Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6432234 Geomorphology 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We collected repeat seasonal GPS surveys of barchan dunes over 3 years.•We examine the fit of locally measured climate variables to migration rates.•90% of the variability in migration rates is attributed to surface wind power.•Changes in precipitation and vegetation exhibit no measureable control on rates.

Aeolian sand covers extensive areas of the Navajo Nation in the southwestern United States. Much of this sand is currently stabilized by vegetation, although many drier parts of these Native lands also have active and partly active dunes. Current prolonged drought conditions that started in the mid-1990s are producing significant changes in dune mobility. Reactivation of regional aeolian deposits due to drought or increasing aridity from rising temperatures resulting from climate change could have serious consequences for human and animal populations, agriculture, grazing, and infrastructure. To understand and document the current and future potential for mobility, seasonally repeated surveys were used to track the location of multiple active barchan dunes. By utilizing Real-Time Kinematic GPS field surveys and simultaneously collecting in-situ meteorological data, it is possible to examine climatic parameters and seasonal variations that affect dune mobility and their relative influences. Through analysis of the recorded data, we examined the fit of various climate parameters, and demonstrate that under the current prolonged drought, wind power is the dominant factor controlling dune mobility.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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