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17.3: Chapter Summary

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    48362
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    Chapter 17 Summary

    17.1 Desert Weathering and Erosion

    Weathering in deserts happens by the same processes seen elsewhere but generally at slower rates because water—the main driver of both chemical and mechanical weathering—is scarce. When rainfall does occur, often as flash floods, it can cause rapid mechanical weathering. A unique desert feature is desert varnish, a thin dark coating that forms on long-stable rock surfaces. Although water is still the main erosional force in deserts, wind plays a major role by transporting sand, silt, and dust. Wind moves sand by saltation, which rounds and frosts grains and can sandblast rock to form features such as yardangs and ventifacts. Wind erosion can also create blowouts where loose sand is removed. Rare phenomena like sliding stones show how desert conditions—wind, ice, and flat surfaces—can combine to move large rocks.

     

    17.2 Desert Landforms

    Desert landforms are shaped by both water and wind. Streams emerging from mountains deposit coarse sediment to form alluvial fans, which can merge into bajadas, while isolated mountain remnants become inselbergs. In closed basins, evaporation creates flat playas, and desert streams often flow only after storms, producing dangerous flash floods. Wind builds large sand seas called ergs and forms various dune types—such as barchan, longitudinal, parabolic, and star dunes—depending on wind direction, sand supply, and vegetation.


    This page titled 17.3: Chapter Summary is shared under a CC BY-NC license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Deborah Shulman.

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