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McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

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Page 1: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

McKnight's Physical Geography

Lectures

Chapter 18

The Topography ofArid Lands

© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

Andrew MercerMississippi State University

Page 2: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

A Specialized Environment

• Desert terrain stark and abrupt

• Desert special conditions– Weathering – mechanical weathering dominant; slower

weathering and angular particle formation

– Soil and regolith – soil is thin or absent, exposing bedrock

– Soil creep – minor due to lack of soil and lubricating effects of water

Top – thinner soilSlope – very thin soilFoot – thicker soil

Page 3: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

A Specialized Environment

• Desert special conditions (cont.)– Impermeable surfaces – caprocks and hardpans; high

water runoff

– Sand – some deserts have sand abundance, allows for water input into the ground, easily moved by rain and wind

– Rainfall – is the most important shaper of landscapes in DESERT country

– Wind – also matters, but less so than even occasional rain

Even in very dry country, water is still the most important shaper of topography

Page 4: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

A Specialized EnvironmentDesert conditions

•Utah is semi-desert

•Basins of interior drainage – most dry-land watersheds do not drain into any ocean –

•Water usually evaporates before reaching the ocean

or a large lake.

Page 5: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Running Water in Waterless Regions

• Running water most important external landform agent in dry country and desert

• Erosion tremendously effective with little plant cover

• Intensity of rain combined with impermeable land surfaces create intense runoff

• Unpredictable imbalance between erosion and deposition

Page 6: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Running Water in Waterless RegionsSurface water in the desert– Exotic streams – the Nile is

an example of a river that originates in one region and flows through an alien region to some other destination.

– Ephemeral streams – periodically flow, result in intense erosion, transportation, and deposition

– Perennial – fulltime flow, year-round

– Desert lakes – playas and Salinas (dry salt lake beds), saline lakes

C – more mild

B climate - desert

A climate

Page 7: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Running Water in Waterless Regions

• Fluvial erosion in arid lands

– Occurs during small portion of the year, flash floods

– Differential erosion – variations in slope and shape of landform from rock type variations

– Residual erosional surfaces – inselbergs (e.g., bornhardts), pediments

– Desert stream channels – ephemeral stream beds

Page 8: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Consider Mr. Allred’s yard – the rocky top of a hill was once the ‘armor-plated’ stream bed at the bottom of the hill. Eventually, everything else washed away, leaving the river bed as the new top of the hill.

Page 9: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Running Water in Waterless Regions• Fluvial deposition in arid lands

– Talus accumulations at the foot of steep slopes

– Piedmont – zone at the foot of a mountain range

– Piedmont angle

– Basins of interior drainage covered with fine particles since flow volume and speed are low

Page 10: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of Wind

• Wind as a sculptor is a relatively limited effect

• Air at the surface has nearly zero wind

• Wind speed increases with distance above ground

Page 11: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of Wind

• Aeolian erosion– Two effects, deflation and abrasion

– Deflation – shifting of loose particles via the wind, blowouts

– Abrasion – requires tools such as airborne sand and dust, sculpts landforms already in existence, ventifacts

Page 12: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of Wind• Aeolian (wind) transportation– Only finest particles are carried in suspension as dust

– Dust storms

– Larger particles moved by saltation (curved trajectory) and traction (rolled or pushed)

– Creep by saltation

Page 13: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of Wind• Aeolian (wind) deposition

– Fine sand laid as thin coating;

• Desert sand dunes– Some dune fields composed of unanchored sand, moved

by local winds; slip face

Page 14: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of WindDesert sand dunes (cont.)

– Three most common dunes• Barchan – individual dunes

migrating across landscape; crescent shaped

• Transverse – supply of sand greater than for barchans; crescent shaped, but entire landscape made of these dunes

• Seifs – long, narrow dunes that are parallel; orientation seems to represent an intermediate direction between two dominant wind directions

Page 15: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of Wind

• Common types of desert sand dunes

Page 16: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Loess– Wind deposited silt

– Lacks horizontal stratification

– Great vertical durability

– Formation not well understood

Millions of people have lived in silt caves across thousands of years.

However, when such soils are WET they can collapse during an earthquake – thousands of people may get killed.

Page 17: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

The Work of Wind

Major loess (SILT) locations of the world

Page 18: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Two Representative Desert Landform AssemblagesNotice the effect of water even in a desert – occasional, sharp rain can result in vast erosion.

It is not a good idea to build or occupy ‘alluvial fans’ like the one below.

River deltas are similar.

Watch out.

Page 19: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Two Representative Desert Landform Assemblages

Death Valley– Excellent example of

basin and range terrain

– Surrounding mountain ranges

– Basin filled with alluvium

– Salt pans and mobile dunes in the basin

– Notice that salt collects in basins after washing out of mountains.

Page 20: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Two Representative Desert Landform Assemblages

Mesa-and-scarp terrain

•Mesa – flat topped surface

•Scarp – steep cliffs

•horizontal strata

•Some layers resist erosion well -- others erode quickly

Harder rock lasts longer

Softer rock erodes, allowing the whole formation to fail

Page 21: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Two Representative Desert Landform AssemblagesMonument Valley – Utah/Arizona

These features are the scattered remains of vast areas that were eroded and washed away.

Only a few “hard spots” remain – the cap rock protected softer rock nearby or underneath.

Once water got past the cap rock, the whole region washed away.

Page 22: McKnight's Physical Geography Lectures Chapter 18 The Topography of Arid Lands © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Andrew Mercer Mississippi State University

Two Representative Desert Landform Assemblages• Badlands

– Overland flows from occasional rains develop tiny rills that expand into ravines or gullies

– Characterized by maze of ravines and gullies, lifeless and nearly impassable

• Arches and natural bridges– A small amount of cap rock

is all that remains of the entire formation.

– Cap rock protects the softer rock underneath.

– All of it will be gone very quickly.