaks down and
fronts track across the area. The distribution pattern established by
Middleton has been confirmed by Natsagdorj et al. (2003), as is the spring-
time peak of activity.

5.12 Trajectories of Dust Transport from


China and Mongolia

Dust from the large expanse of desert across northern China and Mongolia
has been found in glacier ice on the northern and western margin of the
Tibetan plateau (Wake et al. 1994), but the transport trajectory that has been
subject to much greater study is eastward, out towards the Pacific Ocean.
Studies of north-east Asian dust outbreaks, occurring particularly in the
spring months and that reach Korea and Japan (Fig. 5.46a, b), include those
of Chun et al. (2001), Ma et al. (2001) and Mori et al. (2002, 2003), while a
study by Osada et al. (2004) examines accumulations in snow banks in
Central Japan. This material also commonly reaches the North Pacific Ocean
(Duce et al. 1980) and the islands of Hawaii (Shaw 1980) and can travel as far
as Alaska (Rahn et al. 1981). Desert dust was found to be the dominant form
of aerosol in the middle troposphere, at 5–6 km altitude, north of 23˚ N, a
region of prevailing westerlies, during sampling for the Pacific Atmospheric
Chemistry Experiment campaign, in January 1994 (Ikegami et al. 2004).
More south-westerly trajectories also occur and dust from China is often
reported from Taiwan (Chen et al. 2004; Wu et al. 2004). This material may
also return to the Chinese mainland should synoptic conditions allow, as was
observed in Hong Kong in May 1996 (Fang et al. 1999).
Intercontinental transport of mineral dust from some very large dust
events in north-east Asia has been traced to North America in recent years
142 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

(e.g. the April 2001 event; Takemura et al. 2002; Daremova et al. 2005).
Material from a major dust storm in northern China in April 1998 was
observed on satellite imagery crossing the Pacific over a period of five days
(Fig. 5.46b) and being deposited in Canada by large-scale subsidence and
orographic effects (McKendry et al. 2001). Dust-raising occurred across an
area of about 3.3×106 km2 of northern China for a period of some ten days;
and an estimated 4.64×108 t of dust was emitted over this period, most of it
from the Gobi (In and Park 2003).
A second, even larger trans-Pacific dust transport episode took place in
April 2001, following extensive dust-raising over the Taklamakan and Gobi
deserts. PM10 concentrations of Asian dust reached 30–40 µg m−3 at a large
number of rural sites in the United States and contributed to even larger con-
centrations at some urban locations (Jaffe et al. 2003).
These large trans-Pacific dust events are typical of the spring months, the
time of maximum dust storm activity in northern China, and are relatively
rare: Jaffe et al. (2003) identified just the two large events mentioned above in
15 years of aerosol observations. However, mineral dust from Asia is trans-
ported to North America in smaller quantities all year round. Examination of
data from the Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments
(IMPROVE) network by VanCuren and Cahill (2002) found Asian dust at all
of the sites in the western United States throughout the year, with a broad
maximum between March and October.
Probably much less frequent are events that transport mineral dust from
Chinese deserts to Europe. Grousset et al. (2003) found evidence of dust from
China in the French Alps, having been transported more than 20 000 km
across the North Pacific, North America and the North Atlantic.

5.13 Australia

Like other parts of the Southern Hemisphere, Australia is not an especially


dusty continent. However, both at the present and in the past, dust activity
has been appreciable and has contributed to sedimentation on- and off-shore
(McTainsh 1989; Knight et al. 1995; Kiefert and McTainsh 1996; Goede et al.
1998). Australia is today the largest dust source in the Southern Hemisphere
and in the Late Glacial Maximum contributed three times more dust to the
South West Pacific than now (Hesse and McTainsh 1999). Notable dust events
of the twentieth century included the great ‘dust-up’ of November 1902, the
series of storms that darkened the midday sky in Adelaide in the summer of
1944–1945 and the huge pall of Mallee-derived dust that swept across
Melbourne during February 1983 (Lourensz and Abe 1983; Fig. 5.51). On
23 October 2002, Australia’s largest reported dust storm caused air pollution
across most eastern parts of the country after 12 months of extreme drought
combined with above-average maximum temperatures to produce severe soil
The Regional Picture 143

Fig. 5.51. Dust storm in Melbourne, Australia, 8 February 1983 (Australian Bureau of
Meteorology)

moisture deficits and reduced vegetation cover (McTainsh et al. 2005).


The storm measured 2400 km long, up to 400 km across and between 1.5 km
and 2.5 km high. The dust load was estimated at between 3.35×106 t and
4.85×106 t; and it caused air quality problems for the inhabitants of several
cities, including Sydney and Brisbane (Chan et al. 2005).
The average distribution of dust storm activity in Australia has been plotted
from meteorological data by McTainsh and Pitblado (1987; Fig. 5.52a) and
shows six areas of above average activity: Central Australia (A), Central
Queensland (B), the Mallee (C), the Eastern and Western Nullarbor plains
(both labelled D) and coastal Western Australia (E), with in excess of five
storms per year. McTainsh et al. (1989) also subdivide eastern Australia with
regard to dust storm seasonality (Fig. 5.53). A northern region (encompassing
Queensland and most of New South Wales) experiences dust storms during
spring and early summer, whereas in the southern region (southern New South
Wales and Victoria) dust storms are prevalent during summer. This relates in
part to the rainfall regimes of these two regions, though in both areas the
months with most frequent dust storms are also the windiest months as well.
Substantial quantities of dust leave Australia in two main plumes
(Fig. 5.52b): one that runs across the Tasman Sea towards New Zealand
(McGowan et al. 2000; Marx et al. 2005a) and another that heads westward
out into the Indian Ocean (McTainsh 1985). The former plume was more
active during the last Glacial Maximum (Thiede 1979) and is an important
144 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a)

Annual frequency of events


(1957-1984) 0 600 km
< 0.5
0.5
0.5 - 2
2-5
0.5

>5 2

E B
5
2
D
5 D
0.
2
Perth C
2

0.5

Sydney
0.5
400mm median annual rainfall
(50 percentile) Melbourne

b)

Indian Ocean 0 600 km

Tasman Sea

Arid zone boundary


Lunette zones
Longitudinal dune systems
Dust paths

Fig. 5.52. Dust storm activity in Australia. a) Average annual frequency (1957–1984). b) Dust
paths into the Tasman Sea and Indian Ocean in relation to aeolian landforms. Modified after
McTainsh (1989)
The Regional Picture 145

140⬚ 146⬚
Northern Region
12⬚
12˚ 80 0.20

Monthly average rainfall (mm)

Monthly average dust storm


60 0.15

frequency ( )
40 0.10

18⬚
20 0.05

0 0.00

Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Queensland Month
24⬚
N

0 500

30⬚ km

New South Wales


Southern Region
80 0.20
Monthly average rainfall (mm)

Monthly average dust storm


60 0.15

)
36˚
36⬚

frequency (
Victoria 40 0.10

20 0.05

42⬚S 0 0.00
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun

140⬚E 146⬚
146˚ 152⬚ Month

Fig. 5.53. Wind erosion regions of eastern Australia. Modified after McTainsh et al. (1989,
Fig. 1)

contributor to Tasman Sea sediments (Hesse 1994), but dust from Australia
still reaches New Zealand with some regularity. McGowan et al. (2005) and
Marx et al. (2005b) traced New Zealand dust back to the Eyre Peninsula of
South Australia and western New South Wales. The Channel Country north
of Lake Eyre and the Simpson Desert have probably been major sources of
dust in arid phases. Much dust may also be derived from around Lake Eyre
and the Murray–Darling plains. Some dust has accumulated on land, con-
tributing to the formation of ‘parna’, a clay-rich sediment.
The area of greatest dust-storm frequency, as determined from meteoro-
logical station data, has been shown to be broadly coincident with the huge
146 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

(1.3×106 km2) internal drainage basin of Lake Eyre. Indeed, TOMS analysis
indicates that this ephemeral playa is the continent’s main dust source, the
only area where AI values exceed 11. The dustiness of the current playa bed
itself can only be inferred from terrestrial data, due to the absence of meteor-
ological stations.
As an area of sediment supply, the Lake Eyre Basin has been compared to
that of Lake Chad (McTainsh 1985), with deflation operating on alluvial
spreads brought by the southward-flowing Eyre, Diamantina,and Cooper
rivers. The long history of deflation is evidenced by wind-blown deposits,
typically rich in gypsum and clay, found at a number of sites (Magee and
Miller 1998). Indeed, after making an approximate comparison of the sedi-
ment yield of dust transport and river systems in the Lake Eyre and Murray–
Darling Basins, Knight et al. (1995) summed up the overall significance of
dust transport in the evolution of the Australian landscape by asserting that
more sediment is lost from the continent in the air than in rivers.
Throughout the months of maximum atmospheric dust-loadings (October
to March) the surface-wind speeds reach a maximum over the Simpson and
Great Victorian deserts (apart from the west coast of Australia), with a pre-
vailing south easterly to southerly wind. The classic synoptic situation gener-
ating deflation in southern regions of Australia is an eastward moving
mid-latitude frontal system (Sprigg 1982). Anticyclogenesis may follow the
passage of the front, producing marked horizontal wind shear in the easter-
lies to the south of a heat trough (Sturman and Tapper 1996). Material raised
by these systems is occasionally transported as far as New Zealand (Collyer
et al.1984; McGowan et al. 2000).
6 Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and
Constituents

6.1 Dust Contents of Air

In this chapter we discuss the physical characteristics of dust and deal with
such issues as the concentration of dust in the atmosphere, the rates at which
it accumulates and the nature of its constituents.
Numerous observations have now been made on the dust contents of air,
which help to indicate areas where aeolian material is an important atmos-
pheric component (Fig. 6.1). Duce (1995) provides full details over land and
sea, based on measurements in the near-surface boundary layer using high-
volume filtration systems. In areas where dust is raised, such as the Thar
Desert of north-west India and the Great Plains of the United States, dust con-
centrations may be in the range from 102 µg m−3 to 105 µg m−3. In the Negev,
dust concentrations during dust storms are between 1578 µg m−3 and 4204 µg
m−3 (Offer and Azmon 1994), though Ganor and Foner (2001) record one dust
storm in Tel Aviv when a concentration of 23 790 µg m−3 was recorded.
At the other end of the scale as, for example, in the North Atlantic between
Iceland and Newfoundland, concentrations fall to as low as 0.003 µg m−3. Most
oceanic sampling sites are in the range 0.02–1.0 µg m−3. The major exception to
this, which once again illustrates the importance of the Sahara as a source of
atmospheric dust, is the eastern Atlantic off West Africa where observations
indicate dust concentrations from ca. 2.0 µg m−3 to ca. 60.0 µg m−3, though in
some events airborne dust concentrations off West Africa may reach as high as
13 421 µg m−3 (Lepple and Brine 1976), and 13 735 µg m−3 (Gillies et al. 1996).
Duce (1995) also recognizes regional differences in dust concentrations
over the Pacific. Very low values are found over the equatorial Pacific, central
South Pacific and the Southern Ocean, while higher concentrations are evi-
dent in the western South Pacific, consistent with moderately high transport
from the Australian deserts. The highest concentrations are generally found
in the mid- and high-latitude North Pacific, where seasonal transport from
the Asian deserts is significant. When Mori et al. (2003) monitored the varia-
tion in mass concentration during a long-range kosa event emanating from
Mongolia in March 2001, they found concentrations dropped by an order of
magnitude as the dust was transported across the interior of China (6700 µg
m−3 at about 500 km from source) to a Japanese island (230 µg m−3 at about
2500 km from source). During a dust storm in April 2000, total concentrations
148 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Deserts

Continents

Oceans

Upper North
Troposphere

Polar
Regions

0 0.01 0.1 1.0 10 100 1,000 10,000 100,000


Dust concentration (µg/m3)

Fig. 6.1. Dust concentrations in different environmental settings. Modified after Schütz (1987,
Fig. 3)

in Beijing reached 3906.2 µg m−3 (Zhang et al. 2003) while, during a dust
event in April, total concentrations at Yulin (600 km east of Beijing) reached
4650 µg m−3 (Lasserre et al. 2005).
It is plain that, during dust storm events, levels of particulate matter can
often exceed acceptable levels in terms of air quality and health considera-
tions, even at considerable distances from source. For example, during a dust
event in Beijing in August 2000 (Xie et al. 2005), average daily PM10 values,
that is particles with a diameter <10 µm, reached 720–898 µg m−3 which com-
pared with an average daily concentration of 162–190 µg m−3 and a Chinese
National Ambient Air Quality Standard of 150 µg m−3. In Korea, Chung et al.
(2003) found that maximum PM10 values from four dust events between 1997
and 2000 ranged from 254 µg m−3 to 996 µg m−3. In the Canary Islands
(Querol et al. 2004), daily PM10 values during Saharan dust events can reach
up to 1000 µg m−3, which compares with a regional background value of only
19 µg m−3. The European Community Air Quality Directive indicates that
daily PM10 values should not exceed 50 µg m−3 for more than 7 days year−1 or
an annual mean of 20 µg m−3 (Rodriguez et al. 2001).
The relationship between the mass concentration of dust in the air and
visibility is illustrated in Fig. 6.2. Some attempts have been made to relate
dust concentrations to the Aerosol Index (AI) determined by TOMS. Alpert
and Ganor (2001) suggested the relationship shown in Table 6.1.
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 149

1000
Mass concentration (µg/m−3)

500

0
0 5 10 15 20
Visibility (km)

Fig. 6.2. Plot of total mass concentration versus visibility with the corresponding regression
curve. Modified after Mohammad and Frangi (1986, Fig. 4)

6.2 Dust Deposition and Accumulation

It is important to distinguish between dust deposition and dust accumula-


tion. As Goossens (2005) has pointed out, deposition refers to the amount of
sediment that impacts on a unit surface in a unit time, whereas accumulation

Table 6.1. Relationship between dust concentrations and AI values determined by TOMS

AI value Daily dust concentration at the surface (µg m−3)

30 4000
25 1900
12 1200
150 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

is the amount of sediment that remains at a unit surface at the end of a


particular time interval.
The information available on the rates of deposition in individual events
(Table 6.2) suggests that these can be of a high order. The 1901 dust fall over
North Africa, for example, is estimated to have deposited 15×107 t and the 1903
dust fall over England is estimated to have deposited ca. 107 t of sediment. The
range of values lies between 105 t and 15×108 t. When expressed in terms of
sediment deposited per unit area, rates can reach as high as 455 t km−2 (North
Africa), 300 t km−2 (Nebraska), 162 t km−2 (Colorado) and 126 t km−2 (Caspian)
on desert margins. Quantities fall off rapidly towards more humid areas. Data
for a major dust storm in the UnitedStates and Canada in 1933, for instance,
show deposition rates of 39 t km−2 in Kansas, 13.5 t km−2 in east Nebraska, but

Table 6.2. Dust deposition rates in individual falls

Location Quantity
Absolute quantities Date Reference Tonnes

England 1903 Mill and Lempfert (1904) 10 000 000


England and Wales 1958 Stevenson (1969) 1 000 000
New Zealand 1930 Kidson and Gregory (1930) 200 000
Wisconsin, USA 1918 Winchell and Miller (1918) >1 000 000
Arctic 1976 Rahn et al. (1977) 500 000
North-west Africa 1974 Lepple and Brine (1976) 400 000
Europe 1901 VDL (1902) 800 000–
1 000 000
Europe 1901 Fett (1958) 1 800 000
Sweden 1892 Fett (1958) 500 000
North Africa 1901 Fett (1958) 150 000 000
Poland 1928 Fett (1958) 1 140 000
New Zealand 1928 Fett (1958) 100 000
Kansas, USA 1933 Fett (1958) 131 000
Quantity per unit area Tonnes km−2
Iowa, USA 1937 Bennett (1938a) 13.2
Michigan, USA 1937 Bennett (1938a) 5.75
New Hampshire, USA 1937 Bennett (1938a) 3.86
Westphalia 1859 Bennett (1938a) 33.1
New Hampshire/ 1936 Robinson (1936) 3.86
Vermont, USA
East Nebraska, USA 1933 Weaver and Flory (1937) 13.5
Philadelphia, USA 1934 Watson (1934) 1.35
Ottawa, Canada 1933 Page and Chapman (1934) 1.11
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 151

Table 6.2. Dust deposition rates in individual falls—cont’d

Location Quantity
Absolute quantities Date Reference Tonnes

Montreal, Canada 1933 Page and Chapman (1934) 0.77


New Hampshire, USA 1933 Page and Chapman (1934) 0.57
Nebraska, USA 1935 Tricart and Cailleux (1969) 300.0
Canary Islands 1973 Logan (1974) 2.0
Canary Islands 1974 Logan (1974) 8.0
Steiermark 1896 Fett (1958) 30.0
Kansas, USA 1933 Fett (1958) 39.0
Caspian Sea 1925 Brouievitch and Goudkov 126.0
(1954), cited by
Tsyganenko (1968)
South-eastern 1969 Walker and Costin (1971) 19.5–170.0
Australia
Europe 1901 Fett (1958) 3.83
North Africa 1901 Fett (1958) 455.0
Poland 1928 Fett (1958) 11.75
New Zealand 1928 Fett (1958) 5.88
England 1903 Mill and Lempfert (1904) 195.0
Egypt 1941 Oliver (1945) 371.0
Sault Ste Marie, 1937 Martin (1937) 4.5
Michigan
Marquette, Michigan 1937 Martin (1937) 5.75
Page Co., Iowa 1937 Martin (1937) 30.6
Fort Collins, Colorado 1937 Martin (1937) 162.2
South-eastern France 1846 Free (in Winchell and Miller 1918) 2.2
Salzburg, Austria 1862 Free (in Winchell and Miller 1918) 0.09
Carmiola, Austria 1862 Free (in Winchell and Miller 1918) 5.52
Madison, USA 1918 Free (in Winchell and Miller 1918) 5.21
Idaho, USA 1917 Larsen (1924) 67.2

only 0.58 t km−2 in New Hampshire. Nonetheless, moderately high dust falls
have been recorded in Europe and Britain (3.83–195.0 t km−2).
When we turn to annual rates of deposition, estimates of rates of dust
deposition exist for a number of sites at varying distances from the heart of the
Sahara (Fig. 6.3). Others are presented in Table 6.3. As might be expected, there
is a tendency for rates to be lowest at large distances from potential sources.
Thus the values for Western Europe (e.g. Central France and the Alps) are less
152 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

WEST EAST
km
Removal of Saharan dust (millions of tonnes per year) 5
Aerial return of dust towards Africa (millions of tonnes per year) 4
Sinks of dust into the Atlantic (millions of tonnes per year) 166
260 3
128
2
50 53 56 83
61
60 1
km 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0
3 3 5 22 -1
45 38 30
-2

ATLANTIC OCEAN AFRICA


15˚ - 24˚N

cm
100
20
10
7
1
Rate of sedimentation 0.3
(cm per 1,000 years) 0.2
0.1
km 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0

Fig. 6.3. Aeolian sediment budgets for the Sahara. Modified after Schütz et al. (1981, Figs. 8, 9)

than 1 g m−2. Further south, in north-east Spain, a value of 5.1 g m−2 is recorded
while, in south-east Spain, a value of 23.06 g m−2 has been found. Over Sardinia,
Corsica, Crete and the south-eastern Mediterranean, most values are between
10 g m−2 and 40 g m−2 (Fig. 6.4). On the south side of the Sahara, values in areas
close to Harmattan source regions have values around 100 g m−2 to 200 g m−2,
but they decline to low values over the Gulf of Guinea. Deposition rates of
Harmattan dust decrease southwards across Ghana (Breuning-Madsen and
Awadzi 2005). More general data on rates of deposition are given in Table 6.4.
Most of these data on long-term rates are probably best viewed as rough
approximations, since records are in many cases short and because of the
difficulties in distinguishing between deposition and accumulation. Other
estimates of dust deposition have been gained by modelling (Prospero
1996a), using dust concentration data (Fig. 6.5). The model indicates deposi-
tion rates for the Mediterranean of 3–14 g m−2 year−1, which are comparable
to those obtained from direct measurements. The highest values in the model
are for the 10˚ box at 10–20˚ N and 20–10˚ W, with a value of 30.8 g m−2.
Schütz et al. (1981) modelled the annual mass budget of dust transported
from the Sahara over the Atlantic in the north-east trade wind zone (see
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 153

Table 6.3. Annual dust deposition amounts

Reference Location Annual deposition (g m−1)

Saharan related
Drees et al. (1993) South-west Niger 200.0
McTainsh and Walker (1982) Northern Nigeria 137.0–181.0
Maley (1982) South Chad 109.0
Herut and Krom (1996) Israeli coast 72.0
Herut and Krom (1996) South-east Mediterranean 36.0
Hernández and South-east Spain 23.06
Hernández (1997)
Breuning-Madsen Northern Ghana 20.0
and Awadzi (2005)
Tiessen et al. (1991) Northern Ghana 15.0
Bergametti et al. (1989) Corsica 12.0
Löye-Pilot et al. (1986) Cosica 12.5
Torres-Padrón et al (2002) Canary Islands 11.9–30.2
Nihlen and Olsson (1995) Aegean Sea 11.2–36.5
Pye (1992) Crete 10.0–100.0
Le-Bolloch et al. (1996) Southern Sardinia 6.0–13.0
Avila et al. (1996, 1997) North-east Spain 5.1–5.3
Fiol et al. (2005) Mallorca 4.5
Measures and Brown (1996) Gulf of Guinea 3.4–11.5
Bücher and Lucas (1984) Central France 1.0
Wagenbach and Geis (1989) Swiss Alps 0.4
De Angelis and French Alps 0.2
Gaudichet (1991)
Non-Saharan related
Cattle et al. (2002) Northern New South 31.4
Wales, Australia
Singer et al. (2003) Dead Sea 25.5–60.5
Gill et al. (2000) Lubbock, Texas 25.0–30.0
Reheis and Kihl (1995) California and southern Nevada 3.0–30.0

Fig 6.3). A high rate of deposition (up to 20 cm per 1000 years) occurs over
the first 2000 km whereas, when most of the mass of dust plume has fallen out
(at distances greater than 2000 km), a zone of comparatively low accumula-
tion rates (1–2 cm per 1000 years) occurs. Duce (1995) calculated the mean
flux and deposition rates of aerosol minerals over all the oceans (Fig. 6.6,
Table 6.5) and, as might be expected, found that the highest flux values, some
154 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Fig. 6.4. Saharan dust on the bonnet of a car in Calvi, Corsica, July 1999 (from ASG)

in excess of 10 000 mg m−2 year−1 occurred downwind of the major arid


regions of Africa, eastern Asia, the Indian sub-continent and Australia. In all
he calculated that around 910 Tg year−1 of mineral matter was deposited in
the oceans, of which just over half was into the North Pacific. More recent
estimates yield broadly similar values for the total flux to the global oceans,
ranging up to 1814 Tg year−1 (Ginoux et al. 2001).
Various estimates have been made of dust deposition rates in China.
Ta et al. (2004a), based on 15 years of measurements, came up with average
deposition rates of 251.8 kg km−2 year−1 for the loess region and 365.5 kg km−2
year−1 for the Gobi desert regions. Deposition rates decline as precipitation
amounts increase. Another detailed study was carried out by Zhang et al.
(1997). They produced figures of a similar magnitude, with mean regional
values ranging from 130 kg km−2 year−1 to 670 g m−2 yr−1 (Tables 6.6, 6.7).
Rates of deposition of dust in East Asia show a decline with distance from
sources in the west of the country. Data from Gao et al. (1997), plotted in
Fig. 6.7, show this clearly.
Rates of dust deposition in the Pampas of Argentina were estimated by
Ramsperger et al. (1998). They found that dust input was around 400–800 kg
ha−1 year−1.
However, as will be evident in Chapters 7 and 9, rates of dust deposition
show considerable temporal variability at a whole range of time-scales.
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 155

Table 6.4. Rates of dust accumulation

Location Reference Rate (mm per 1000 years)

Based on measurements made on land


Iraq Kukal and Saadallah (1973) 20 100
Caspian Sea Brouievitch and Goudkov (1954) 659–862a
Northern Arabian Sea Foda et al. (1985) 800
Idaho, USA Larsen (1924) 500
Illinois, USA Van Heuklon (1977) 100
Beersheba, Israel Rim (1952), cited by Yaalon and 100
Ginzbourg (1966)
Israel Yaalon and Ganor (1975) 22–83
Israel Yaalon and Dan (1974) 20–80
United States Smith et al. (1970) 65–85
Europe Free (in Twenhofel 1950) 70
Caspian Sea Kukal (1971) 46–60a
Pyrenees Bucher and Lucas (1975) 18–23a
Kansas, USA Brown et al. (1968) 6.6–8.6a
Adelaide, south-eastern Tiller et al. (1987) 2.5–5.0
Australia
Based on studies of ocean cores and ice caps
North Atlantic Prospero and Carlson (1981) 5.0–6.0
East California Marchand (1970) 2.1–2.6a
South-eastern Australia Walker and Costin (1971) 0.9–1.2a
New Zealand Windom (1969) 0.8
Western tropical Atlantic Delany et al. (1967) 0.6
North Pacific Ferguson et al. (1970) 0.1–0.5
Tropical Pacific Jackson et al. (1971) 0.4
Global Windom (1969) 0.1–1.0
Global Judson (1968) 0.25–1.0
Washington State, USA Windom (1969) 0.21
Greenland Windom (1969) 0.14
Yukon Windom (1969) 0.11
Mexico Windom (1969) 0.01–0.09
Arctic Ocean Darby et al. (1974) 0.02
Arctic Ocean Mullen et al. (1972) 0.09
Antarctica Windom (1969) 0.01
a
Derived from data expressed as unit mass per unit areas by author, assuming (after Prospero and Carlson
1972) an in situ density of 0.65–0.85 g cm−2
156 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

60˚N

156 61 63 63 156 142 1542

50˚

601 315 157 91 85 137 765

40˚

948 1563 861 260 242 461 1447 3430 6925 14120

30˚

2022 1378 818 542 849 1555 15624

20˚

2045 3370 3380 2918 3540 5820 30800

10˚

3829 3950 3984 6338 20180 14498 9045

80˚W 70˚ 60˚ 50˚ 40˚ 30˚ 20˚ 10˚ 0˚ 10˚ 20˚ 30˚E

Fig. 6.5. Annual aerosol deposition rates (g m−2 × 103) over the North Atlantic Ocean. Derived
from data in Prospero (1996a, Table 2B)

60⬚E 120⬚E 180⬚ 120⬚W 60⬚W 0⬚

60⬚N
1,000 100

30⬚N 1,000 1,000


10,000
10,000
100
0⬚ 1,000
1,000
100
10
30⬚S

10 10
60⬚S

Fig. 6.6. Calculated global fluxes of atmospheric matter (mg m−2 year−1) to the oceans. Modified
after from Duce (1995, Fig. 3.10)
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 157

Table 6.5. Atmospheric mass flux of mineral aerosol to the ocean (from Duce 1995, Table 3.4)

Ocean Mean flux (g m−2 year−1) Deposition (Tg year−1)

North Pacific 5.3 480


South Pacific 0.35 39
North Atlantic 4.0 220
South Atlantic 0.47 24
North Indian 7.1 100
South Indian 0.82 44
Global 2.5 910

6.3 Particle Sizes

Some of the earliest determinations of dust deposit grain sizes were made in the
United States by Udden (1898). He found that most of his samples were in the
size range from 62.5 µm to 15.6 µm. Given that suspension is the prime mode
of dust transport, it is to be expected that silt is a dominant component of dust
deposits, though clay and sand fractions can also be present. Also, given that
coarser particles will drop out of suspension first, dust deposits tend to get finer
as one moves away from their source regions. Udden suggested that coarse dust
(31–62 µm) might travel around 320 km from its source, that medium dust

Table 6.6. Rates of dust deposition in China. Total atmospheric deposition of mineral aerosol
to Chinese deserts. Source: Zhang et al. (1997, Table 1)

Chinese deserts sampled


in 1991–1994 (area) Deposition rate (g m−2 year−1) Total deposition (Tg year−1)

Taklimakan desert 450 (110–1900) 150.0 (37.0–630.0)


(337 600 km2)
Gurbantunggut desert 130 (37–270) 6.2 (1.8–13.0)
(48 800 km2)
Desert in the Tsaidam Basin 230 (68–480) 7.9 (2.4–17.0)
(34 900 km2)
Kumutage desert 320 (40–1100) 6.2 (0.8–22.0)
(19 500 km2)
Badain Juran desert 310 (99–750) 14 (4.4–33.0)
(44 300 km2)
Ulan Buh desert (9970 km2) 670 (14–2100) 6.7 (0.1–21.0)
2
Hobq desert (16 100 km ) 420 (73–570) 6.7 (1.2–9.2)
Mu Us desert (32 100 km2) 380 (66–1300) 12.0 (2.1–42.0)
Tengerr desert (42 700 km2) 290 (15–1200) 12.0 (0.6–52.0)
158 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 6.7. Rates of dust deposition in China. The 15-year maximum, minimum and mean annual
dust deposition rates in urban cities in Gansu Province, China. Source: Ta et al. (2004a, Table 3)

Average Maximum Minimum


City (t km−2 year−1) (t km−2 year−1) (t km−2 year−1)

Desert/Gobi area
Jiuquan 320.22 539.68 201.57
Zhangye 352.84 542.4 197.96
Jinchang 290.22 621.85 133.14
Wuwei 498.64 688.85 366.57
Average rate 365.48 – –
Loess area
Lanzhou 327.02 398.45 249.19
Dingxi 281.63 405.31 181.48
Linxia 256.57 383.93 149.40
Pinliang 256.94 320.24 188.19
Xifeng 207.50 359.93 135.33
Tianshui 180.86 232.46 131.30
Average rate 251.75 – –

(16–31 µm) might travel around 1600 km from its source and that dust finer
than 16 µm might “be largely scattered around the globe”.
The wide range of grain sizes that may be present in dust deposits is made
evident by particle analysis of dust collected by passive dust samplers
in Lubbock, Texas (Gill et al. 2000). Seven samples had a mean clay content
(<2 µm) of 23.02%. The average percentage in the size range 2–50 µm was
55.08%. The rest was in the size range 50–2000 µm. The PM10 percentage,
which is important from the human health point-of-view, was 47.2%.
The particle size characteristics of Saharan dust are summarized in
Table 6.8. It needs to be noted, however, that nearly all the determinations are
for dust storms which are not from major source areas and which have trav-
elled outwards into the moister parts of West Africa, to the Atlantic (Stuut
et al. 2005), to the Mediterranean or to Europe. It is likely, therefore, that dust
storms occurring nearer their source will have coarser grain size characteris-
tics than those listed. Mean modal and median sizes of the travelled dust tend
to be fine silt between 5 µm and 30 µm in diameter, though Harmattan dust
at Kano (Nigeria) may have a median diameter that reaches 74 µm (McTainsh
and Walker 1982), while that from Tanezrouft reaches 72 µm (Coudé-
Gaussen 1981). Conversely, samples from southern Ghana, Barbados,
Bermuda, the United States and parts of Europe may be less than 5 µm.
Although data are sparse, dust storms may transport substantial amounts of
clay-sized material (<2 µm).
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 159

100¡
100⬚ 110¡
110⬚ 120¡
120⬚ 130¡
130⬚
50¡
50⬚
50˚
RUSSIA
50¡
50⬚ RUSSIA

MON GOL I A

40¡
40˚
40⬚
40¡
40⬚ Baotou 39
Beijing 18 NORTH
KOREA

Seoul 3.7
Lanzhou 41 SOUTH
Qingdao 3.0 KOREA

Xian 25

Cheju Do 3.2
CHINA

30¡
30˚
30⬚
30¡
30⬚

East China Sea


2.7

Quanzhou 3.6
Taipeh 0.55

TAIWAN
VIETNAM
Hong Kong 1.4
20¡
20⬚ 20¡
20˚
20⬚
0 500 km
LAOS
110⬚
110˚ 120˚
120⬚ 130¡
130⬚

Fig. 6.7. Rates of dust deposition in China (g m−2 year−1). Derived from data in Gao et al. (1997)

Although the modal data presented here are useful, they provide little
information about the maximum sizes of grain that can be transported in
dust storms derived from the Sahara and other source regions. Schroeder
(1985) found aggregated dust particles up to 150 µm in diameter in samples
taken on the coastal belt of Sudan, while samples taken over Sal Island
Table 6.8. Particle size characteristics of dust

Modal, mean or
Reference Location median size (µm) Clay (%; <2 µm)

Dust from the Sahara


McTainsh and Walker Kano, Nigeria 8.9–74.3 (median) 2.3–32.0
(1982)
Coudé-Gaussen (1981) Tanezrouft 72 (modal) 9.4
(central Sahara)
Stuut et al. (2005) Off north-west 8–42 (modal) –
Africa
Khiri et al. (2004) Morocco 22–37 (median) –
Coudé-Gaussen (1991) Maghreb 5–40 (median) –
Mattson and Crete 8–30 (modal) –
Nihlén (1996)
Sala et al. (1996) Spain 4–30 (mean) –
Criado and Dorta (2003) Canary Islands 16.9–20.67 (mean) 7.2–9.6
Ratmeyer et al. (1991) Sal Island 11.9–18.6 (mean) –
Fiol et al. (2005) Mallorca 9.3–58.9 (median) –
Breuning-Madsen Ghana 6.8–16.4 (median) –
and Awadzi (2005)
Littmann (1991a, b) West Germany 2.2–16.0 (median) –
Pye (1992) Crete 4.0–16.0 (median) 15.0–45.0
Gillies et al. (1996) Mopti, Italy 16.8 (modal) –
Ozer et al. (1998) Genoa, Italy 14.6 (median) –
Bücher and Lucas (1984) South-western France 4.0–12.7 (median) –
Coudé-Gaussen (1991) South of France 8.0–11.0 (median) –
Tomadin et al. (1984) Central 2.0–8.0 (modal)
Mediterranean
Coudé-Gaussen Paris Basin (France) 8.0 (modal) –
et al. (1988)
Wagenbach Swiss Alps 4.5±1.5 (median) –
and Geis (1989)
Petit et al. (2005) Guadeloupe 4.0 (modal) –
(Caribbean)
Talbot et al. (1986) Barbados 3.2 (median) –
Arimoto et al. (1997) Bermuda 2.0–2.3 (mean) –
Afeti and Resch (2000) Southern Ghana 1.16 (mean) –
Perry et al. (1997) Continental USA <1.0 (mean) –
Franzen et al. (1994) Fennoscandia 2.7 (median) –
Blanco et al. (2003) Lecce, Italy 1.7–2.4 (median) –
Dust from elsewhere
Chen and Fryrear (2002) Texas 23.0–35.0 (mean) –
Osada et al. (2004) Japan 6.0–21.0 (median) –
Liu et al. (2004) China 3.97–93.54 (median) –
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 161

(Cape Verde Islands) off West Africa have yielded individual quartz grains up
to 90 µm in diameter and mica flakes up to 350 µm in diameter (Glaccum and
Prospero 1980). Prospero et al. (1970) detected individual large particles (>20
µm in diameter) that were carried more than 4000 km from their Saharan
source; and Arimoto et al. (1997) recorded particles 43–57 µm in diameter at
Bermuda. Saharan dust collected after numerous fallout events over the
British Isles has shown that large numbers of so-called ‘giant’ dust particles
(>62.5 µm) are commonly carried more than 3000 km to Northern Europe
(Middleton et al. 2001). They have also been found over the Canary Islands
and far out into the Pacific, 10 000 km or more from their Chinese source
(Betzer et al. 1988). The mechanisms by which such large particles are kept
aloft over such large distances are far from clear (see also Section 2.8).

6.4 Dust Chemistry

Because the chemistry of the dust involved in dust storms is important in


understanding their possible effects on soils, precipitation chemistry, ocean
biogeochemistry and weathering phenomena (see Chapter 2), data are
presented in Table 6.9 for 23 samples of dust collected from different parts of
the world and derived from different source areas, for which tolerably com-
plete analyses are available. The main component is silica (59.99%), with
Al2O2 (14.13%), Fe2O3 (6.85%), CaO (3.94%), MgO (2.60%), K2O (2.35%),
water and organic matter also being quantitatively important. Mineralogical
studies indicate that the great bulk of the silica is made up of quartz.
In Table 6.9, we also present the major element concentrations for Saharan
dust as sampled in the southern Sahara/Sahel from the Harmattan source and
over Europe. For comparison, figures are given for Chinese and North
American (Arizona) dust and for dust storms on a global basis, together with
the mean composition of the Earth’s surface rocks.
What emerges from these data is that both Harmattan and European
dusts are dominated by SiO2 and Al2O3, a characteristic they share with
North American and Chinese dusts. The concentrations of these two major
elements are similar to those found in world rocks. The dominance of SiO2
probably reflects the importance of quartz in aeolian dust. Saharan dust also
appears to contain appreciable quantities of Fe2O3, MgO and CaO, though
Harmattan dust is less rich in MgO and CaO than Saharan dust transported
northwards to Europe. The CaCO3 content of dust from North African
sources has been recognized for its influence in increasing the pH of rainfall
in Corsica (Löye-Pilot et al. 1986) and at Erdemli in Turkey (Özsoy and
Saydam 2000), while Saharan dust has also been identified as an important
source of atmospheric P, mainly insoluble, to the Mediterranean (Mignon
and Sandroni 1999).
162

Table 6.9. Major element analyses of dust. References (1–11): 1 Kano (McTainsh and Walker 1982), 2 Kano (Wilke et al. 1984), 3 Kano (Wilke et al. 1984),
4 Zaria (Wilke et al. 1984), 5 Zaria (Wilke et al. 1984), 6 Italy/central Mediterranean (Tomadin et al. 1984), 7 Italy/central Mediterranean (Tomadin
et al. 1984), 8 Pyrenees (Bücher and Lucas 1984), 9 Europe (Bücher 1986), 10 Goudie (1978), 11= Clarke (1916)

Harmattan dust (Southern Sahara) Saharan dust over Europe

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Harma-
ttan mean
Europe
mean
China
mean(10)
Arizona
mean(10)
World
mean(10)
World
rocks(11)

SiO2 66.03 57.19 59.05 57.45 65.04 61.33 51.79 54.83 58.0 60.95 56.49 60.26 57.92 59.9 58.93
Al2O3 11.08 12.11 11.32 10.64 9.97 15.52 12.79 16.33 11.0 11.02 13.91 11.40 12.21 14.13 14.98
Fe2O3 4.45 5.30 4.63 4.34 3.78 8.06 5.32 6.09 6.0 4.50 6.37 2.91 4.72 6.85 6.1
FeO – – – – – – – – – – – 1.37 – – –
MgO 0.82 0.81 0.75 0.81 0.62 2.84 3.86 2.90 2.7 0.76 3.08 – 3.01 2.60 3.81
CaO 0.13 3.61 3.01 2.88 1.90 3.47 12.19 10.15 8.6 2.31 8.60 – 2.01 3.94 4.84
Na2O 0.91 1.46 1.30 2.14 1.12 0.81 1.16 0.98 1.6 1.39 1.14 1.72 1.93 – –
K2O 2.04 2.95 2.87 3.26 2.95 3.26 3.26 2.18 1.8 2.81 2.63 2.13 2.63 2.35 2.99
TiO2 0.73 0.83 0.81 0.82 0.92 0.74 1.01 1.22 1.2 0.82 1.04 0.65 0.74 – –
P2O5 0.17 0.25 0.22 0.18 0.18 0.18 0.42 0.13 – 0.20 0.24 0.19 – – –
MnO 0.10 0.08 0.08 0.09 0.08 – – 0.05 1.6 0.09 – – – – –
SO3 – – – – – – – – – – – 0.20 – – –
CO2 – 4.99 5.47 6.38 4.18 – – – – 5.26 – – – – –
H2O – 9.74 8.94 9.00 7.30 – – – – 8.75 – 0.80 2.14 – –
LO1 12.79 – – – – – – – – – – – 11.64 – –
Total 99.25 99.32 98.45 97.99 98.04 – – – – – – – – – –
A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 163

Dust storms can transport appreciable quantities of organic material,


because much dead plant debris (leaves, seeds, seed cases, etc.) has a low
density and only requires modest threshold velocities for its entrainment.
Analysis of Argentinian dust in the Pampas by Ramsperger et al. (1998)
revealed that the organic matter content was between 6.7% and 8.3%. Dust
samples from Lubbock, Texas, averaged around 10% of organic carbon (Gill
et al. 2000) and samples from Tempe, Arizona, averaged 11.6% (Péwé et al.
1981) while, in Australia, Boon et al. (1998) found the organic content aver-
aged 31–34%. Such organic material makes a major contribution to the func-
tioning of dryland ecosystems (Zaady et al. 2001). The organic portion may
include large numbers of phytoliths and diatoms (Folger et al. 1967; Abrantes
2003; Breuning-Madsen and Awadzi 2005) and diatomites from desiccated
pluvial lakes in the Bodélé depression seem to be major component of the
dusts that are generated from the dustiest place on Earth (Giles 2005). Dust
may also contain plant waxes (Dahl et al. 2005).
Analyses of samples for constituents, which are not included in
Table 6.9, indicate that some other components may locally be important.
Bucher and Lucas (1975) found that carbonates amounted to 20–30% in
Saharan dust deposited in the Pyrenees; Khiri et al. (2004) found that
Moroccan dust had calcite contents that ranged between 23% and 69%; and
Alastuey et al (2005) found that Saharan dust deposited on the Canary islands
had CaCO3 values of 6–9% and gypsum values of 3.5% to 10.0%. Logan (1974)
found that soluble salts in dust landing on the Canaries amounted to
1.2–3.6%; Yaalon and Ginzbourg (1966) reported CaCO3 contents in Negev
dust of up to 48% and soluble salts up to 3.1%; Singer et al. (2003) reported
that dust collected in the vicinity of the Dead Sea had calcite contents that
were between 5.2% and 33.1%, and dolomite contents that were between
11.5% and 14.8%; Modaish (1997) found that the calcium carbonate content
of dust in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, was 31.8%; in Iraqi dust storms Kukal and
Saadallah (1973) found that carbonate amounted to 66.1–69.5%; and, around
the Caspian Sea, Brouievitch and Goudkov (cited by Tsyganeko 1968) found
a calcium carbonate content of 12.3%. Dust samples in Southern Nevada and
California contain 8–31% carbonate and 4–19% for soluble salts (excluding
gypsum; Reheis and Kihl 1995). Warn and Cox (1951) found that at Lubbock,
Texas, carbonate equalled 5–20% and gypsum 5%, while Gill et al. (2000)
found they had highly variable calcium carbonate contents of 0.5–15.3%,
whereas samples from Tempe, Arizona, (Péwé et al. 1981) had contents that
ranged from 1.12% to 3.87%. In northern China, the carbonate content of
dust samples ranged from 2.6% to 12.1% (Wang et al. 2005b).
Dust derived from playa (salt lake) surfaces may be rich in soluble salts
(Blank et al. 1999); and this is the case with respect to dust blowing off the
desiccating floor of the Aral Sea. Australian dusts may contain as much as
50% by weight of salt (Kiefert 1997). This may contribute to groundwater
salinity (Acworth and Jankowski 2001). Dust derived from the Owens (dry)
Lake includes appreciable amounts of arsenic (Reheis et al. 1999).
164 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

6.5 Clay Mineralogy of Dust

The fine fraction of aeolian dust contains various types of clay mineral,
which can sometimes give an indication of source regions of dust pro-
duction. Dusts collected in Texas (Gill et al. 2000) contain three main clay
minerals – illite, smectite and kaolinite. Aeolian clay deposits in south-east
Australia have kaolinite and illite as their most common clay minerals
(Dare-Edwards 1984). In Japan, dust derived from China (Inoue and Naruse
1987) was dominated by kaolinite, illite, vermiculite and montmorillonite.
Dust over the Dead Sea contains smectite, kaolinite, illite and palygorskite
(Singer et al. 2003).
There are now available a large number of studies of the clay mineralogy of
Saharan dust; and Alastuey et al. (2005), for example, found that the three
main clay minerals in Saharan dust over the Canary Islands were palygorskite,
illite and kaolinite. However, there are major geographical variations in the
proportions of different clay minerals derived from different source areas.
Caquineau et al. (1998, 2002) detected variations in the clay minerals present
in dust collected at Sal Island on the basis of the different source areas from
which the dust was derived. Dust originating from the North and West Sahara
exhibited the highest amount of illite, whereas kaolinite became predominant
when air mass trajectories indicate a Sahelian origin. Kaolinite was dominant
in dust originating from the South and Central Sahara, though the amount of
illite could not be detected. Such a latitudinal variation in clay mineralogy is
consistent with the observations of Chester et al. (1972) along the coast of
Western Africa from 25˚ N to 30˚ S. Kaolinite concentrations increased
towards the equator, whereas illite decreased. Dust samples collected from
the Niger and Northern Nigeria also displayed a predominance of kaolinite
(Drees et al. 1993; Wilke et al. 1984; McTainsh and Walker 1982).
Along a transect in the Sahara from 19˚ N to 35˚ N, Paquet et al. (1984)
identified four different groups or sectors. In Northern Algeria, illite and
chlorite accounted for around 70–75% of the clay content, kaolinite about
15% and attapulgite 10–15%. Further south, around Beni Abbes and In Salah,
attapulgite reached levels of 20–25%. Even further south, around
Tamranrassett, Tessalit and In Guessam, illite and chlorite were dominant
(60–70%), attapulgite was only 5–10% and kaolinite 25–30%. South of
Hoggar and in the Tanezrouft smectites were dominant, followed by kaolin-
ite (20–25%), illite (10–25%), attapulgite (10–15%) and chlorite (5%). They
attributed this variability to the nature of the Quaternary sediments and
bedrock of the sectors concerned. For example, the sediments of the north-
ernmost zone gain some of their characteristics as a result of the deflation of
the inland basins (Chotts), while high kaolinite contents may be derived from
ancient lateritic weathering profiles.
Sarnthein et al. (1982) also drew a distinction between northern and south-
ern source areas. Dust from the South Sahara and Sahel (south of 20–25˚ N) is
Dust Concentrations, Accumulation and Constituents 165

less rich in carbonate but richer in kaolinite and montmorillonite, whereas in


the North and Central Sahara, carbonate contents are higher (up to 20–50%)
and the dominant clay minerals are illite, chlorite, palygorskite and montmo-
rillonite. Palygorskite has also been recognized as a characteristic mineral of
Saharan dust (Coudé-Gaussen and Blanc 1985) reaching Sardinia and the
Western Mediterranean (Molinaroli 1996), in dust falling on Skye, western
Scotland (Bain and Tait 1977) and in dust reaching the central Mediterranean
(Tomadin et al. 1984). At the eastern end of the Mediterranean, kaolinite is a
more significant aeolian clay mineral input, its African origin indicated by the
northward decreasing abundance in marine sediments (Foucault and Mélières
2000). Dust reaching north-eastern Spain from the Northern Sahara had the
following clay minerals: illite, smectite, palygorskite and kaolinite (Avila et al.
1996, 1997), while that reaching Mallorca was dominated by illite, kaolinite
and palygorskite (Fiol et al. 2005).
Although the nature of the source region is important for determining the
nature of the clay minerals present in dust, gravitational settling effects
during transport are of secondary significance (Prospero 1981).
7 Changing Frequencies of Dust Storms

7.1 Introduction

Dust storm frequencies vary at a series of temporal scales. In Chapter 9 we


discuss how dust storm activity has changed during the course of the
Quaternary era, using evidence from ocean, lake and ice cores and also from
the great loess deposits that were laid down by dust storms in the past. This
chapter, however, concentrates on the nature and causes of changing dust
storm frequencies in recent decades and is largely based on the analysis of
climatological data, though attempts have been made to use remote sensing
data, such as TOMS, to identify temporal trends (e.g. Barkan et al. 2004).

7.2 The United States Dust Bowl

The Dust Bowl of the 1930s was possibly the most famous case of soil erosion
by deflation (Bonnifield 1979; Worster 1979; see Fig. 7.1), though as Malin’s
(1946) archival studies showed, dust storms were rampant in Kansas in the
nineteenth century, long before the sod had been busted by pioneering farm-
ers. In part the Dust Bowl was caused by a series of hot, dry years which
depleted the vegetation cover so that, in the words of John Steinbeck (1939,
p. 49): “a man didn’t get enough crop to plug up an ant’s ass”. It also made
the soils dry enough to be susceptible to wind erosion. The effects of this
drought were gravely exacerbated by years of overgrazing and unsatisfactory
farming techniques. However, perhaps the prime cause was the rapid expan-
sion of wheat cultivation in the Great Plains. The number of cultivated
hectares doubled during the First World War as tractors (for the first time)
rolled out on to the plains by the thousands. In Kansas alone, the hectares
under cultivation increased from under two million in 1910 to almost five
million in 1919. After the war, wheat cultivation continued apace, helped by
the developments of the combine harvester and governmental assistance. The
farmer, busy sowing wheat and reaping gold, could foresee no end to his land
of milk and honey; but the years of favourable climate were not to last and,
over large areas, the tough sod which exasperated the earlier homesteaders
gave way to friable soils of high wind erosion potential. Drought, acting on
168 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a)

16
16
12
8
6
4
2

b)

14
8
6

124

Light

c)

4 6

2
1

Light

Fig. 7.1. The concentration of dust storms (number of days per month) in the United States in
1936, illustrating the extreme localization over the High Plains of Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma
and Kansas: a) March, b) April, c) May. Modified after Goudie (1983)
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 169

damaged soils, created the ‘black blizzards’ (Fig. 7.2) which have been so
graphically described by Coffey (1978, pp 79–80):
“There was something fantastic about a dust cloud that covered 1.35 m.
square miles, stood three miles high and stretched from Canada to Texas,
from Montana to Ohio – a cloud so colossal it obliterated the sky . . . a four-
day storm in May 1934 . . . transported some 300 million tons of dirt 1500
miles, darkened New York, Baltimore and Washington for five hours, and
dropped dust not only on the President’s desk in the White House, but also
on the decks of ships some 300 miles out in the Atlantic . . . masses of dust
began to billow into huge tumbling clouds ebony black at the base and
muddy tan at the top, some so saturated with dust particles that ducks and
geese caught in flight, suffocated; some turning the sky so black that chick-
ens, thinking it night, would roost. Oklahoma counted 102 storms in the span
of one year; North Dakota reported 300 in eight months.”
Woodie Guthrie wrote a song about the Great Dust Storm of 14 April 1935:
“The storm took place at sundown, it lasted through the night,
When we looked out next morning, we saw a terrible sight.
We saw outside our window where wheat fields they had grown,
Was now a rippling ocean of dust the wind had blown.
“It covered up our fences, it covered up our barns,

Fig. 7.2. Dust storm approaching Spearman, Texas, 14 April 1935 (NOAA Photo Library)
170 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

It covered up our tractors in this wild and dusty storm.


We loaded our jalopies and piled our families in,
We rattled down that highway to never come back again.”

The core of the Dust Bowl area comprised the western third of Kansas,
south-east Colorado, the Oklahoma Panhandle, the northern two-thirds of
the Texas Panhandle and north-east New Mexico, although most of the Great
Plains experienced Dust Bowl conditions at some time during the 1930s.
Indeed some of the worst conditions were found as far north as Wyoming,
Nebraska and the Dakotas.
The most severe dust storms (the black blizzards) occurred in the Dust
Bowl between 1933 and 1938, with activity being at a maximum during the
spring of these years. At Amarillo, Texas, at the height of the period, one
month had 23 days with at least 10 h of airborne dust and one in five storms
had zero visibility (Choun 1936). For comparison, the long-term average for
this part of Texas is just six dust storms a year (Changery 1983).
The reasons for this most dramatic of ecological disasters have been widely
discussed and blame has largely been laid at the feet of the pioneering farm-
ers and ‘sod busters’ who ploughed up the plains for cultivation. For although
dust storms are frequent in the area during dry years and the 1930s was a
period of drought, with high temperatures and low rainfall, the scale and
extent of the 1930s events were unprecedented (Fig. 7.3a).
The wave of settlers that arrived in the area from 1914 to 1930, in conjunc-
tion with the increasing use of mechanized agriculture, catalysed by high
wheat prices, led to exceptionally large-scale wind erosion when drought hit
the plains in 1931. In 1937 the US Soil Conservation Service estimated that
43% of a 6.5×106 ha area in the heart of the Dust Bowl had been seriously
damaged by wind erosion.
An approximate 22-year drought cycle has been identified in the Western
USA (Mitchell et al. 1979). Major droughts have occurred in the Great Plains
in the 1890s, 1910s, 1930s, 1950s and 1970s; and these droughts are normally
periods of exaggerated dust-storm activity (Fig. 7.3b). Soil loss in the 1970s
was on a scale comparable to that of the 1930s (Lockeretz 1978). This is sig-
nificant for, as Gillette and Hanson (1989) observe, the early 1970s was not a
period when cumulative departures from normal rainfall were as marked as
they had been in the 1930s and 1950s in the Great Plains. Thus other factors
such as the occurrence of strong, erosive wind storms may be as important a
causative factor as simple lack of rainfall.
Land management techniques rather than climate are probably important in
determining the variability of dust storm occurrence (Lee et al. 1993); and
Todhunter and Cihacek (1999) have documented a decline in dust storm occur-
rence in North Dakota (Fig. 7.4), which they attribute to the adoption of practices
such as planting of shelterbelts, conservation tillage, crop residue management
and land retirement programmes. The decline in dust storm occurrence for the
southern High Plains (Stout and Lee 2003) since the 1940s is shown in Fig. 7.5.
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 171

a) 120

Dodge City
100 Big Spring

80
Days with blowing dust

60

40

20

1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970

b) 500

400
Total hours of blowing dust

300

200

100

0
1950−51 1960−61 1970−71 1980−81

Fig. 7.3. a) Frequency of dust-storm days at Dodge City, Kansas (1922–1961) and at Big Spring,
Texas (1953–1970). Modified after Gillette and Hanson (1989). b) Yearly total hours of blowing
dust for Lubbock, Texas (summing August through July of the following year). Modified after
Wigner and Peters (1987)
172 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

20

18

16

14
Number of events

12

10

0
1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Fig. 7.4. Number of dust events at Fargo, North Dakota. Modified after Todhunter and Cihacek
(1999)

500

450

400
Annual hours of blowing dust

350

300

250

200

150

100

50

0
1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Fig. 7.5. Annual hours of blowing dust from 1947 to 1993 as reported by surface weather
observers at Lubbock, Texas. Modified after Stout and Lee (2003, Fig. 2)
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 173

7.3 Mexico

A study by Jauregui (1960) of dust storms at Tacubaya in Mexico City over


1923–1958 showed a marked inter-annual variability in frequency, but with
no trend over the period. He pointed out in another paper (Jauregui 1969)
that dust-storm intensities are generally lower at Tacubaya than at the airport
on the northeast edge of the urban area; but as Jauregui’s data (1960) for
Tacubaya have no apparent visibility limit, it is not possible to compare his
frequencies with those taken from the airport. Nevertheless, he found that
there was no trend in dust storm frequency from 1923 to 1958, whereas a
marked downward trend was apparent for all visibility classes used in the
data from the airport over the period 1952–1983 (Fig. 7.6). This decrease in
frequency can be explained with reference to three major factors: rainfall,
urban development and lake bed management.
A gradual increase in rainfall over the data period is shown by precipita-
tion figures from Tacubaya. A similar steady increase has been noted at San
Juan Aragon, about 7 km north-north-west of the airport and on the same
side of the urban area, annual rainfall totals here being of the order of 200
mm less than those at Tacubaya (Jauregui and Klaus 1982). Jauregui (1960)
found little correlation between one or two year’s rainfall and the following
year’s dust storm frequency, so that a year or two of low rainfall did not nec-
essarily result in a high number of dust storms the following year. For the

Rainfall
Dust days (visibility < 5000m)
Dust days (visibility < 1600m)
1200 Dust days (visibility < 1000m)

1000
Rainfall per year (mm)

800 80

600 60
Dust days per year

400 40

200 20

0 0
1952 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1984

Fig. 7.6. Annual rainfall totals and dust-day frequencies for Mexico International Airport
(1952–1984). Modified after Goudie and Middleton (1992, Fig. 2)
174 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

data period analysed at the airport, correlations with antecedent annual


rainfall were also poor. Comparing annual dust-event frequency (visibility
<5000 m) with the previous year’s rainfall produced a Spearman’s rank
correlation coefficient of −0.14 (56% probability of a relationship) and a cor-
relation with the average annual rainfall over the preceding three years was
also poor: r = −0.22 with 23% probability. Nevertheless, a gradual increase
in rainfall can reasonably be expected to have led to a concomitant decline in
duststorm frequency over the same period when considered with the other
factors outlined below.
The growth and spread of the urban area around the airport may have had
some impact on dust storm activity. Although perhaps in the short term
urban sprawl may act to further destabilize dust sources during phases of
construction, the encroachment of the urban area around the airport that has
occurred since the 1950s will have acted to protect susceptible soil surfaces
after the initial stages (Jauregui 1989).
The identification of the dried bed of Lake Texcoco as a major source of
dust storms resulted in the initiation of a project in 1972 that aimed to stabi-
lize this area. Lake Texcoco, at low levels during dry years, has been a source
of dust storms over Mexico City for at least 100 years (Jauregui 1960), but
drainage for industry, agriculture and human use resulted in its complete
desiccation in the early 1950s. During this decade the lake, situated immedi-
ately north-east of the present airport, became a major source of dust storms
over both the airport itself and the city. The project has planted pastures of
zacate salado (Distichlis spicata) irrigated with recycled urban waste water
and has constructed a number of reservoirs on the former lake bed. In 1971,
the area accounted for 40% of Mexico City’s dust storms (SARH 1985); that
percentage was reduced to zero by 1984. It is interesting to note that the aver-
age annual number of dust storm days occurring at Mexico City shown by
Goudie and Middleton (1992) is very much less than that quoted by Jauregui
(1973) and subsequently referred to in a number of more general texts on
dust storms (e.g. Goudie 1978; Coudé-Gaussen 1984). The value used here is
4.5 days year−1. Jauregui’s (1973) value of 68 is quoted from a previous paper
(Jauregui 1960) which, as noted above, uses no visibility limit in the dust
storm data. Further, Jauregui (1973) uses the value 68 as the average number
of dust storms, whereas in the original 1960 paper, he shows an average 68
dust storm days.

7.4 Saharan Dust Events

The changing frequencies of Saharan dust events over recent decades has
been noted by several authors, using data on dust storms observed at mete-
orological stations, satellite observations (e.g. Barkan et al. 2004), data on
atmospheric dust concentrations and dust fall deposition rates monitored at
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 175

distance from source areas (e.g. Chiapello et al. 2005). Increases in dust storm
frequency concurrent with drought periods have been noted in the Sahelian
zone since the mid-1960s by Middleton (1985a) and by Goudie and Middleton
(1992), using data from Mauritania, Senegal, Nigeria and Sudan. N’Tchayi
et al. (1997) have also shown an increase in both the frequency of occurrence
and annual duration of dust conditions since the late 1950s, particularly for
stations in the Sahel; and (N’Tchayi et al. 1994) have demonstrated that as
rainfall has diminished the frequency of dust haze has increased (Fig. 7.7a).
These trends have been reflected in rising concentrations of Saharan dust
monitored at Barbados between 1965 and 1992 (Zhu et al. 1997) and subse-
quently (Chiapello et al. 2005). The Barbados dust concentrations are
inversely related to the previous year’s rainfall in Sahelian Africa (Prospero
1996b), but winter transport to that island is related to the North Atlantic
Oscillation (NAO) as well (Chiapello et al. 2005).
Atmospheric dust loadings are a function of several climatic parameters
that operate on the decadal scale, including drought as mentioned above but
also the deflational power of the wind. In the Sahel there is some evidence
that this increased between 1970 and 1984 (Clark et al. 2004). Another cli-
matic forcing factor that has attracted recent attention, as mentioned above,
is the NAO. Moulin et al. (1997) showed that, between 1982 and 1996, there
was a clear similarity in trends between atmospheric optical depth, dust con-
centrations and the NAO index (Fig. 7.7b). Variations in dust event frequen-
cies could be an indicator of climatic change and this aspect has attracted the
attention of several studies in recent years. Observations in north-western
Italy have shown an increasing trend of Saharan dust events since 1975
(Rogora et al. 2004). Data from the Mediterranean coast of Spain, south of
Alicante, over the period 1949–1994 also showed a marked increase in the
number of dust-rain days since the 1970s (Sala et al. 1996). The long-term
average there was approximately two dust-rain days per year, but from 1985
to 1994 the annual total averaged 6.5 dust-rain days, with 9.0 dust-rain days
per year recorded for the period 1989–1994. In Mallorca, there has also been
an increase in dust rains over the period from 1981 to 2003, except for a
decrease between 1991 and 1996 (Fiol et al. 2005). Several other authors have
remarked upon the peak in Saharan dust falls over Europe in the late 1980s.
Dessens and Van Dinh (1990) noted a marked increase in the frequency of
Saharan dust outbreaks depositing at the Midi-Pyrenees Aerology
Observatory in Lannemezan, France, over the period 1983–1989. Similarly, a
significant increase in the quantities of Saharan dust falling over the French
Alps since the early 1970s (with very high inputs occurring after 1980; De
Angelis and Gaudichet 1991) was detected from an ice core that yielded dust
deposition data over a 30-year period (1955–1985). Nonetheless, the 1980s
increase was noted in the British Isles (Burt 1991b), which derives Saharan
dust both from trans-Mediterranean trajectories and from transport across
the Bay of Biscay. Table 5.7 shows the Saharan dust falls over British Isles in
the twentieth century documented in the literature, which also affirms the
176 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a) 500
400

400

Number of days with dust haze


Rain 300
Rainfall depth (mm/ year)

300

200

200

100
100
Dust haze

0 0
1952 1962 1972 1982
Year

b) 20 10
Dust concentration (µg m−3)

15 8
6

NAO index
10
4
5 2
0 0

−5 -2
-4
−10
1964 1968 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996
Year

Fig. 7.7. a) The relationship between annual dust haze days and annual rainfall for the Sahelian
station of Gao (16˚ N), between 1952 and 1987. Modified after N’Tchayi et al. (1994, Fig. 6). b)
Comparison of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) index (bold continuous line) with desert
dust concentrations at Barbados in the West Indies, between 1964 and 1996. Modified after
Moulin et al. (1997, Fig. 4)

importance of the 1980s and early 1990s, although the increase discernible
here may also reflect to some extent a keener awareness and interest in such
phenomena.
Additional evidence for recent increasing Saharan dust-raising activity
comes from the eastern Mediterranean, where Yaalon and Ganor (1979) esti-
mated that some 25×106 t of Saharan dust reached the east Mediterranean
Basin each year, most settling into the Mediterranean Sea. This figure has
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 177

subsequently been revised upward, to 70×106 tyear−1 (Ganor and Mamane


1982) and more recently to 100×106 tyear−1 (Ganor and Foner 1996). The
increase reflects the steady rise in frequency of Saharan dust episodes over Tel
Aviv (Israel) from ten per year in 1958 to 19 per year in 1991 (Ganor 1994).
However, it seems that the frequency of ‘red rain’ events on the Spanish
Mediterranean coast has declined in the second half of the 1990s (Avila et al.
1997; Avila and Peñuelas 1999). Eleven years of deposition records
(1984–1994) at Corsica showed that annual rates peaked in the late 1980s and
declined in the first half of the following decade (Löye-Pilot and Martin 1996).
This study also noted the high year-to-year variability, with the annual input
of Saharan dust at Corsica varying between 4.0 g m−2 and 26.2 g m−2 over the
study period. Contrary to this evidence of increasing frequency of dust out-
breaks across the Western Mediterranean, however, Conte et al. (1996) show
a decline in the frequency of strong Siroccos over the period 1951–1990 at
Trapani in Sicily. This is probably due to an increase in anticyclonic activity
in the western and central parts of the Mediterranean Basin, which tends to
counteract the occurrence of frontal disturbances which generate the strong,
dust-laden southerly winds from the Sahara.
Data from Mauritania were supplied by the Service Météorologique,
Nouakchott. The variation in frequency of annual dust storm days and
annual rainfall totals for Nouakchott is shown in Fig. 7.8. The increase in dust
storm days after 1968 is dramatic. Low rainfall totals of 48.1 mm in 1970 and
17.9 mm in 1971 represented just 32% and 12% respectively, of the 1949–1967
average and can be seen as the main onset of the drought. The number of dust

220 Rainfall
Dust storm days
200

180 90

160 80
Dust storm days per year
Rainfall per year (mm)

140 70

120 60

100 50

80 40

60 30

40 20

20 10

0 0
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985
1986

Fig. 7.8. Annual frequency of dust-storm days and annual rainfall for Nouakchott, Mauritania,
1960–1986. Modified after Goudie and Middleton (1992, Fig. 5)
178 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

storm days increased markedly from six in 1970 to 65 in 1974 before a


reasonably high annual rainfall of 190.6 mm in 1975; dust storm activity
declined to 25 days in 1976 and 27 days in 1977. In 1977, however, the rainy
season brought just 2.7 mm of precipitation, making it the driest year since
records began in 1931; and dust storm activity rose to 55 days and 61 days in
1978 and 1979, respectively. The total dropped to 33 dust storm days in 1980
after a relatively heavy rainfall in 1979, but rose to an unprecedented 85 days
in 1983 and remained at around 80 days year−1 until 1986.
At Nouakchott, further investigation of the dust storm/rainfall relation-
ship has been undertaken using linear-correlation techniques (Middleton
1986c). The linear-correlation coefficient between dust-storm frequency and
the previous year’s rainfall (note that the dust-storm season at Nouakchott is
primarily in the first six months of the year, before the onset of the rainy sea-
son) is −0.53 (28% explanation). The relationship between dust storms and
antecedent rainfall is stronger, however, when annual dust-storm days are
compared to the average annual rainfall over the previous three years (linear-
correlation coefficient = −0.75, with 56% explanation). This fairly strong rela-
tionship is similar to that found by Bertrand et al. (1979) for Agadez and
Bilma in Niger.
The early 1970s peak in dust-raising at Nouakchott is discernable in data
from the north-western margins of the Sahara at Ouarzazate on the headwa-
ters of the Dra in Morocco (Fig. 7.9). Although rainfall was below average in
1971, 1973, 1974 and 1975, other periods of below-average rainfall in the
1960s produced less remarkable peaks in dust storm activity, suggesting a
weaker relationship between rainfall and dust-raising in this area, the reasons
for which deserve further investigation.
Data for the Sudan refer to stations across the Sudanese Sahel (see Hulme
1985; Middleton 1985a, b). The annual dust-storm frequency and annual
rainfall totals for El Fasher, El Obeid and Khartoum (Fig. 7.10) show a marked
rise in dust-storm activity dating from the late 1960s/early 1970s. Particularly
low rainfall in 1972 and 1973 at El Fasher, for example, was followed by a dis-
tinct rise in dust-storm frequency, peaking in 1974, falling in 1975 and 1976
after high rainfall in 1974, but remaining at increasing levels after that year as
annual rainfall remained for the most part below 200 mm. The zero dust-
storm reading for 1979 followed the wettest year in the central Sudan (1978)
in the previous 20–25 years (Trilsbach and Hulme 1984), although particu-
larly high rainfall was not evident at El Fasher itself.
Ozer (personal communication) has analysed long-term visibility and
wind data for the Sahara, dating back to the late 1940s. By incorporating
such data into D’Almeida’s (1986) model of dust emissions, Ozer has come
up with some remarkable data. He has calculated that, from the late 1940s to
the 1960s, there was a yearly dust production of around 126×106 t, which
rose to 317×106 t during the 1970s and has been at around 1275×106 t since
the 1980s. In the bad drought year of 1984, dust production reached a star-
tling 3760×106 t.
a) c) 40
0.7
30 0.6 30 0.6
0.5
20 0.4 20 0.4
0.3
10 0.2 10 0.2

Rainfall (mm)
0.1

Dust storm days

Rainfall (mm)
Dust storm days

0 0.0 0 0.0
J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D

30
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms

b) d)

500

20 400 20

300
250
200 10 200 10
150
Dust storm days per year

100 100
Rainfall per year (mm)
50
0 0 Dust storm days per year 0 0

Rainfall per year (mm)


1950 1960 1970 1980 1950 1960 1970 1980

Fig. 7.9. Annual rainfall totals and dust storm frequencies for Ouarzazate and Marrakech, Morocco (1951–1980). a) Mean monthly dust storm frequencies
179

and rainfall for Ouarzazate, b) 1951–1980 annual totals for Ouarzazate. c) Mean monthly dust storm frequencies and rainfall for Marrakech, d) 1951–1980
annual totals for Marrakech
180 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

a)
700

600 Rainfall

Dust storms per year (total of frequencies


Dust storms 11

recorded at 0600, 1200, 1800, GMT)


Rainfall per year (mm)
500 10
9
400 8
7
300 6
5
200 4
3
100 2
1
0 0
1950 1954 1958 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1982
b) 1983
700

600
Rainfall
Dust storms
Rainfall per year (mm)

500

frequencies recorded at 0600,


Dust storms per year (total of
400 8
7
300 6
1200, 1800, GMT)

5
200 4
3
100 2
1
0 0
1950 1954 1958 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978
26
Dust storms per year (total of frequencies

24
recorded at 0600, 1200, 1800, GMT)

22
Rainfall 20
c) Dust storms 18
400 16
14
Rainfall per year (mm)

300 12
10
200 8
6
100 4
2
0 0
1950 1954 1958 1962 1966 1970 1974 1978 1982
1983

Fig. 7.10. Annual rainfall totals and dust storm frequencies for Sudan: a) El Fasher (1950–1983),
b) El Obeid (1950–1978), c) Khartoum (1950–1983). Modified after Goudie and Middleton
(1992, Fig. 6)
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 181

50

40
Dust (µg m−3)

30

20

10

0
1966 1970 1974 1978 1982 1986 1990 1994 1998

Fig. 7.11. Monthly mean dust concentrations on Barbados (1965–1998; µg m−3). Arrows indicate
the years when a major ENSO event occurred. Modified after Prospero and Lamb (2003, Fig. 1)

The impact of increased dust loadings over the Sahara in recent decades is
also evident in the record of dust transported to Barbados in the Caribbean
(Prospero and Lamb 2003). Records have been kept since 1965 and demon-
strate a strong correlation with rainfall deficits in West Africa and also with
major El Niño events (Fig. 7.11).

7.5 Russia and its Neighbours

Two examples of changing dust storm frequencies can be given for the
former USSR; and both demonstrate the important role played by human
activities. The first of these relates to the effects of vegetation removal and
ploughing in the 1950s as part of the Virgin Lands Scheme when about 40×106
ha of steppe pastures were converted to cropland in eastern Russia, western
Siberia and Kazakhstan. As Table 7.1 shows, dust storm frequency in the
Omsk region went up on average by 2.5-fold when comparing the data for the
period 1936–1950 with those for 1951–1962.
The 1950s also saw a concerted effort to increase the area of irrigated crop-
land in what was then Soviet Central Asia. In some of these areas with
enhanced vegetation cover, the impact on wind erosion has resulted in a
declining trend in dust storm occurrence, as shown for two meteorological
stations in Uzbekistan in Table 7.2. Simultaneously, the offsite impact of the
increase in irrigated cropland has meant a gradual desiccation of the Aral Sea,
which has generated great concern about the increasing deflation of dust
182 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 7.1. The effects of the Virgin Lands Scheme on the frequency of dust storm days in the
Omsk region of the former USSR. After Sapozhnikova (1973)

Mean annual number of dust-storm days

Station 1936–1950 1951–1962 Increase

Omsk steppe 7.0 16.0 ×2.3


Isil’-Kul’ 8.0 15.0 ×1.9
Pokrov-Irtyshsk 4.0 22.0 ×5.5
Poltavka 9.0 12.0 ×1.3
Cherlak 6.0 19.0 ×3.2
Mean value 6.8 16.8 ×2.5

Table 7.2. Changes in the annual frequency of dust storms at two stations in Uzbekistan due to
the expansion of irrigation. After Molosnova et al. (1987)

Station 1950–1959 1960–1969 1970–1979

Khiva 11.9 10.7 5.8


Takhiatash 99.8 34.4 24.8

from the exposed sea bed (Létolle and Mainguet 1993; Middleton 2002).
These lacustrine sediments, which are both highly saline and toxic, have
become a significant new source of wind-blown material in the region
(Fig. 7.12). Marked increases in the annual frequency of dust storms were
recorded at several stations in the Priaralye region of Uzbekistan in the fol-
lowing decades, although the rising frequency was not constant at all stations
(Table 7.3). Major storms first became visible on satellite imagery in 1975 and
have since increased in frequency and duration (Micklin 1988; UNEP 1992).
In a summary of estimates of the amount of material deflated annually,
Glazovsky (1995) suggested a range of 40–150×106 t as reasonable for the
early 1990s.
Orlovsky et al. (2005) studied the annual variation in dust-raising events in
Turkmenistan between 1936 and 1995 (Fig. 7.13). Plainly there is a great deal
of variability from year to year and decade to decade, but no overall regional
picture is evident, except a sharp decrease in frequency after 1980–1985.
These authors suggest that a similar fall in dust-raising activity was also
recorded for other areas of Central Asia, including the Aral Sea region.
Changes in the frequency of latitudinal circulation, irrigation and grazing
over the period have all played a role.
Nonetheless, salts from the Aral Sea’s exposed bed were recorded as being
deposited at annual rates of 0.3 t ha−1 in several zones up to 75 km south
of the coastline in 1985 (UNEP 1992). A similar deposition monitoring sur-
vey in the year 2000 (Wiggs et al. 2003) reported rates in the dustiest period
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 183

Aral
Sea

Dust plumes

Kazakhstan

N
U zbekista n

Fig. 7.12. Dust being raised by north-easterly winds from the desiccated former sea bed of the
Aral Sea, 18 April 2003 (MODIS)

of about 0.25 t ha−1 month−1. Sodium chloride and sodium sulphate are
particularly toxic to plants; and there is a widespread belief that this aeolian
deposition of salts is adversely affecting both croplands and natural ecosys-
tems in the Priaralye. Babaev (1996), for example, reports a steady decline in
yields of pasture on the Ustyurt Plateau since the 1970s; and Glazovsky
(1995) suggests that aeolian salt deposition may at least partly explain
decreasing production of silkworm cocoons in the Uzbek autonomous
republic of Karakalpakstan.
There is also a possible link between enhanced levels of atmospheric dust
and poor human health in areas bordering the Aral Sea. Wiggs et al. (2003)

Table 7.3. Changes in the annual frequency of dust storms at stations in Priaralye, Uzbekistan
due to desiccation of the Aral Sea. After Molosnova et al. (1987). n/a Data not available

Station 1941–1949 1950–1959 1960–1969 1970–1979

Chabankazgan n/a 18.1 31.1 44.5


Chimbai 10.6 11.8 13.6 15.0
Muynak 42.2 57.1 18.4 67.6
Zaslyk n/a 1.5 3.5 12.7
184 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Dust storms 5 years moving average


a)
b)
30 80
25
60
Frequency

Frequency
20
15 40
10
20
5
0 0
1936 1944 1952 1960 1968 1976 1984 1992 1942 1950 1958 1966 1974 1982 1992
c) d)
100 50
80 40
Frequency

Frequency
60 30
40 20
20 10
0 0
1936 1944 1952 1960 1968 1976 1984 1992 1936 1944 1952 1960 1968 1976 1984 1992
e) f)
80 20

60 15
Frequency

Frequency

40 10

20 5

0 0
1936 1944 1952 1960 1968 1976 1984 1992 1936 1944 1952 1960 1968 1976 1984 1992

Fig. 7.13. Annual dust storm frequencies (days) for: a) Gasan-Kuli, b) Darvaza, c) Tedjen,
d) Dashoguz, e) Kazanjik, f) Kara-Kala. Modified after Orlovsky et al. (2005, Fig. 4)

reported that, in Turkmenistan, respiratory diseases are a major cause of


illness and death amongst all age groups and that 50% of all reported illnesses
in children are respiratory in nature. Further, there is anecdotal evidence of
the emergence of interstitial lung disease amongst children in the region of
Kazakhstan that borders the Aral Sea. However, the few studies that have set
out to examine these possible links between atmospheric dust and respira-
tory problems have concluded that dust is just one of several factors that
adversely affect respiratory health in the Aral Sea region.

7.6 Pakistan

The frequency of dust storms between 1961 and 2000 has been studied for
Pakistan by Hussain et al. (2005). Overall, dust storm frequencies declined
in the period 1991–2000 compared to the mean for the whole period, with a
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 185

22% decrease in Punjab, 34% in the North West Frontier Province, 45% in
Sind and 48% in Baluchistan. This may be attributable in part to the spread
of cultivated and irrigated land, though in the late 1990s dust storm
incidence appears to have increased again in response to intense drought
conditions.

7.7 China and Mongolia

Lake sediments in Korea have been used to construct a mid- to late Holocene
history of dust events in China, which has shown that dust storm activity was
greatest at times of aridity and strong winter monsoon strength (Lim et al.
2005). In addition, some of the earliest written records of dust storm activ-
ity anywhere in the world are recorded in the ancient Chinese literature.
They refer to dust falls in northern China, which are variously know as ‘dust
rain’, ‘dust fog’ or ‘yellow fog’, usually occurring in the spring months. The
earliest known record of ‘dust rain’ was in 1150 BC and is found in an his-
torical book: Zhu Shu Nian (‘Chronicles Recorded on Bamboo Slips’, quoted
by Liu et al. 1981). Written records of dust events in Korea extend back to
AD 174 (Chun 2003).
Zhang (1985) used 1156 historical records to show the decadal frequency
of dust-rain years in China for the period since 300 AD (Fig. 7.14). The peri-
ods of frequent occurrence are 1060–1090 AD, 1160–1270 AD, 1470–1560 AD,
1610–1700 AD and 1820–1890 AD (Liu et al. 2004). Comparison of the fre-
quency of dust-rain years with a winter-temperature index for the period
1470–1969 shows that they are in opposite phase. Although the data set is
extensive, it is not evident how homogeneous it is through time; but the
period of enhanced dust-raising activity in the nineteenth century has also

10

8
Frequency

0
1100
1000

1200

1300

1400

1500

1600

1700

1800

1900
300

400

500

600

700

800

900

Year

Fig. 7.14. The frequency curve of dust fall since 300 AD in China. Modified after Zhang (1985)
186 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

been highlighted from deposits in the Far East Rongbuk ice core near Mount
Everest. Shichang et al. (2001) report markedly more intense dusty periods
during the 1830s, 1840s and 1880s, although the source of the material
found in the core is still open to debate. Dust may have been transported
from northern China, but may equally have been raised locally, from the
Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau, or from south-west Asia. Indeed, the diary of
Tonghe Weng provides data on dust events in Beijing during the late nine-
teenth century and indicates that their frequency was not markedly different
from today (Fei et al. 2005).
The changing frequency of dust storms during the recent period of mete-
orological observations has been discussed by a number of authors (see, for
example, Wang et al. 2004b). In Mongolia, Natsagdorj et al. (2003) analysed
data for the period 1960–1999 and identified an increasing trend from the
1960s to the 1980s, with an approximately three-fold increase over that
period, followed by a downward trend in the 1990s (Fig. 7.15a). They believe

a)
60

50

40
Dusty days

30

20

10

0
1960

1963

1966

1969

1972

1975

1978

1981

1984

1987

1990

1993

1996

1999

b) 3000

2500
Dust storm days

2000

1500

1000

500

0
1954 1959 1964 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999

Fig. 7.15. Annual frequency of dusty days in: a) Mongolia, 1960–1999 (modified after Natsagdorj
et al. 2003, Fig. 11), b) China, since 1954 for 681 stations (modified after Wang et al. 2004b, Fig. 6),
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 187

c) 15

12
Kosa days

Annual average = 3.8


6

0
1920 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
d) 15

10
Kosa days

0
1970 1980 1990 2000

Fig. 7.15. (continued) c) Seoul, 1915–1999 (modified after Chun et al. 2001, Fig. 4), although
data are missing for 1923–1953, d) Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan, 1970–2001 (modified after
Kyotani et al. 2005, Fig. 7)

that human activities accounted for the first of these two phases, but that an
increase of precipitation may have caused the reversal in trend during the
latter phase.
Zhou and Zhang (2003) and Wang et al. (2005a) analysed the frequency of
severe dust storms for the period since 1954 in China. They found that
the highest frequency of such events occurred in the 1950s, but was lowest
in the 1990s. Similarly Qian et al. (2002) found high levels of dust activity in
188 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

the 1950s and a steady decline at Beijing and Baotou thereafter. They
suggested that dust storms were twice as prevalent in the 1950s–1970s as
they were from the mid-1980s. They attribute this to a reduced meridional
temperature gradient, resulting in reduced cyclone frequency in Northern
China. Zhao et al. (2003) also attributed the decline in inner Mongolian dust
storms from 1961 to 2000 to changes in atmospheric circulation. Likewise,
Ding et al. (2005) believed that the sharp decrease in dust storm activity after
the mid-1980s occurred concurrently with enhanced geopotential height over
the Mongolian Plateau and Middle Siberia as well as an anomalous shift in the
phase and intensity of the stationary wave over Eurasia. In contrast, Parungo
et al. (1994) attributed the negative trend in dust storm frequency to the
planting of a vast belt of forests – ‘The Great Green Wall’ – across the north-
ern arid lands of China. They asserted that when in the 1980s and 1990s dust
storms were rare in Beijing there were not statistically significant changes in
wind speed or precipitation. An analysis by Wang et al. (2004b; Fig. 7.15b)
confirmed that, for China as a whole, the highest frequencies of dust storms
occurred in the 1960s and 1970s, though they recognized that in some regions
(such as the Chaidm basin) they were increasing; and they attributed this to
localized desertification brought about by human pressures on the land. In
the early twenty-first century reduced precipitation and a concomitant
decrease in vegetation cover caused a resurgence of dust events (Zhou and
Zhai 2004). There also appears to have been greater atmospheric instability,
leading to stronger winds and thus more dust storms (Gao et al. 2003b).
Finally, Fan and Wang (2004) believed that there was a link between dust
weather frequency in northern China and the Antarctic Oscillation, while Liu
et al. (2004) suggested that some recent dust storm events have coincided
with the occurrence of El Niño events.
Data on dust event trends in Korea are provided by Chun et al. (2001) for
the period 1915–1999, though data for 1923–1953 are missing. The number of
Asian dust events observed in Seoul appears to have increased sharply since
the 1970s (Fig. 7.15c). The years 2000, 2001 and 2003 were especially dusty
(Youngsin and Lim 2003). A subsequent study by Chun and Cho (2003) indi-
cated that the period from the 1930s to early 1940s was also characterized by
a very high number of dust days. By contrast, records of Kosa events at two
stations run by the Meteorological Agency of Japan in Yamanashi prefecture
show a discernable declining trend since the late 1970s (Fig. 7.15d), despite
high year-on-year variability.

7.8 Australia

The Australian continent is marked by considerable variation in dust storm


activity from year to year; and agricultural degradation of land surfaces in
areas like the Mallee may have had an impact on dust storm frequencies.
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 189

The variability of storm frequency across the whole country over the last four
decades of the twentieth century is high (Fig. 7.16); and McTainsh et al. (2005)
point to the close relationship between years of high dust storm frequency
and the occurrence of drought across the continent. Ekström et al. (2004)
explore the relationship between dust storm activity and pressure conditions
and highlight the importance of variations in the location of the Indian Ocean
sub-tropical high, with a more westward displacement of this pressure centre
in the Great Australian Bight, allowing cold air to enter the continent, thereby
increasing the potential for dust storm activity. Likewise, Leslie and Speer
(2005) suggest that the decline in dust storm activity over central eastern
Australia, which commenced in the mid-1970s, was due to a decrease in post-
frontal south- to south-east winds and that such circulation changes are
themselves related to changes in the Pacific decadal Oscillation (PDO).
However, a range of anthropogenic reasons has been forwarded to
explain the low frequencies of the 1970s and early 1980s, including a reduc-
tion in rabbit numbers, the adoption of minimum tillage techniques and an
increase in land cover as a result of the invasion of woody weeds (State of the
Environment Advisory Council 1996). However, the occurrence of drought
seems likely to be a stronger determinant of dustiness (McTainsh et al. 2005):
the 1970s and 1980s being decades with relatively few drought periods. Figure
7.16 indicates that the droughts of 1994–1995 and 2002 were clearly reflected

250

200
Number of dust storms

150

100

50

0
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

Fig. 7.16. The frequency of dust storms Australia-wide, 1960–2002. Modified after McTainsh
et al. (2005, Fig. 5)
190 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

in increased dust storm activity, although that of 1982–1983 had a more


modest effect in terms of dust storm frequency.

7.9 The Aeolian Environment in a Warmer World

Given the impact that climatic variability in the recent past has had on soil
erosion by wind, it is likely that future global warming will have a major
impact as well. Changes in precipitation and evapotranspiration rates will
probably have a marked impact on the aeolian environment. Rates of defla-
tion, sand and dust entrainment are closely related to soil moisture condi-
tions and the extent of vegetation cover. Areas that are marginal in terms of
their stability with respect to aeolian processes will be particularly suscepti-
ble; and this has been made evident, for example, through recent studies of
the semi-arid portions of the United States (e.g. the High Plains). Repeatedly
through the Holocene, they have flipped from states of vegetated stability to
states of drought-induced surface instability (Forman et al. 2001). It is likely
that many drylands will become drier under global warming, either because
of an increasing loss of soil moisture related to higher temperatures, or
because of reductions in precipitation inputs. It is also possible that wind
velocities may increase.
Indeed, using the output from General Circulation Models, it is apparent
that with future global climate change there are likely to be substantial
changes in aeolian activity (Muhs and Maat 1993; Stetler and Gaylord 1996),
with future dust storm incidence in the High Plains and the Canadian Prairies
(Wheaton 1990) being comparable to that of the devastating Dust Bowl years
of the 1930s. Modelling studies of southern Africa by Thomas et al. (2005)
have suggested that, during the present century, most of the currently largely
stable dune surfaces of the Mega-Kalahari will become reactivated and
mobile. If this proves to be the case, there will be substantial winnowing of
fines from the weathered dune surfaces (see Section 2.3) and an increase in
dust storm activity in southern Africa.
At a more localised scale, aeolian processes have already become more
active in the past 100 years or so in Iceland as the retreat of glaciers due to cli-
mate warming has altered hydrological conditions at glacial margins and in
larger sandy areas. The enhanced wind action has buried previously vege-
tated areas and it is likely that continued glacier retreat will lead to further
land degradation (Gisladottir et al. 2005).
However, climate change is not the only factor that will affect future dust
storm activity. In addition, not all regions will react in the same way to cli-
mate change – some, for example, may become wetter and less dusty, while
others may become drier and more dusty. It is also necessary to consider
other future environmental changes caused by land use and land cover
modifications brought about by human activities (Mahowald and Luo 2003).
Changing Frequencies of Dust Stroms 191

7.10 Conclusions

The study of dust storm frequencies over recent decades indicates that
different areas show different tendencies. Some regions, such as northern
Africa, show an increasing trend of dust emissions, which results from
increasing drought, perhaps combined with changing wind velocities and
various anthropogenic pressures. The examples of Owens Lake in the United
States and the Aral Sea in Central Asia illustrate how man-made desiccation
of lake basins can cause dust activity to increase. In contrast, other areas,
including parts of the plain lands of North America and parts of China and
Australia, show decreasing trends, some of which can be explained by
improvements in land management. However, in the first years of the twenty-
first century, the downward trend recognised in both Australia and China
appears to have been reversed as a result of the return of drought conditions.
It is, however, extremely difficult to identify the causes of changes in
frequencies with any degree of confidence, because of the complexity of
potential factors involved.
8 Dust Storm Control

8.1 Introduction

Various attempts have been made to control the occurrence of dust storms;
and these include the array of techniques that have been used for wind
erosion control, most of them developed to protect cultivated fields from soil
loss (Bennett 1938a, b; Middleton 1990; Riksen et al. 2003a; Sterk 2003;
Nordstrom and Hotta 2004). In any particular location, a range of measures
is typically employed, as Table 8.1 shows for northern Europe. These tech-
niques are frequently classified into three categories: (a) crop management
practices, (b) mechanical tillage operations and (c) vegetative barriers. All of
these methods aim to decrease wind speed at the soil surface by increasing
surface roughness and/or increasing the threshold velocity that is required to
initiate particle movement by wind. Numerous crop management practices,
also commonly referred to as agronomic measures, can influence both the
detachment and the transport phases of soil particle movement, particularly
when combined with good soil management. Mechanical methods, by
contrast, effectively do little to prevent soil detachment, but tend to be more
effective in preventing soil transport (Morgan 1995).

8.2 Agronomic Measures

Agronomic measures for controlling soil erosion use living vegetation or


the residues from harvested crops to protect the soil by acting as non-
erodible elements, thereby absorbing the wind’s shear stress. When a veg-
etative cover is sufficiently high and dense to prevent the wind stress on
adjacent exposed land exceeding the threshold for particle movement,
then the soil will not erode. Roots also help to prevent erosion through
their contribution to the mechanical strength of the soil. Maintaining
a sufficient vegetative cover is the ‘cardinal rule’ for controlling wind
erosion (Skidmore 1986).
Establishing and maintaining a good ground cover is dependent on the
type of crops being grown and the length of time taken to attain a canopy
cover of 40–50%. Crops grown in rows, tall tree crops and low-growing crops
194 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Table 8.1. Measures commonly employed to minimise wind erosion risk in northern Europe.
After Riksen et al. (2003b)

Aim and timeframe Technique Remarks

Techniques that minimise Autumn-sown varieties Need to sow before end of October
actual risk (short-term) to develop sufficient cover
Mixed cropping Second crop remains on the field
after main crop is harvested
Nursing or cover crop More herbicides needed
Straw planting Unsuitable on light sandy soils
Organic protection layer Use depends on availability and
(e.g. liquid manure, relevant regulations
sewage sludge)
Time of cultivation Dependent on labour and
equipment availability
Cultivation practices Not suitable for all crop types
(e.g. minimum tillage,
plough and press)
Techniques that minimise Smaller fields Increase in operational time and
potential risk (long-term) costs as well as loss of overall
cultivated area
Change of arable land Loss of cultivated area, production
to alternative use and farm income
(e.g. permanent pasture,
woodland)
Marling (increase clay Need suitable material close by
content to 8–10%)
Wind breaks High investment costs as well as
loss of overall cultivated area

with large leaves offer least protection to the soil surface (Morgan 1995).
The simplest way to combine different crops is by rotation, for example by
planting a non-commercial crop that will reduce erosion after a cash crop has
been harvested. The practice of farming land in narrow strips, on which crop
alternates with fallow usually of a legume or grass, is another option. The
most effective strips are perpendicular to the prevailing erosive wind direc-
tion, but they do provide some protection from winds not perpendicular to
the field strip (Skidmore 1986). The strips diminish the wind velocity across the
fallow strip, reduce the distance the wind travels over exposed soil and they
localise any soil drifting. Strip-cropping demands small fields, however, and
thus is not compatible with highly mechanised agriculture; but it provides a
useful technique for the smallholder. The maintenance of a crop residue or
mulch as a stubble on cropland is recognised as an efficient method for
reducing wind erosion losses. The effectiveness of a residue against erosion
after harvesting depends on its amount, height, orientation, diameter and
density of stalks, as well as its survivability. ‘Stubble mulching’ is a crop
Dust Storm Control 195

residue management technique that aims to maintain some degree of crop


residue on the field surface at all times. The soil is usually tilled, but not to
the extent that the field is left ‘clean’. The tillage system usually utilises
blades or V-shaped sweeps and does not invert the soil (McCalla and
Army 1961).
Stubble mulching is a primary erosion control technique used in one form
of ‘conservation tillage’ that does not invert the topsoil and leaves enough
crop residue on the field surface after harvest to protect the soil throughout
the non-growing season. The farmer plants new seeds among the stalks
and debris left from the previous harvest. The method reduces erosion and
also reduces farmers’ costs since fewer trips with tractor and ploughing
equipment are needed through the fields.
The wise management of crop residues is widely used in dryland agriculture
in many parts of the world. It is especially valuable in poor countries; e.g. in
the Sahel of West Africa, millet mulches of around 2 t ha−1 have proved to be
highly effective (Bielders et al. 2001). In an experiment to determine the loss
of topsoil prevented by millet mulch in Niger, Michels et al. (1995) found
a relative difference in surface elevation of 33 mm after just one year between
bare millet plots and those spread with 2000 kg ha−1 of mulch, as a result of
wind erosion and sediment deposition.
The protective properties of crop residues are greatest when the material
is left standing rather than being flattened, but standing residue is not always
agronomically acceptable. Millet stalks in the Sahel may harbour crop-
damaging stem borers (Acigona ignefusalis Hampson) when left standing,
but the larvae of this pest usually perish – by heat at the soil surface – if the
stalks are cut down after harvest, so reducing the risk of infestation during
the next cropping season (Ndoye and Gahukar 1987).
In other parts of the world, however, fallen crop residues can still provide
a good habitat for insects and weeds. In countries where pesticides are afford-
able, this problem can be overcome with chemical applications, but with the
concomitant hazards of off-field pollution, killing of non-target species and
development of resistance to the chemical used. Where pesticides are not
used, the insects and weeds can combine to reduce yields by eating crops and
competing for soil nutrients.
Some of these difficulties can be avoided by using other forms of stabiliser.
Dung, which is widely used in subsistence agriculture because of its fertilis-
ing properties, also provides effective protection to the soil against particle
creep and saltation – initiators of suspension – even at a very low level of
cover (de Rouw and Rajot 2004). Rock fragments are another widely accepted
stabiliser. Pebble and gravel mulches have been used by farmers in north-
west China for more than 300 years, to dampen down soil erosion and to trap
dust carried by the wind (Li et al. 2001). The accumulation of dust may sup-
ply valuable additional nutrients to gravel-mulched fields (Li and Liu 2003).
In some countries, sandy soils can be stabilised by the addition of clay to the
soil. This process is often called marling; and it reduces erosion risk by
increasing aggregate stability.
196 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

A range of synthetic materials have also been evaluated for their applica-
bility to wind erosion control (e.g. Armbrust and Dickerson 1971). Among
substances used are polyvinylacetate (PVA) emulsions and polyacrylamides
(PAM) sprayed onto the soil surface. These can provide temporary protection
for high-value crops but are too expensive for low-value crops. Polymers are
applicable to the control of saline dust blowing from tailing ponds (Fuller and
Marsden 2004). Some stabilisers have been found to meet the essential crite-
ria for soil surface stabilisers (Armbrust and Lyles 1975):
(a) One hundred per cent of the soil must be covered.
(b) Stabilisers must not adversely affect plant growth or emergence.
(c) Erosion must be prevented initially and reduced throughout the period
of severe erosion hazard.
(d) The stabiliser must be easily applied and without special equipment.
(e) The cost must be low enough for profitable use.

8.3 Soil Management

Soil management techniques focus on ways of preparing the soil to promote


good vegetative growth and to improve soil structure in order to increase
resistance to erosion. Applying organic matter is a form of soil management
that can decrease soil erodibility as well as enhance its fertility, but most soil
management methods pertaining to erosion control are concerned with
different forms of tillage.
Tillage is an essential part of farming, providing a suitable seed bed for
plant growth and helping to control weeds, but the dangers of inappropriate
tillage have been illustrated in the Maghreb of North Africa, the United States
Great Plains and the Virgin Lands scheme of the former Soviet Union (see
Chapter 7). Excessive tillage, particularly of light-textured soils, breaks soil
clods, reduces surface roughness and exposes soil to wind action, particularly
if soil-overturning binds stubble into the soil, thus reducing mulch coverage.
To overcome this destruction of structure in non-cohesive soils, tillage oper-
ations must be restricted. This may be by reducing the number of passes over
a field by combining as many operations into one pass as possible, such as in
mulch tillage or minimum tillage, or by strip-zone tillage where operations
are concentrated only as rows where the plants grow, leaving the inter-row
areas untilled (Schwab et al. 1966; see Table 8.2).
The effects of various forms of conservation tillage on erosion rates, soil
conditions and crop yields has been the subject of many studies in recent
years (see, for example, Merrill et al. 1999) and the results show the success
of the system to be highly soil-specific and also to depend on how well
weeds, pests and diseases are controlled (Morgan 1995). To give one example,
significant differences in dust production from field experiments in semi-arid
Dust Storm Control 197

Table 8.2. Tillage practices used for soil conservation. After Schwab et al. (1966)

Practice Description

Conventional Standard practice of ploughing with disc or mouldboard plough, one or


more disc harrowings, spike-tooth harrowing and surface planting
Strip or zone Preparation of seed bed by conditioning the soil along narrow strips in
tillage and adjacent to the seed rows, leaving the intervening soil areas untilled
Mulch tillage Practice that leaves a large percentage of residual material (leaves, stalks,
crowns, roots) on or near the surface as a protective mulch
Minimum tillage Preparation of seed bed with minimal disturbance; use of chemicals to
kill existing vegetation, followed by tillage to open only a narrow seed
band to receive the seed; weed control by herbicides

north-east Spain were detected by López et al. (1998) when conventional


tillage operations (mouldboard ploughing) were compared to reduced tillage
(chisel ploughing). Reduced tillage produced a smaller wind-erodible frac-
tion at the soil surface and a greater percentage of soil cover with crop
residues and clods, resulting in lower values of vertical dust flux.
The practice of no-tillage agriculture, in which drilling is carried out
directly into the stubble of the previous crop, has been found to show great
promise (e.g. Phillips et al. 1980). It reduces labour costs and soil and mois-
ture losses, enhances soil organic matter content, and maintains good struc-
ture. Schmidt and Triplett (1967, quoted in Phillips et al. 1980) showed soil
erosion loss from a no-tillage field of corn in Ohio to be 4.5 t ha−1 during
a severe windstorm as compared to a conventionally planted cornfield that
lost 291 t ha−1. In Nebraska, the use of no-tillage and herbicides to control
wind erosion resulted in less weed growth, higher soil moisture storage and
higher grain yields than conventional tillage over a 6-year period (Wicks and
Smith 1973). No-tillage has been embraced by agrochemical companies
because it requires heavier doses of pesticides, but this in itself is not neces-
sarily desirable due to possible increases in off-field pollution (Risser 1985).
Plant residues on no-tillage fields may lower soil temperatures by as much as
6 ˚C at 25 mm depth in spring, which can delay spring plantings in central
and northern North America where soil temperatures are below those needed
for optimal growth, but in the tropics this effect may be useful where soil
temperatures are frequently above the optimum for maximum plant growth
(Phillips et al. 1980). Nevertheless, experience in north-western India sug-
gests that, because of the low organic matter content of sandy soils in arid
areas, they become compacted with no-tillage systems, which seriously
reduces the growth and yield of crops (Gupta et al. 1983).
A technique developed by the United States Department of Agriculture in
Arizona, specifically for grassland re-vegetation, involves the ‘firming’ and
‘shaping’ of the land surface. ‘Land imprinting’ refines the function in nature
in which hoof prints from grazing ungulates perform the role of seed bed
198 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

preparation by holding rainwater for soil infiltration and thereby allowing


‘nature-irrigated’ germination if a seed is present (Anderson 1987). The
imprinting machine consists of a single rolling cylinder, the only moving
part, attached to a pulling frame. The imprints on the soil are made by angle
irons welded to the cylinder; their configuration can be adapted to specific
site conditions. The design is so simple that the machine can be made in any
sophisticated welding workshop anywhere in the world.

8.4 Mechanical Methods

Mechanical approaches to wind erosion control manipulate the surface


topography in order to control the flow of the wind. Such techniques include
the creation of barriers to wind flow such as fences and windbreaks (known
as shelterbelts when composed of living plants) and altering surface topogra-
phy, such as by ploughing furrows.
Barriers to wind flow aid erosion control by decreasing surface shear stress
in their lee and by acting as a trap to moving particles, although barriers also
create turbulence in their lee which can reduce their effective protection. Their
efficiency in terms of reduction of wind velocity and turbulence intensity is
determined by a range of factors, including barrier porosity (dependent on
plant spacing, stalk and leaf width), porosity distribution, shape, height, ori-
entation, width and spacing. The most efficient barrier is semi-permeable
because, although its velocity reduction is less than for an impermeable fence,
the amount of eddies and turbulence in its lee are reduced (Cooke et al. 1982).
In the same way, windbreaks and shelterbelts should be designed to optimise
the interaction between height, density, porosity, shape and width of the plant
barrier (Cornelis and Gabriels 2005). A barrier oriented perpendicular to
winds predominantly from a single direction will decrease wind erosion forces
by more than 50% from the barrier leeward to 20 times its height, the decrease
being greater at shorter distances from the barrier (Skidmore 1986). In situa-
tions where erosive winds come from several directions, grid or herringbone
layouts provide better all-round protection.
Numerous other benefits to crops can also often be associated with the
establishment of windbreaks. These include increased soil and air tempera-
tures, improved plant water relations and irrigation efficiency, reduced pest
and disease problems and an extended growing season in sheltered areas,
resulting in increased crop development, earlier crop maturity and market
advantage (Hodges and Brandle 1996). Many studies have also documented
yield increases in crops grown behind windbreaks, although effects on yield
can vary greatly between crops, situations and seasons (Baldwin 1988).
Shelterbelts are composed of a range of shrubs, tall-growing crops and
grasses, besides the more conventional tree windbreak. They may be planted,
left as remnants of formerly forested areas, or allowed to grow naturally in
Dust Storm Control 199

fencerows after tractors have cleared fields. However, most barrier systems
occupy space that would otherwise be used for crops. Perennial barriers grow
slowly, can be difficult to establish and compete with crops for water and
plant nutrients (Dickerson et al. 1976; Lyles et al. 1983). Thus the net effects
of living barrier systems must be weighed against possible adverse effects on
yields (e.g. Frank et al. 1977). Some of these difficulties can be avoided by
using artificial barriers, such as stone walls, wood or fabric fences, but the
economic costs of materials and labour to construct them often restrict their
use to high-value crops (Tibke 1988).
The ploughing of ridges is a common anti-erosion measure that acts to
roughen the soil surface and thus reduce the average wind velocity for
some distance above the ground. Ridges also trap entrained particles on
their leeward sides (Chepil and Milne 1941). Tillage to produce ridges
across the path of the erosive wind is usually carried out by chisel and is
successfully used temporarily to control wind erosion in an emergency
(Woodruff et al. 1957). Farmers of sandy soils in the Midland counties of
England employ a version of ridge and furrow tillage to control wind ero-
sion on land devoted to sugar beet (Morgan 1995). The Glassford system
ploughs soil that is moist but not wet to produce ridges and furrows and
immediately the furrows are rolled. The operation is carried out in January
and the resulting furrowed and ridged surface remains stable throughout
the spring blowing period. However, in poorer farming regions such as the
Sahel, where mechanical measures depend on animal traction, the tech-
nique is not so widely used. Also, because of the sandy soils, ridges and
furrows are short-lived, being broken down during rain storms (Bielders
et al. 2000).

8.5 Miscellaneous Methods to Reduce Dust Emissions

Fugitive dust emissions also warrant the use of various other suppression
techniques, including the application of water by means of trucks, hoses
and/or sprinklers prior to conducting any activities that might disturb the
surface. Such short-term control techniques may be complemented by the
cessation of activities at times of high wind velocity. Surfaces can be sta-
bilised for longer periods by paving dirt tracks or applying dust suppressant
chemicals.
The stabilisation of desiccated lake beds is a particularly important issue
with respect to locations like Owen’s Lake in California. In an ideal world,
stream flows that are currently being diverted would be returned to the basin.
Given that this is unlikely to be possible, other techniques have been experi-
mentally trialled in the Owen’s Valley (Gill and Cahill 1992), including sand
fences to catch coarse particles, chemical surfactants, the spreading of gravel,
mechanical compaction, sprinkler irrigation and re-vegetation.
9 Quaternary Dust Loadings

9.1 Introduction

At certain times during the Quaternary, such as the Last Glacial Maximum
(LGM) at around 18–20×103 years ago (Mahowald et al. 1999), the world was
a very dusty place. This is indicated by its extensive deposits of loess, the
presence of large amounts of aeolian dust in ocean, lake and peat bog core
sediments, the existence of quantities of dust found in ice cores drilled from
the polar regions and elsewhere and even the accumulations of desert dust in
speleothems. These natural archives have been intensively studied for their
palaeoenvironmental significance (e.g. Muhs and Bettis 2000; Shichang et al.
2001; Pichevin et al. 2005). The enhanced dustiness they have accumulated,
especially during cold glacial periods, may relate to a larger sediment source
(e.g. areas of glacial outwash), changes in wind characteristics both in prox-
imity to ice caps and in the trade-wind zone (Ruddiman 1997) and the expan-
sion of low-latitude deserts. It would be simplistic to attribute all cases of
higher dust activity to greater aridity in source regions for, as Nilson and
Lehmkuhl (2001) point out, this is but one factor, albeit important. Also
important are changes in the trajectories of the major dust-transporting wind
systems, changes in the strength of winds in source regions, the balance
between wet and dry deposition (which may determine the distance of dust
transport), the degree of exposure of continental shelves in response to sea-
level changes and the presence of suitable vegetation to trap dust on land. It
is possible that increased dust loadings during the LGM were not only a prod-
uct of climatic change but also a contributory factor to that change; and this
is something that is now being built into climatic models (e.g. Overpeck et al.
1996; Mahowald et al. 1999).

9.2 Ocean Cores

It is possible to obtain a long-term measure of dust additions to the oceans by


undertaking studies of the sedimentology of deep-sea cores (Rea 1994).
Working in the Arabian Sea, Clemens and Prell (1990) found a positive
correlation between global ice volume (as indicated by the marine O18/O16
202 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

record) and the accumulation rate and sediment size of dust material. Kolla
and Biscaye (1977) confirmed this picture for a larger area of the Indian Ocean
and indicated that large dust inputs came off Arabia and Australia during the
last glacial. On the basis of cores from the Arabian Sea, Sirocko et al. (1991)
suggested that dust additions were around 60% higher during glacials than in
post-glacial times, though there was a clear ‘spike’ of enhanced dust activity at
around 4000 years BP associated with a severe arid phase that has been impli-
cated in the decline of the Akkadian empire (Cullen et al. 2000). Jung et al.
(2004) also report on Holocene dust trends in the Arabian Sea and suggest that
dry, dusty conditions were established by 3800 years BP.
Pourmand et al. (2004) refined this further and showed that high dust
fluxes in the Middle East occurred during cold phases such as the Younger
Dryas, Heinrich events 1–7 and cold Dansgaard–Oeschger stadials. They
attributed this to a weakened south-west monsoon and strengthened north-
westerlies from the Arabian Peninsula and Mesopotamia. Similarly, a core
from the Alboran Sea in the western Mediterranean indicated an increase in
dust activity during Dansgaard–Oschger stadials and Heinrich events
(Moreno et al. 2002).
There is particularly clear evidence for increased dust inputs at the time of
the LGM, at around 18×103 years ago (Fig. 9.1). In the Atlantic offshore from the
Sahara, the amount of dust transported into the Ocean was augmented by a
factor of 2.5 (Tetzlaff et al. 1989, p. 198). Australia contributed three times
more dust to the south-west Pacific Ocean at that time (Hess and McTainsh
1999) and increased dust loadings to the ocean may have stimulated increases
in planktonic productivity on the South Australian continental margin
(Gingele and De Deckker 2005). Dust fluxes appear generally to have been two
to four times higher than at present (Kolla et al. 1979; Sarnthein and Koopman
1980; Tetzlaff and Peters 1986; Chamley 1988; Grousset et al. 1998). By contrast,
they appear to have been very low during the ‘African Humid Period’ (AHP).
From 14.8×103 years ago to 5.5×103 years ago, the mass flux off Cape Blanc was
reduced by 47% (DeMenocal et al. 2000). This is confirmed by analyses of the
mineral magnetics record from Lake Bosumtwi in Ghana, which suggest a high
dust flux during the last glacial period and a great reduction during the AHP
(Peck et al. 2004).
The causes of high dust fluxes during glacial phases include reductions in
precipitation. However, changes in the strength of the north-easterly trades
may also have been a major contributory factor in some areas in the north-
ern hemisphere (Ruddiman 1997; Grousset et al. 1998; Moreno et al. 2001;
Abouchami and Zabel 2003) and various studies have been made of wind-
transported materials (including phytoliths, diatoms deflated from desic-
cated lakes and also grain sizes) to plot wind strength changes over extended
periods (e.g. Hooghiemstra 1989; Stabell 1989; Abrantes 2003; Pichevin et al.
2005). However, evidence for stronger winds during the LGM is not univer-
sal, with Hesse and McTainsh (1999) arguing that this was not a factor in the
higher dust loadings in the Tasman Sea at that time.
Quaternary Dust Loadings 203

a) b)
11.5 12.7

20
18,000 yr BP 14 18,000 yr BP
Modes (µm) 16 % > 6 µm of
30⬚
terrigenous fraction 20 30⬚ terrigenous fraction 30

16 25
10
AFRICA AFRICA
80
15⬚ 40 15⬚
32

60
40 50
14
11.5 20
45⬚ 30⬚ 15⬚ 45⬚ 30⬚ 10 15⬚

c) d)
c) PRESENT 7 .7
12. 12 14 PRESENT 10 20
Modes (µm) 12.7 30
30⬚ 16 30⬚ % > 6 µm of
terrigenous fraction terrigenous fraction
20
35
20
32

40

40
AFRICA AFRICA
40

15⬚ 15⬚
25 40
20

10
45⬚ 30⬚ 15⬚ 45⬚ 30⬚ 15⬚

Fig. 9.1. Dust in the Atlantic off the Sahara at 18 000 years BP (the glacial maximum) and 6000
years BP (mid-Holocene), as revealed by ocean core sediments. a) Distribution of modal grain
sizes of terrigenous silt (>6 µm, carbonate, opal-free) at 18 000 BP. b) Distribution of percent-
age silt (>6 µm, carbonate, opal-free) at 18 000 BP. c) Distribution of modal grain sizes of ter-
rigenous silt (>6 µm, carbonate, opal-free) in surface sediments. d) Distribution of percentage
terrigenous silt (>6 µm). Modified after Sarnthein and Koopmann (1980, Figs. 2, 3, 5, 6)

Bozzano et al. (2002), on the basis of their analysis of an ocean core off
Morocco, found a correlation between dust supply and precessional minima
in the earth’s orbit. They argued that enhanced precession-driven solar radi-
ation in the boreal summer would have increased seasonal temperature con-
trasts, which in turn amplified atmospheric turbulence and stimulated
storminess. In other words, they believe that a crucial control of dust storm
activity is not simply aridity, but the occurrence of meteorological events that
can raise dust from desert surfaces.
Cores from the Japan Sea (Irino et al. 2003) show the importance of dust
deposition at the maximum of the LGM (Fig. 9.2). Both the amount of silt
being deposited and its modal size indicate an intensification of dust sup-
ply at that time. In the mid-latitude North Pacific, which is also supplied
with dusts from Central Asia, dust deposition maxima during the last
200×103 years occurred in OIS 4 to latest OIS 5 and in the middle of OIS 6
(Kawahata et al. 2000). These were seen as times of reduced precipitation
during the summer monsoon and strengthened wind speeds during the
winter monsoon.
204 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Marine Oxygen
Isotope Stage 1 2 3 4 5
−32
Greenland

δ18 O (%)
Ice Core
(GRIP)

−36
−40
−44
Silt content

50 a)
(%)

60
(KT94-14, PC5)
Japan Sea
Sediment

70

b)
Silt mode

6
(µm)

7
8

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Age (ka)

Fig. 9.2. Temporal variations of aeolian dust (silt) content a) and grain size b) in core KT94-15-
PC5 recovered from the Japan Sea. Oxygen isotope variations from GRIP ice core are also shown
above for comparison. Modified after Irino et al. (2003, Fig. 2)

At a longer time-scale, there is some evidence the dust activity increased as


climate deteriorated during the late Tertiary. In the Atlantic off West Africa,
Pokras (1989) found clear evidence for increased terrigenous lithogenic input
at 2.3–2.5×106 years ago, while Schramm (1989) found that the largest
increases in mass accumulation rates in the North Pacific occurred between
2×106 and 3×106 years ago. This coincides broadly with the initiation of north-
ern hemisphere glaciation. However, no such link has been identified in the
southern Pacific Ocean (Rea 1989).The lengthiest analysis of dust deposition
in the oceans was undertaken by Leinen and Heath (1981) on sediments of the
central part of the North Pacific. They demonstrated that there were low rates
of dust deposition 50–25×106 years ago. This they believe reflects the temper-
ate, humid environment that was seemingly characteristic of the early Tertiary
and the lack of vigorous atmospheric circulation at that time. From 25×106 to
7×106 years ago, the rate of aeolian accumulation on the ocean floor increased,
but it became greatly accelerated from 7×106 to 3×106 years ago. However,
although there is thus an indication that aeolian processes were becoming
increasingly important as the Tertiary progressed, it was around 2.5×106 years
ago that there occurred the most dramatic increase in aeolian sedimentation.
This accompanied the onset of northern hemisphere glaciation.
Deposition of dust in the North Pacific occurred before the oldest pre-
served Asian loess formed, but isotopic studies indicate it came from the
basins of Central Asia. Over the past 12×106 years, however, the dust flux to
the North Pacific has increased by more than an order of magnitude,
documenting a substantial drying of Central Asia (Pettke et al. 2000).
Quaternary Dust Loadings 205

The analysis of deep-sea cores in the North Atlantic provides a picture of


long-term changes in dust supply and aeolian activity in the Sahara. Some dust
dates back to the early Cretaceous (Lever and McCave 1983) and aeolian dust
is present in Neogene sediments (Sarnthein et al. 1982). However, aeolian
activity appears to become more pronounced in the late Tertiary. As Stein
(1985, pp. 312–313) reported: “Distinct maxima of aeolian mass accumulation
rates and a coarsening of grain size are observed in the latest Miocene,
between 6 and 5 Ma and in the Late Pliocene and Quaternary, in the last 2.5
million years”. They attribute this to both a decrease in precipitation in the
Sahara and to an intensified atmospheric circulation. The latter was probably
caused by an increased temperature gradient between the North Pole and the
Equator due to an expansion in the area of northern hemisphere glaciation.
From about 2.5×106 to 2.8×106 years ago, the great tropical inland lakes of the
Sahara began to dry out; and this is more or less contemporaneous with the
time of onset of mid-latitude glaciation. High dust loadings were a feature of
the Pleistocene (Pokras 1989). Mean late-Pleistocene dust inputs were two to
five times higher than the pre-2.8×106 year values (DeMenocal 1995).
In the Mediterranean basin, which derives much of its dust load from the
Sahara, Larrasoaña et al. (2003) analysed a core from the seabed south of
Cyprus, using its haematite content as a proxy for dust. It covered a period of
three million years. They found that, throughout that time, dust flux minima
occurred when the African summer monsoon attained a northerly position
during times of insolation minima. This, they argued, increased the vegeta-
tion cover and soil moisture levels, thereby dampening down dust activity in
the Saharan source regions.

9.3 Dust Deposition as Recorded in Ice Cores

Another major source of long-term information on rates of dust accretion is


the record preserved in long ice cores retrieved either from the polar ice caps
or from high-altitude ice domes at lower altitudes. Indeed, observations of
dust in polar ice cores has done much to establish the reality of abrupt cli-
mate changes in the Quaternary and dust has been described as climate’s
‘Rosetta Stone’ (Broecker 2002).
Because they are generally far removed from source areas, the actual rates of
accumulation of dust in ice cores are generally low, but studies of variations in
micro-particle concentrations with depth do provide insights into the relative
dust loadings of the atmosphere in the last glacial and during the course of the
Holocene. Thompson and Mosley-Thompson (1981) drew together a lot of the
material that was published at the time they wrote and pointed to the great
differences in micro-particle concentrations between the Late Glacial and
the Post-Glacial. The ratio for the Dome C ice core (E. Antarctica) was 6:1, for
the Byrd Station (W. Antarctica) 3:1, and for Camp Century (Greenland) 12:1.
206 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Briat et al. (1982) maintained that, at Dome C, there was an increase in micro-
particle concentrations by a factor of 10–20 during the last glacial stage; and they
explain this by a large input of continental dust. The Dunde ice core from High
Asia (Thompson et al. 1990) also shows very high dust loadings in the Late
Glacial and a very sudden fall off at the transition to the Holocene. Within the
last glaciation, dust activity both in Europe and in Greenland appears to have
varied in response to millennial-scale climatic events (Dansgaard–Oeschger
Events and Bond Cycles; Rousseau et al. 2002).
These early results are confirmed by the more recent study of the Epica
and Vostok cores from Antarctica (Delmonte et al. 2004a; Fig. 9.3). In the
Epica core (Fig. 9.4), the dust flux rose by a factor of ca. 25, ca. 20 and ca. 12
in Glacial Stages 2, 4 and 6 compared to interglacial periods (the Holocene
and OIS Stage 5.5). Delmonte et al. (2004b) found in the Dome B, Vostok and
Komsomolskaia cores that, during the LGM, dust concentrations were

−360

δD‰ (V-SMOW)
a) 1
−380
Stage 2

−400

Holocene
2 3 4 5 6 789 10 −420
−440
concentration (ppb)

1500
1250
EPICA dust

b)
1000
750
500
250
0
0 400 800 1200 1600 2000 2400
concentration (ppb)

1800
1500 c)
Vostok dust

1200
900
600
300 −400
0 −420
δD‰ (V-SMOW)
Stage 4

d)
Stage 2

Stage 6

−440

Holocene Interglacial −460


7.3

5.5
5.1

5.3

−480
3.1

3.3

−500
0 400 800 1200 1600 2000 2400
Depth (m)

Fig. 9.3. Climate and dust records from EPICA Dome C and Vostok ice cores. a) EPICA deu-
terium record. b) EPICA dust concentration record (ppb) to 2201 m depth. c) Vostok dust con-
centration record (ppb) to 2670 m depth. d) Vostok deuterium record for the past ca. 220 000
years, with the major climatic stages indicated. The dashed lines linking EPICA and Vostok ice
cores identify ten common dust events (1–10). Modified after Delmonte et al. (2004a, Fig. 2)
Quaternary Dust Loadings 207

1,600
Dust mass (µg kg−1)
1,200

800

400

0
0 200 400 600 800
Age (kyr BP)

Fig. 9.4. Dust mass from EPICA Dome C core, Antarctica over more than 700 000 years.
Modified after EPICA community members (2004, Fig. 2D)

between 730 ppb and 854 ppb, whereas during the Antarctic Cold Reversal
(14.5–12.2×103 years BP) they had fallen to 25–46 ppb and, from 12.1×103 to
10×103 years BP, they were between 7 ppb and 18 ppb. Isotopic studies sug-
gest that the bulk of the dust was derived from Patagonia and the Pampas
of Argentina (see also Iriondo 2000). In the case of Greenland, a prime source
of dust in cold phases was East Asia (Svensson et al. 2000). Broecker (2002)
suggests that the increase in dust production and deposition in glacial times
can be attributed to the steepened temperature gradients and associated aeo-
lian activity related to the equatorward extension of continental glaciers and
sea ice. However, changes in the hydrological and vegetative state of source
regions will also have been very important (Werner et al. 2002).
Studies of dust in ice cores can also be applied to recent decades. The North
GRIP core in Greenland indicates that, in the late 1990s, east Asia was a major
source and the provenance in spring/summer was the Taklamakan Desert
(Bory et al. 2002). In contrast, the GISP2 core from Greenland shows dust
that originated in the United States during the 1930s Dust Bowl (Donarummo
et al. 2003). An ice core from near Mount Everest shows a series of intense
dust periods during the past 200 years (Kang et al. 2001), particularly in the
1830s to 1840s and in the 1890s to 1920s. A core from Dasuopu, Tibet, shows
intense dust accumulation from 1790 AD to 1796 AD, a time of severe drought
in India.
Although studies of cores from the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans and
from polar ice tend to show the importance of dust accumulation during cold
phases, this is not a universal picture. Thus, areas that were covered in snow
and had extensive freshwater lakes in glacial phases might have generated
limited amounts of dust; and this is the explanation provided by Thompson
et al. (1998), who found that LGM ice from the Sajama ice cap in the high
mountains of Bolivia contains eight times less dust than the Holocene ice.
In contrast, ice from the Late Glacial at Huascarán, Peru, indicates it was a
time of extreme dustiness because of high winds and drier surface conditions
(Thompson et al. 1995).
208 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

9.4 Loess Accumulation Rates

By measuring and dating loess sections, it has been possible to estimate


the rate at which loess accumulated on land during the Quaternary (see Table
9.1). The presented data may somewhat underestimate total dust fluxes into
an area because, even at times of rapid loess accumulation, there would have
been concurrent losses of material as a result of fluvial and mass-movement
processes. Solution and compaction may also have occurred.
The data in Table 9.1 show a range of values between 22 mm and 4000 mm
per 1000 years. Pye (1987, p. 265) believes that, at the LGM, loess was proba-
bly accumulating at a rate of between 500 mm and 3000 mm per 1000 years
and suggests that: “Dust-blowing on this scale was possibly unparalleled in
previous Earth History”. By contrast, he suggests that: “During the Holocene,
dust deposition rates in most parts of the world have been too low for signif-
icant thicknesses of loess to accumulate, although aeolian additions to soils
and ocean sediments have been significant”. Pye also hypothesises that rates
of loess accumulation showed a tendency to increase during the course of the
Quaternary. Average loess accumulation rates in China, Central Asia and
Europe were of the order of 20–60 mm per 1000 years during Matuyama time
(early Pleistocene) and of the order of 90–260 mm per 1000 years during the
Brunhes epoch (post-0.78×106 years ago). He also points out that these long-
term average rates disguise the fact that rates of loess deposition were one to
two orders of magnitude higher during Pleistocene cold phases and were one
or two orders of magnitude lower during the warmer interglacial phases
when pedogenesis predominated.
A very detailed analysis of loess accumulation rates in China is provided
by Kohfeld and Harrison (2003). They indicate that in the glacial phases

Table 9.1. Loess accumulation rates for the late Pleistocene. From various sources in Pye (1987,
Table 9.6) and Gerson and Amit (1987)

Location Accumulation rate (mm per 1000 years)

Negev (Israel) 70–150


Mississippi Valley (USA) 700–4000
Uzbekistan 50–450
Tajikistan 60–290
Lanzhou (China) 250–260
Luochaun (China) 50–70
Czechoslovakia 90
Austria 22
Poland 750
New Zealand 2000
Quaternary Dust Loadings 209

(e.g. OIS 2) aeolian mass accumulation rates were ca. 310 g m−2 year−1
compared to 65 g m−2 year−1 for an interglacial stage (e.g. OIS 5) – a
4.8× increase. A comparable exercise was carried out for Europe by Frechen
et al. (2003). They found large regional differences in accumulation rates but
suggested that, along the Rhine and in eastern Europe, rates were from
800–3200 g m−2 year−1 in OIS 2. Loess accumulation rates over much of
the United States during the LGM were also high, being around 3000 g m−2
year−1 for mid-continental North America (Bettis et al. 2003). From 18×103
years ago to 14×103 years ago, rates of accumulation in Nebraska were remark-
able, ranging from 11 500 g m−2 year−1 to 3500 g m−2 year−1 (Roberts et al. 2003).
Further details from the large number of studies devoted to loess are
covered in Chapter 10.
10 Loess

10.1 Introduction

Loess has been the subject of an enormous literature, ever since Charles Lyell
(1834) drew attention to the loamy deposits of the Rhine Valley in Germany.
Many theories have been advanced to explain loess formation; and Smalley
(1975) provides excerpts from the early literature and a commentary to go
with them. It was, however, Ferdinand von Richthofen (1882, pp. 297–298)
who cogently argued that these intriguing deposits probably had an aeolian
origin and that they were produced by dust storms transporting silts from
deserts and depositing them on desert margins:
“In regions where the rains are equally distributed through the year, little
dust is formed, and the rate of growth of the soil covered with vegetation will
be exceedingly small. But where a dry season alternates with a rainy season,
the amount of dust which is put in motion and distributed through atmos-
pheric agency can reach enormous proportions, as witnessed by the dust
storms which in Central Asia and Northern China eclipse the sun for days in
succession. A fine yellow sediment of measurable thickness is deposited after
every storm over large extents of country. Where this dust falls on barren
ground, it is carried away by the next wind; but where it falls on vegetation,
its migration is stopped.
“In rainless deserts the wind will gradually remove every particle of fine-
grained matter from the soil, though a new supply of this may constantly be
provided by the action of sandblast. The sediments of desiccated lakes, the
soil which is laid bare by the retiring of the sea, the materials which are car-
ried down by periodical torrents from glaciated regions to desert depressions,
the particles which on every free surface of rock are loosened by constant
decay – all these will be turned over and over again by the wind . . .”
While it is true that the silt carried by the wind may result from a wide
range of processes, including glacial grinding (see Section 2.2), and that
silts may be re-worked and modified by pedological processes, mass move-
ments and fluvial activity, the case for an aeolian role in loess formation is
overwhelming.
Loess is largely non-stratified and non-consolidated silt, containing some
clay, sand and carbonate (Smalley and Vita-Finzi 1968). It is markedly finer
than aeolian sand. Many parts of the world possess long sequences of loess and
212 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

palaeosols (Rutter et al. 2003) and these provide a major source of palaeoen-
vironmental information that can be correlated with that obtained from ocean
cores. It consists chiefly of quartz, feldspar, mica, clay minerals and carbonate
grains in varying proportions; and Table 10.1 gives some details of major ele-
ment geochemistry of unweathered loess. The grain size distribution of typi-
cal loess shows a pronounced mode in the range 20–40 µm and is generally
positively skewed towards the finer sizes. It can, however, sometimes have a
sand content of over 20%, in which case it is termed ‘sandy loess’, or a clay
content in excess of 20%, in which case it is termed ‘clayey loess’ (Pye 1987,
p. 199). Grain size depends on distance from source, formative wind velocities
and the granulometry of the materials from which it is derived.
Loess is present in the ancient stratigraphic record, as for example in the
Palaeozoic beds of Utah (Soreghan et al. 2002), but in this section we concen-
trate primarily on the great Quaternary loess accumulations, which cover as
much as 10% of the Earth’s land surface (Muhs et al. 2004). Over vast areas
(at least 1.6×106 km2 in North America and 1.8×106 km2 in Europe), these
blanket the pre-existing relief and, in Tajikistan, these accumulations have
been recorded as reaching a thickness of up to 200 m (Frechen and Dodonov
1998). In the Missouri Valley of Kansas, the loess may be 30 m thick.
European Russia has sustained thicknesses, often 10–30 m and reaching over
100 m in places, while in New Zealand, on the plains of the South Island,
thicknesses reach 18 m. Loess profiles thicker than 50 m are known from
boreholes in the Pampas of Argentina (Kröhling 2003).
Loess is known from some high-latitude regions, including Greenland,
Alaska (Muhs et al. 2004), Spitzbergen, Siberia (Chlachula 2003) and
Antarctica (Seppälä 2004). Loess has also been recorded from various desert
regions (Table 10.2). In Arabia, Australia and Africa, where glaciation was
relatively slight, loess is much less well developed, though an increasing num-
ber of deposits in these regions is now becoming evident. Of all the world’s
loess deposits, those of China are undoubtedly the most impressive for their
extent and thickness, which near Lanzhou is 300–500 m.
The distribution of loess in North America is now well known; and the
main areas in the United States include southern Idaho, eastern Washington,

Table 10.1. Major element geochemistry of unweathered loess in comparison to dust (%)

Component Loessa Dustb

SiO2 63.80 (53.1–82.03) 59.9


Al2O3 10.41 (7.52–16.13) 14.13
Fe2O3 3.75 (2.77–5.10) 6.85
MgO 2.34 (0.65–4.53) 2.60
CaO 6.99 (0.61–13.56) 3.94
a
Mean and range (in brackets) based on 15 samples in Pye (1987, Table 9.2)
b
Based on data in Table 6.9
Loess 213

Table 10.2. Examples of peridesert loess

Location Reference (s)

Matmata, Tunisia Coudé-Gaussen et al. (1982), Dearing et al. (1996, 2001)


Namib Blümel (1982)
Northern Nigeria McTainsh (1987)
Eastern Afghanistan Pias (1971)
Potwar, Pakistan Rendell (1984)
Negev Yaalon and Dan (1974)
Syria Rösner (1989)
Iran Lateef (1988), Okhravi and Amini (2001), Kehl et al. (2005)
Bahrain Doornkamp et al. (1980)
Yemen Nettleton and Chadwick (1996), Coque-Delhuille and Gentelle (1998)
United Arab Emirates Goudie et al. (2000)
Saudi Arabia Al-Harthi and Bankher (1999)
Peru Eitel et al. (2005)

north-eastern Oregon and, even more important, a great belt from the Rocky
Mountains across the Great Plains and the Central Lowland into western
Pennsylvania. Loess is less prominent in the eastern United States as relief,
climatic conditions for deflation and the nature of outwash materials seem to
have been less favourable than in the Missouri–Mississippi region. There are
at least four middle-to-late Quaternary loess units in the High Plains, which
from oldest to youngest are the Loveland Loess (Illinoian glacial), the Gilman
Canyon Formation (mid- to late Wisconsinian), the Peoria Loess (late
Wisconsinian) and the Bignell Loess (Holocene; Pye et al. 1995; Muhs et al.
1999). The loess deposits of the United States have recently been reviewed by
Bettis et al. (2003; Fig. 10.1), who suggest that the Last Glacial (Peoria) loess
is probably the thickest in the world, being more than 48 m thick in parts of
Nebraska and 41 m thick in western Iowa. Some of the Peoria loess, including
than in Nebraska, may not be glaciogenic, having been transported by west-
erly to northerly winds from parts of the Great Plains not directly influenced
by the Laurentide ice sheet or alpine glaciers (Mason 2001). However, this has
been a matter of some controversy, for Winspear and Pye (1995) favoured a
more glacial explanation for the Peoria Loess in Nebraska. Some of the loess
in the Great Plains (the Bignell Loess) is of Holocene age (Mason and Kuzila
2000; Mason et al. 2003; Jacobs and Mason 2005). Miao et al. (2005) believe
that much of the Holocene loess, most of which dates from 9000–10 000 years
to 6500 years ago, was produced in dry phases as a result of the winnowing of
dune fields.
In South America, where the Pampas of Argentina and Uruguay has
thick deposits, a combination of semi-arid and arid conditions in the Andes
214 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

104⬚ 86⬚
49⬚

North Dakota CANADA

Minnesota Michigan
45⬚
South Wisconsin
Dakota

Michigan
Nebraska
Iowa
41⬚

Ohio

Colorado Illinois Indiana


Kansas

Missouri
37⬚ Kentucky

Oklahoma
"Loess" of the Tennessee
Blackwater Draw
Formation
Arkansas

33⬚
Georgia
Loess thickness: Texas Mississippi
Louisiana Alabama
>20 m
20-10 m
10-5 m 0 200 km Florida
5-1 m
0.2-1 m
Gulf of Mexico

Fig. 10.1. Map showing the distribution and thickness of Last Glacial loess (Peoria Loess) in
mid-continental USA (Central Lowland and Great Plains physiographic provinces). Modified
after Bettis et al. (2003, Fig. 2)

rain-shadow, combined with glacial outwash from those mountains, created


near ideal conditions (Zarate 2003). The Argentinian loess region is the most
extensive in the Southern Hemisphere, covering 1.1×106 km2 between 20˚ S and
40˚ S. Zinck and Sayago (2001) described a 42-m thick loess – palaeosol
sequence of Late Pleistocene age from north-west Argentina, though generally
thicknesses are less than this. Much of the loess was laid down in the Late
Pleistocene during the Last Glacial Maximum, but some deposition has also
occurred in the Holocene. There is isotopic evidence that some of the loess
Loess 215

contains a substantial amount of dust derived from volcanic sources (Sayago


et al. 2001; Smith et al. 2003), but multiple geomorphological sources have also
been proposed, including the Argentinian continental shelf, the Paraná River
Basin, the Pampean Hills, the Altiplano-Puna Plateau and glaciofluvial deposits
from Mendoza, Neuquen and Rio Negro. Mantles of aeolian silt and loess are
known from other parts of South America, including the Orinoco Llanos of
Colombia and Venezuela, north-east Brazil, the central valley of Chile and
southern Peru (Iriondo 1997; Iriondo and Kröhling 2004; Eitel et al. 2005).
New Zealand has the other major loess deposits of the Southern
Hemisphere. They cover extensive areas, especially in eastern South Island
and southern North Island. It has been estimated that loess more than 1 m
thick covers at least 10% of New Zealand’s land surface and that soils with
a loessial component cover 60% of the country (Eden and Hammond 2003).
The loess has been derived mainly from dust deflated by westerly winds from
the many broad, braided river floodplains. Dust is deflated from point bars
and abandoned channels and deposited downwind on the floodplains. Some
of the loess may have been derived from the continental shelf at times of low
glacial sea levels. New Zealand loess has a predominantly quartzo-feldspathic
mineralogy and is largely derived from uplifted Mesozoic turbidite sequences
from the main axial ranges and uplifted Neogene marine sequences, though
in the North Island particularly the loess also contains a tephra (volcanic ash)
component. Some of the New Zealand loess is of considerable antiquity, and
in the Wanganui region of North Island there is a 500×103 year record of
11 loess layers and associated palaeosols (Palmer and Pillans 1996). On South
Island, luminescence studies suggest that the Romahapa loess/palaeosol
sequence is at least 350×103 years old (Berger et al. 2002). However, dust con-
tinues to accumulate in New Zealand at the present time downwind of many
major braided floodplains; and the maximum thickness of post-glacial loess
on the Canterbury Plains is about 4 m (Berger et al. 1996).
In Europe, the loess is most extensive in the east where, as in the case of
North America, there were plains and steppe conditions. The German loess
shows a very close association with outwash and, in France, the same situation
is observed along the Rhône and Garonne Rivers. These two rivers carried out-
wash from glaciers in the Alps and Pyrenees, respectively. The Danube was
another major source of silt for loess in eastern Europe. Britain has relatively
little loess and this may have resulted from the oceanic climate which would
tend to reduce the area of exposed outwash. Indeed, in Britain wind-lain sedi-
ments of periglacial times are conspicuous only for their rarity and “loess is
more of a contaminant of other deposits than one in its own right” (Williams
1975). The maximum depth of loess in Britain is only about 2–3 m. In southern
Europe, Late Pleistocene loess, up to 10 m thick, occurs in the Granada Basin of
south-east Spain (Günster et al. 2001). Other loess is known from the central
Apennines of Italy (Frezzotti and Giraudi 1990), the Po Valley (Busacca and
Cremaschi 1998; Castiglioni 2001), Susak Island in the Dalmatian Archipelago
(Cremaschi 1990) and in parts of Greece, including Crete (Brunnacker 1980).
216 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Loess is probably more widespread in South Asia than has often been
realised. Given the size of the Thar Desert and the large amounts of sediment
that are transported to huge alluvial plains by rivers draining from the moun-
tains of High Asia, this is scarcely surprising. In northern Pakistan, there are
loess deposits in the Potwar Plateau (Rendell 1989) and in Kashmir there
are many loess – palaeosol sequences (Dilli and Pant 1994) while, in north
India, loess has been identified from the Delhi Ridge of Rajasthan (Jayant
et al. 1999), various tributary valleys of the Ganges plain, such as the Son and
the Belan (Williams and Clarke 1995) and the central Himalayas (Pant
et al. 2005). It has also been found in the plains of Gujarat in western India
(Malik et al. 1999).
We will now first consider the controversial matter of loess and its relative
paucity on the margins of the world’s greatest contemporary dust source and
then will look at the huge loess deposits of Central Asia and of China.

10.2 PeriSaharan Loess

Although loess (by definition a wind-deposited dust with a median grain size
range of 20–30 µm; Tsoar and Pye 1987) has been estimated to cover up to
10% of the world’s land area (Pesci 1968), its occurrence in Africa is very lim-
ited. This appears surprising, given that the Sahara is the world’s largest area
of contemporary dust storm activity; and evidence from ocean and ice cores
suggests that it produced more dust during the cold phases of the Pleistocene.
The reasons for the relative lack of loess deposits around the Sahara are a
subject for debate (see Wright 2001b). Some have argued that sufficient silt-
sized material could only be produced in glacial environments and that the
Sahara lacks loess because it has few mountains and therefore receives insuf-
ficient material from mountain glaciers (Smalley and Krinsley 1978). This is
unlikely to be the full explanation because, as we saw in Section 2.2, there are
many mechanisms whereby silt is produced in deserts and there is self-
evidently plenty of silt in the Sahara at the present day to provide material for
dust storm transport (McTainsh 1987; Tsoar and Pye 1987; Yaalon 1987).
Certainly much Saharan dust has been deposited over the oceans (Fig. 10.2),
but on land only certain desert margins appear to have been favourable for
loess formation. Tsoar and Pye (1987) suggest that globally the absence of
more widespread peridesert loess is largely due to a lack of available vegeta-
tion traps for dust, an idea also put forward by Coudé-Gaussen (1990) in
comparing loess deposits north and south of the Mediterranean. Another
possible reason is the relative high intensity of rainfall (and therefore of water
erosion) on the south side of the Sahara. The mean rainfall per rainy day in
the drier parts of West Africa averages 9.75 mm, whereas in the drier parts
(mean annual rainfall less than 400 mm) of the classic loess belts it is 4.51 mm
(China) and 2.56 mm (former USSR).
Loess 217

Dust

Nile delta

Libya

Egypt

Fig. 10.2. A dust storm blowing northeastwards into the Mediterranean from North Africa,
2 February 2003 (MODIS). Much Saharan dust has been deposited over the oceans but this is
not a complete explanation for the relative lack of PeriSaharan loess

Several authors suggest that the current inventory of loess derived from
the Sahara is incomplete (e.g. Coudé-Gaussen 1987; Yaalon 1987), but three
areas have been studied in some detail: southern Tunisia (Coudé-Gaussen
et al. 1982), Northern Nigeria (McTainsh 1987) and the Negev (Yaalon and
Dan 1974). The Matmata plateau loess (Fig. 10.3) of southern Tunisia reaches
a thickness of 18 m at Téchine and contains up to five palaeosols typically rich
in smectite and palygorskite. The loess probably derives from the Sabkha,
Chott Djerid and from the Grand Erg Oriental.
Coudé-Gaussen et al. (1983) suggested that two great phases of deposition
occurred between 28 000 years BP and 10 000 years BP and from 6000 years
BP to 4000 years BP; and Coudé-Gaussen (1991) provides full details of their
sedimentology. However, while Coudé-Gaussen et al. (1983) believed that
maximum loess deposition occurred during humid conditions, this view was
disputed by Dearing et al. (1996) on the basis of their mineral magnetics
investigation. They believed that the period between 15 000 years BP and
20000 years BP was a time of both aridity and accelerated loess deposition.
More recently, Dearing et al. (2001) showed that some of the loess is older
218 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Fig. 10.3. The loess deposits of the Matmata area in Tunisia have been excavated to create
dwellings (from ASG)

than this, with a sequence of loess and palaeosols from Téchine being
deposited during the period between 100 000 years BP and 250 000 years BP.
The silty loess of the Jebel Gharbi mountain range in north-west Libya,
a deposit that reaches a maximum thickness of 4–5 m and contains interbed-
ded palaeosols and calcretes (Giraudi 2005), is effectively an extension of the
Matmata loess. Elsewhere in Libya, a clayey loess has been documented in the
Ghat area in the south-west (Assallay et al. 1996).
On the south side of the Sahara, material from the Chad basin transported
by the Harmattan wind system has provided the source of the Zaria loess
mantle of the Kano plain in northern Nigeria, which displays a clear decrease
in grain size with distance from the basin. The dominant clay minerals in the
Zaria loess are illite and kaolinite (McTainsh 1987).
Other sparse deposits are catalogued by Coudé-Gaussen (1987): (a) to the
north of the Sahara in the Canary Islands, Southern Morocco, south-western
Egypt and (b) to the south in Guinea and Northern Cameroon. In the Negev
Desert of the Middle East, the Netivot loess section is up to 12 m thick and
contains distinct palaeosols of Upper Pleistocene and Holocene age, which
indicate climatic cycles of about 20 000 years duration. Here the dominant
clay mineral is montmorillonite, with some pedogenic palygorskite. Loess
has also been identified in the central Sinai (Rögner and Smykatz-Klosss
1991). Some of these Near Eastern dust deposits have an origin that is at least
in part African.
Loess 219

10.3 Central Asian Loess

One of the most striking features of Central Asia, and one it shares with China
(Bronger et al. 1998), is the development of very thick (some more than 200 m
thick) and complex loess deposits dating back to the Pliocene (Ding et al.
2002; Fig. 10.4). They are well displayed in both the Tajik Republic (Mestdagh
et al. 1999) and the Uzbek Republic (Zhou et al. 1995), where rates of deposi-
tion were very high in late Pleistocene times (Lazarenko 1984). The nature of
the soils and pollen grains preserved in the loess profiles suggest a progres-
sive trend towards greater aridity through the Quaternary; and this may be
related to progressive uplift of the Ghissar and Tien Shan mountains (see
Davis et al. 1980). A thermoluminescence (TL) chronology for the Middle and
Upper Pleistocene loess deposits of Tajikistan is provided by Frechen and
Dodonov (1998) and section and granulometric details are provided by
Goudie et al. (1984). However, some of the early TL dates for the deposits are
believed to be unreliable (Dodonov and Baiguzina 1995; Zhou et al. 1995).
None the less, as in China, the loess profiles contain a large number of
palaeosols that formed during periods of relatively moist and warm climate.
Rates of loess deposition were very modest in the Holocene whereas, in the
Last Glacial, rates of accumulation were as high as 1.20 m per 1000 years
(Frechen and Dodonov 1998). Ding et al. (2002) believe that the alternations

Fig. 10.4. The loess deposits of Khonako, Tajikistan (from ASG)


220 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

of loess and soil horizons in Central Asia can be well correlated with the
Chinese loess and deep-sea isotope records.

10.4 Chinese Loess

Loess (huangtu, yellow earth) reaches its supreme development in China,


most notably in the Loess Plateau (Fig. 10.5), a 450 000 km2 area in the mid-
dle reaches of the Yellow River (Hwang Ho). At Jiuzhoutai, north-west of
Lanzhou, the loess attains a maximum thickness of 334 m, while in Jingyuan
County, Gansu Province, a thickness of 505 m has been reported (Huang et al.
2000), but over most of the plateau 150 m is more typical. The loess, because
of its mechanical properties, creates distinctive landscapes, but it is also
important because it provides one of the best terrestrial records of past cli-
mates. The classic study is that of Liu (1988). Loess deposits occur in loca-
tions other than the Loess Plateau, including the mountainous regions (Rost
1997; Lehmkuhl 1997; Sun 2002b), the Tibetan Plateau (Lehmkuhl et al. 2000),

80⬚ 90⬚ 100⬚ 110⬚ 120⬚ 130⬚ 50⬚

Haerbing

50⬚ 40⬚N
AL
TA

GOBI DESERT
I

130⬚E
Beijing
TIEN Wulumugui
Ho

SHAN TENGER ORDOS


ng

Tarim
a
Hw

Basin
N
HA 30⬚
U NS
NL Wuhan
KU Ya
ng
TIBETAN PLATEAU tz
e Chengdu
Lhasa
30⬚
Canton
20⬚

0 500 km

80⬚ 90⬚ 100⬚ 110⬚E

Fig. 10.5. The distribution of loess in China


Loess 221

parts of northern Mongolia (Feng 2001) and Korea (Yatagai et al. 2002). The
loess of China poses many challenges for the engineer because of the devel-
opment of pseudo-karst, landslides and huge sediment yields in stream
channels (Derbyshire and Meng 2005).
In some areas, loess sensu stricto overlies the Pliocene Red Clay Formation
(PRCF) which is also in part a product of aeolian dust accumulation (Liu et al.
2003; Yang and Ding 2004). Evidence for this is that the ‘red clay’ has similar
particle size characteristics to the palaeosols that occur within the overlying
loess deposits. Its base has been dated to around 7.2–8.35×106 years ago
(Qiang et al. 2001). It covers an area of 400 000 km2 and ranges in thickness
from 10 m to more than 100 m (Lu et al. 2001). Although the clay was thought
to mark the start of aeolian dust accumulation in China and the onset of the
present-day East Asian monsoon system (Sun et al. 1998; An 2000; Ding and
Yang 2000), it seems that Chinese deserts and their production of dust actually
date back much further. Dust derived from the Tibetan Plateau and the Gobi
is evident in ocean core deposits going back to at least 11×106 years BP (Pettke
et al. 2000), while aeolian deposits in Qinan County in Gansu Province indi-
cate that deserts large enough to produce significant dust output must have
been formed by 22×106 years ago in central Asia (Guo et al. 2002).
The boundary between the loess and the PRCF has been palaeomagneti-
cally dated at 2.5×106 years ago. The abrupt commencement of loess deposi-
tion on a large scale at about 2.5×106 years ago implies a major change in
atmospheric conditions and the ongoing uplift of the Tibetan Plateau may
have contributed to this (Ding et al. 1992). The appearance of loess beds
alternating with numerous palaeosols indicates a cyclical climatic regime,
with dry cold conditions being dominated by the north-westerly monsoon
and humid warm conditions being dominated by the south-easterly mon-
soon. This contrasts with the more continuous warm climate that prevailed
in the preceding 3×106 years during the Pliocene. The Nd and Sr isotopic
composition of the aeolian deposits changed at around 2.58×106 years ago;
and this has been attributed by Sun (2005) to the addition of relatively
younger crustal materials to the dust in response to the climatic cooling and
late Cainozic uplift, which promoted glacial grinding in the high orogenic
belts of central Asia.
It appears that the accumulation of aeolian dust accelerated rapidly from
about 1.2×106 years ago and that the front of loess deposition was pushed 600
km further south-eastwards from 0.6×106 years ago (Huang et al. 2000). At
the Jiaxian section (Qiang et al. 2001), rates of sedimentation were about 6 m
per million years between 5.0×106 years ago and 3.5×106 years ago, rising to
16 m per million years between 3.5×106 years ago and 2.58×106 years ago and
reaching 20–30 m per million years thereafter.
Immediately above the PRCF is the Wucheng Loess. Above that in turn are
the Lower Lishi Loess, the Upper Lishi Loess and the youngest unit, the Malan
Loess (late Pleistocene). There may also have been some relatively limited
Holocene loess deposition, but average rates of loess accumulation in the
222 A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton

Loess Plateau were higher, possibly by a factor of two, in the later part of the
last glacial period than during the Holocene (Pye and Zhou 1989). The last
glacial appears to have been a time when soil moisture contents were low,
dunes became destabilised and the desert margin shifted southwards towards
the Loess Plateau (Rokosh et al. 2003).
The loess units contain large numbers of palaeosols with as many as 32
soils present above the PRCF (Fig. 10.6). Differences in the nature of these
soils and of the loess in between have been used to establish the history of cli-
mate over the last 2.5×106 years (Liu and Ding 1998). The loess can furnish a
high resolution record of change so that sub-millennial-scale variations have
been picked up (Heslop et al. 1999). Porter (2001) has argued that high-fre-
quency fluctuations in dust influx during the period of Malan dust deposition
may be correlated with North Atlantic Heinrich events. At longer time-scales,
various periodicities have been identified in Chinese loess – palaeosol
sequences, associated with orbital fluctuations, including 100×103-year and
400×103-year cycles (Lu et al. 2004).
Figure 10.7 indicates the relationship between loess and palaeosol
sequences, loess magnetic susceptibility and the oxygen isotope record from
the Pacific Ocean. In general terms, periods of loess deposition are associated
with cold phases (which by implication are dry), while the palaeosols are
associated with warmer phases (An et al. 1990; Sartori et al. 2005), indicating
their origin as products of deflation and subsequent transport and deposition
by dust storms. During the last glacial cycle, it was westerly and north-
westerly winds that were the most important agents for the transport of dust
to the Loess Plateau (Lu and Sun 2000). A comparison of the magnetic signa-
tures of the loess with sands from the Taklamakan suggests that some of the
loess was derived from that source region (Torii et al. 2001), while the pres-
ence of calcareous nanofossils in the Malan Loess suggests transport by
westerly winds from the Tarim basin (Zhong et al. 2003).
In addition to palaeosols, the Loess Plateau sections show multiple phases
of gully formation and gully infilling; and these have been interpreted by
Porter and An (2005) in terms of phases of drainage incision under moist,
intensified summer-monsoon conditions and phases of gully-infilling by
loess during glacial, cold-dry winter-monsoon conditions.
The grain size characteristics of the loess change in a southerly (Yang and
Ding 2004) and easterly direction, with the coarsest loess (mean grain size
ca. 33 µm) being deposited by north-westerly winds in close proximity to the
inner Asian deserts. By contrast, the loess in the south-eastern part of the
Loess Plateau has a mean size that is only 15 µm, while the median diameter
on Cheju island, Korea, ranges from 6 µm to 16 µm (Yatagai et al. 2002).
Likewise, the thickness of the Malan Loess declines progressively along a
WNW–ESE transect as one moves away from the desert source regions and
into areas with higher levels of precipitation (Porter 2001). Grain size also
varies down section and may give information on past wind velocities
(Nugteren et al. 2004; Sun et al. 2004). Coarser grains are correlated with cold
Loess 223

Weinan SUS(SI) Lingtai SUS(SI) Baoji SUS(SI) Weinan G.S.R.


0 150 300 0 80 160 240 80 160 240 0.0 1.0 2.0
0
S0 S0 S0 S0
L1 L1 L1 L1
10 S1 S1 S1
S1
L2 L2 L2
L1
20
S2 S2 S2
S2
L3
L3 L3 L3
30 S3
S3
S3 L4 S3
S4 L4
40 L4 L4
S4
S4 L5 S4
L5 S5 L5 L5
50 S5 S5
S5
L6
L6 S6 L6
60
S6 S6
S6
S7
70 S7 S7 S7
S8
S8 S8
S8
L9 L9
80 L9 L9
S9
Depth (m)

S9 S9 S9
S10
S10 S10 S10
90 S11
S11 S11 S11
S12 S12 S12 S12

S13 S13 S13


100 S13
S14 S14 S14 S14
L15 L15 L15 L15
S15 S15 S15 S15
110 S16 S16
S16 S16
S17 S17 S17
S18 S18
S18 S18
S19 S19 S19 S19
120 S20 S20 S20 S20
S21 S21 S21
S21 S22 S22
S22 S23 S234 S22
S23 S23
130 L24 L24
L24 L24
S24 S24 S24
S24
S25
S25 S25 S25
S26
140 S26 S26
S26 L27
L27
L27 L27
150 S27 S27
S28 S27 S27 S28
S29 S28 S29
S29 S28
S30 S30 S29 S30
S31 S30 S31
160 S31
S31
L32
L32 L32
L32
170 S32 S32 S32 S32
L33 L33 L33 L33

Fig. 10.6. Correlation of magnetic susceptibility curves along Chinese loess sections (SI) and the
grain-size ratio of the <2 µm fraction to that of the <10 µm fraction. The major units of loess
(L units 1–33) and soil (S units 0–32) are indicated. Modified after Liu and Ding (1998, Figs. 5, 6)
224

Time Time Time Oxygen


Xifeng (S) Luochan (S) SPECMAP δO18
(ka) (ka) (ka) isotope
0 100 200 300 0 100 200 300 2 1 0 −1 −2 stage
S0 0 0 0 1
L1 2,3,4
S1 100 100 100 5
L2 6
S2 200 200 200 7
L3
8
S3 300 300 300 9
L4 10
S4 400 400 400 11
L5 12
500 500 500 13
S5 14
600 600 600 15
L6 16
S6 17
L7 700 700 700 18
S7 19
20

Fig. 10.7. A Comparison between magnetic susceptibility profiles at Xifeng and Luochuan, the stratigraphy of loess (L) and soil (S) layers at Xifeng, the
SPECMAP oxygen isotope record from a North Pacific marine core and the oxygen isotope ‘time-scale’. Modified after Pye and Sherwin (1999, Fig. 10.9),
copyright John Wiley and Sons Ltd. Reproduced with permission
A.S. Goudie and N.J. Middleton
Loess 225

periods characterised by an increased winter-monsoon strength such as


Heinrich Events and the Younger Dryas, whereas finer grains coincide with
periods of enhanced summer-monsoon circulation, such as interstadials
(Yatagai et al. 2002).
The dust that formed the Chinese loess appears to have been trapped
downwind by an Artemisia-dominated grassland vegetation through the past
130–170×103 years (Jiang and Ding 2005; Zhang et al. 2006) with but sparse
evidence that, over the same period, there was a widespread forest cover (Liu
et al. 2005). C4 plant abundance declined during glacials, but increased
during palaeosol formation in interglacials (Vidic and Montañez 2004).

10.5 Conclusions

The great loess deposits of China and other parts of the world give an
indication of the importance that dust storms have played in moulding the
Earth’s surface. Although we live in a dusty world today, the evidence from
loess, ice cores, lake sediments and ocean cores all indicate that dust storm
activity has from time to time been very substantially greater than in the con-
temporary era. Over the past few decades, analysis of climatological data and
remote sensing imagery has given us a range of new insights into the nature
and distribution of present-day dust activity, so that we can now say a great
deal about the distribution of dust storms, their source areas, their trajecto-
ries of movement and their frequencies. We are also beginning to learn why
it is that dust storm activity varies on decadal timescales in response to cli-
mate changes and varying degrees of human influence. Perhaps most impor-
tantly of all, we can now appreciate that the dust derived from the world’s
deserts plays a major role in the Earth System through its contribution to bio-
geochemical cycling and climate; and we can appreciate the direct role that
dust plays in human affairs, including the conduct of warfare and the spread
of disease.
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Index

acidity 34, 40-42 atmospheric mass flux of dust 157


Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer attapulgite 164
(AVHRR) 10, 55, 98, 114 Australia 14, 20, 24, 25, 29, 37, 39, 40, 42,
aeroallergens 52 50, 55, 57, 61, 62, 142-146, 147, 154,
Aerosol Index (AI) 11, 55, 148 163, 164, 188-191, 202, 212
Aerosol Optical Thickness (AOT) 11, 55,
57, 98 back trajectory analysis 7, 84, 102, 106
Aerosol Robotic Network (Aeronet) 7, 11 Badain Jaran 135
Afghanistan 26, 53, 117, 119-123, 134 Bahrain 43, 108, 111, 114
agronomic measures to control erosion Barbados 52, 61, 62, 98, 158, 175, 181
67, 193-196 Belarus 64, 134
air crashes 51 berg winds 22, 25, 46, 77
Alaska Bermuda 29, 37, 97, 158, 161
albedo 33, 45, 46 blood rain 6, 30
algal blooms 33 blowing dust 5, 66, 89
Algeria 21, 22, 25, 44, 84, 86, 102, 105, 106, Bodélé 14, 18, 57, 60, 62, 77, 84-88, 98,
114, 164 121, 141, 163
allergens 4, 52 Bolivia 25, 57, 76, 77, 207
Alps 29, 42, 100, 102, 142, 151, 175, 215 Britain and British Isles 31, 100, 102, 104,
Altiplano 25, 57, 76, 77, 215 151, 162, 175, 215
aluminium flux 33
Amazonia 3, 27, 37 calcium carbonate 38, 163
andhi 26, 130, 131 calcrete 3, 38-40, 218
Antarctica 29, 37, 205, 206, 212 California 25. 30, 39, 40, 50, 52, 71, 74,
anthropogenic activities 86 163, 199
Aqua Advanced Infrared Radiation Canada 74, 142, 150, 169
Sounder (AIRS) 11 Canary Islands 30, 31, 148, 161, 163,
Arabia 25, 26, 33, 40, 43, 45, 52, 55, 57, 60, 164, 218
88, 106-121, 163, 201, 202, 212 Cape Verde Islands 31, 96, 161
Aral Sea 40, 52, 134, 163, 181-184, 191 carbon dioxide 45-48
Arctic 4, 26 Caribbean 3, 4, 29, 34, 53, 98, 181
Argentina 25, 44, 77, 154, 207, 212-214 Chad 44, 77, 79, 84, 85, 106, 146, 218
Arizona 24, 25, 50, 52, 71, 161, 163, 197 chemistry of dust 30, 33, 34, 107, 117, 141,
aspergillus sydowi 34 161-163, 212
Atacama 57, 76 Chile 25, 45, 76, 215
Atlantic Ocean 1, 4, 25, 26, 29, 30, 33, 49, China 6, 18, 21, 26, 27, 29, 30, 34, 50, 52,
55, 61, 62, 77, 81, 84, 88, 95-100, 53, 57, 60, 63, 67, 68, 81, 88, 135-142,
105, 142, 147, 152, 158, 169, 175, 147, 154, 163, 164, 185-188, 191, 195,
202, 204, 205, 207, 222 208, 211, 212, 216, 219, 220-225
284 Index

chlorite 38, 164, 165 haze 5, 98, 130, 135, 137, 175, 176
clay minerals in dust 164-165, 212, 218 loadings 1, 45, 46, 49, 57, 111, 113, 126,
climatic impact of dust 45-48 135, 140, 146, 175, 181, 201-209
cloud formation 1, 10, 30, 33, 45, 46, dust optical thickness (DOT) 10, 11, 55,
48-49, 70, 82, 87 57, 62, 84
coccidioidmycosis 52 dust production model (DPM) 20
cold front 24-27, 72, 105, 114 samplers 7-9 158
conjunctivitis 51 dust storm definition 4-5
conservation tillage 170, 195, 196 whirl 5
control of dust storms 193-199
convectional activity 1, 23, 26, 45, 49, 67, EARLINET project 100
68, 70, 82 easterly waves 25, 26, 45, 49, 97
coral reefs 3, 35 economic effects of dust storms 49-51
Corsica 31, 89, 102, 152, 154, Egypt 21, 25, 44, 51, 53, 84, 90, 97, 106,
161, 177 114, 218
creep 21, 195 entrainment 1, 4, 25, 26, 49, 68, 163, 190
Crete 152, 215 environmental consequences of dust
crop residues for erosion control 170, 194, storms 33-44
195, 197 Etosha Pan, Namibia 57, 77, 81
crusts 19, 38, 39 European Community Air Quality
Cyprus 114, 205 Directive 148
Eyre basin, Australia 55, 57, 77, 121,
Dasht-i-Margo 121 145, 146
deflation 13, 17, 18, 21, 22, 25, 35, 38, 42,
50, 67, 74, 76, 77, 79, 82, 84, 86, 112, fech-fech 17
121, 129, 146, 164, 167, 175, 181, Florida 33, 49
190, 213, 222 France 31, 102, 151, 175, 215
desert varnish 3 fugitive dust 22, 199
desertification 4, 49, 61, 87, 188 fungal spores 53
diatomite/diatoms 14, 84, 163, 202
dimethylsulfide (DMS) 33 Georgia 134
diurnal pattern of dust storms 63-67 Ghana 37, 40, 90, 152, 158, 202
dry deposition 30-31, 201 giant dust particles 31, 161
duricrusts 38-40 glacial grinding 13, 211, 221
dust Global Ozone Chemistry Radiation and
accumulation 7, 21, 35, 37-40, 141, 145, Transport (GOCART) 30
149-157, 195, 201-209, 211-225 Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment
dust bowl 4, 74, 167-172, 190, 207 (GOME) 11
concentrations in air 7, 30, 37, 49, 52, Gobi 19, 26, 33, 34, 63, 68, 137, 141, 154, 221
55, 61, 62, 98, 137, 142, 147-149, grain size 13, 19, 157-161, 202, 205, 212,
152, 174, 175, 205, 206 216, 218, 222
deposition 1, 6, 30-31, 33, 40, 49, 68, 71, gravel mulches 195
100, 108, 149-157, 175, 177, 182, Greece 100, 215
183, 201-209, 211-225 Greenland 29, 135, 205-207, 212
deposition rates 150, 152, 153, 154, 156,
158, 174, 208 haboob 22-26, 50, 89
devil 7, 7, 22, 23, 68 Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome 53
emissions 19, 20, 49, 59, 60, 62, 79, 85, harmattan 40, 52, 62, 82, 89, 96, 98, 152,
89, 137, 178, 191, 199 158, 161, 218
Index 285

Hawaii 37, 141 Lithuania 134


health effects of dust storms 51-53, loess 6, 13-17, 25, 71, 77, 108, 135, 137,
183-184 154, 167, 204, 208-209, 211-225
Hong Kong 29, 141 long range transport of dust 7, 27-30,
Hungary 100, 102 52, 106
Loo 26, 130-131
ice cores 6, 29, 46, 48, 167, 175, 186, 201,
205-207, 225 Makran 109, 117, 119, 120, 124, 126
ice nucleating behaviour 49 Mali 22, 40, 44, 52, 84, 86, 88, 89, 98
Iceland 58, 147, 190 Manchuria 42
Illinois 72, 74 marine ecosystems 33-35
Illite 164-165, 218 marine primary productivity 1
India 14, 26, 30, 50, 67, 117, 123-131, 147, Mars, dust storms on 68-70
154, 197, 207, 216 Mauritania 84, 86, 88, 89, 98, 101, 175, 177
Infra-Red Difference Dust Index (IDDI) mechanical control of wind erosion
22, 84, 108 198-199
Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) Mediterranean 3, 25, 26, 30, 33, 67, 77, 88,
30, 98 89, 94, 102, 105-106, 108, 114, 152,
Iran 26, 43, 44, 109, 114, 117, 119, 121, 158, 161, 165, 175-177, 202, 205, 216
124, 129 Meningitis 52
Iraq 26, 53, 107, 114, 163 METEOSAT 11, 22, 84, 108
iron hypothesis 47 Mexico 52, 74, 173-174
Israel 37, 105, 106, 108, 114, 177 Middle East 25-26, 29, 57, 64, 67, 88, 95,
Italy 41, 48, 100, 102, 175, 215 106-117, 202, 218
Ivory Coast 51, 89, 90 Mkgadikgadi, Botswana 57, 77, 79, 81
Moderate Resolution Imaging
Japan 29, 37, 95, 135, 141, 147, 164, 188 Spectrometer (MODIS) 10, 11, 55,
Jordan 63, 114 87, 89, 90, 96, 122
Mojave Desert 71
Kalimantan 135 Mongolia 27, 50, 63, 68, 137, 141-142, 147,
Kansas 6, 71, 150, 167, 170, 171, 212 185-188, 221
kaolinite 164-165, 218 Montmorillonite 164-165, 218
Karakum Desert 134 Morocco 25, 98, 102, 105, 178, 203, 218
katabatic winds 22, 25, 26, 68 Multi-angle Imaging Spectrometer
Kazakhstan 133-135, 181, 184 (MISR) 11
Kenya 25
Korea 29, 30, 50, 53, 135, 141, 148, 185, Namibia 22, 25, 43, 44, 57, 77, 79, 82
188, 221, 222 Nebraska 71, 150, 170, 197, 209, 213
Kosa 135, 147, 187, 188 Negev 37, 51, 108, 109, 147, 163, 217, 218
Kuwait 64, 107, 113 Netherlands 100
Nevada 39, 40, 71, 163
lakes as dust sources 14, 17, 72, 121, 163, New Mexico 25, 39, 52, 170
202, 205, 207, 211 New Zealand 24, 25, 29, 58, 143, 145,
Last Glacial Maximum 45, 143, 210, 203, 212, 215
206, 207, 208, 209, 214 Niger 14, 17, 37, 44, 86, 164, 178, 195
laterite 40 Nigeria 37, 98, 158, 164, 175, 217, 218
Lebanon 114 Normalized Difference Vegetation Index
Libya 25, 44, 54, 84, 105, 106, 114, 218 (NDVI) 62
lidar 7, 11, 100 North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) 1, 175
286 Index

North Dakota 65, 71, 74, 169, 170, 172 rock flour 14
no-tillage agriculture 197 Russia 181-182, 212

ocean cores 201-205 Sahara 1, 3, 4, 14, 17, 18, 21, 26-33, 37,
Oman 107-112 40, 44, 48-53, 55, 57, 60-62, 66,
Oregon 50, 213 81-106, 108-117, 119, 141, 147,
organic material in dust 14, 163 148, 151-165, 174-181, 202, 205,
Owens Lake 52, 71, 191 216-218
Ozone 30, 48 Saharan Air Layer (SAL) 26, 49, 97
Sahel 26, 30, 52, 61-62, 86, 97, 161, 164,
Pacific Ocean 31, 141, 202, 204, 207, 222 175, 178, 195, 199
Pakistan 26, 117, 119, 121, 123, 127, 129, Sal island 98, 159, 164
130, 184-185, 216 Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia 57, 76-77
palaeosols in loess 37, 212, 225 Salars 25, 76
palygorskite 102, 164, 165, 217, 218 salinization 40-42
pampas 25, 42, 77, 154, 163, 207, 212, 213 salt 3, 5, 14, 17, 18, 40, 42, 72, 76, 77, 81,
parna 37, 145 163, 182, 183
particle sizes 19, 31, 35, 45, 157-161, 221 saltation 21, 195
Patagonia 25, 29, 42, 77, 207 sand dunes as dust source 14, 18, 190
pathogens 4, 35, 53 sand flux 81, 140, 141
peridesert loess 213, 216 sandstorm 50, 54, 58
PeriSaharan loess 216-218 Santa Ana winds 25
pH of rainfall 40, 161 Sardinia 89, 152, 165
pH of soil 40 Scandinavia 42, 95, 100
phosphorus 33, 37 seasonal pattern of dust storms 88-89, 98,
photometers 7, 84, 100 110-111, 124
phytoliths 163, 202 SeaWifs 10, 84
phytoplankton 33-34, 46, 48 Seistan Basin 57, 119-124
plankton 1, 202 Senegal 89, 175
plant waxes in dust 7, 163 Shamal 26, 27, 109
Pleistocene 13-14, 43, 71, 72, 77, 84, 135, shelterbelt 170, 198
205, 208, 214-221 Siberia 27, 42, 141, 181, 188, 212
Pliocene Red Clay Formation (PRCF) 221 silicosis 51, 53
PM10 values 142, 148, 158 silt formation 13-14
potential sand flux 81, 140, 141 Sirocco 177
Pyrenees 42, 163, 175, 215 smectite 164-165, 217
snow cover 19, 67, 141
Qatar 107, 114 soil carbon sequestration 38
soil conservation 4, 170, 197
radiative forcing 45-46 soil formation 3, 35
radiometers 7, 10, 11, 85 solar radiation 1, 45, 203
rainfall 1, 30, 40, 59-62, 66, 67, 77, 84, 98, Somalia 25
109, 112, 127, 131, 143, 161, 174, source areas 7, 9, 57, 59, 62, 76, 77, 82,
173-178, 181, 216 84-90, 102, 105, 106, 117, 120, 121,
red rain 177 135, 158, 161, 164, 175, 205, 225
remote sensing 9, 11, 71, 74, 84, 87, 97, 98, Spain 39, 41, 52, 102, 152, 165, 175,
167, 225 197, 215
respiratory problems 52, 53, 184 stone pavement 3, 4, 38, 60
Revised Wind Erosion Equation (RWEQ) 20 stubble mulching 194-197
Index 287

Sudan 14, 24, 25, 40, 84, 90, 94, 114, 159, Turkmenistan 26, 52, 63, 65, 68, 121, 129,
175, 178, 180 134, 182, 184
suspension 21, 31, 43, 137, 157, 195
Switzerland 100, 102 United Arab Emirates 108, 109
Syria 108 Uruguay 213
USA (United States) 4, 18, 25, 29, 39, 40,
Taiwan 30, 53, 135, 141 42, 50, 52, 53, 57, 65, 71-74, 142,
Tajikistan 212, 219 147, 157, 158, 167-172, 190, 191,
Taklamakan 55, 57, 60, 68, 77, 88, 121, 196, 197, 207, 209, 212-213
135, 137, 139, 140, 142, 207, 222 Utah 212
takyrs 17 Uzbekistan 181-183, 219
Tarim Basin 26, 43, 55, 57, 135, 137, 222
Tasman Sea 29, 48, 143, 145, 202 valley fever 52
rerra rossa 3, 37 vegetation cover 20, 35, 43, 59, 63, 74, 127,
Texas 25, 29, 52, 71, 74, 158, 163, 164, 169, 132, 143, 167, 181, 188, 190, 205
170, 172 vegetative barriers 193
Thar Desert 26, 57, 88, 117, 147, 216 Virgin Lands Scheme 134, 181, 182, 196
thermoluminescence dating 219 Visible and Spin Scan Radiometer
threshold velocity 17-19, 82, 163, 193 (VISSR) 11
thunderstorm 23-26, 50, 71, 72, 82,
128-133 war 53-54
Tokar Delta, Sudan 90, 94, 95, 114 weathering 13-16, 39, 40, 42, 76, 161, 164
Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer Western Sahara 98, 102
(TOMS) 10, 11, 55, 57, 60, 62, wet deposition 30-31
71-77, 81, 84, 88, 98, 108, 111, 114, wind erosion 19-22, 50, 74, 87, 145, 167,
117, 120, 124, 127, 137, 140, 146, 170, 181, 193-199
148, 167 Wind Erosion Equation (WEQ) 20
trajectories of dust transport 7, 26, 84, Wind Erosion Prediction System (WEPS) 20
90-1-6, 135, 141-142, 164, 175, wind tunnel 18
201, 225 windbreak 74, 198
transatlantic dust transport 61, 62, 98 WMO synop codes 4, 6, 8
trichodesmium 33, 46 Wyoming 37, 170
Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission
(TRMM) 11 Yardangs 4, 21, 22, 42-45, 77, 84
Tunisia 39, 89, 105, 114, 217, 218
Turkey 26, 105, 106, 108, 114, 161 Zimbabwe 14

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