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Climatology of Arid Lands
James E. McDonald
Institute of Atmospheric Physics
The University of Arizona
Introduction
Viewed broadly, all of the research objectives of The University
of Arizona Arid Lands Program can be regarded as ecologic in nature.
Hence it is pertinent to draw attention in this first of our colloquium
series to a very fundamental, and indeed almost self-evident, principle
of ecology--the law of limits. The law of limits asserts that the
physical environment sets limits to the areas within which any living
organism can live and reproduce, the limits being either limits
of excess or limits of deficiency. Thus, considering man himself,
and his agricultural activities in particular, we find that of the
56 million square miles of the world's total land area, about 13
million square miles lie in regions too cold to permit significant
agricultural activity, and another 16 million square miles are too
dry for conventional agriculture. Thus we find the law of limits
operating in a simple and straightforward manner to reduce, to some
what under one half, the land area within which man can live in
a locally self-sustaining economy. In these colloquia, our interest
will center around the arid limit; and in the present discussion,
in particular, our concern will be with those physical and climatological
factors that impose this arid limit.
Aridity and the Hydrologic Cycle
Residents of arid lands looking out upon the more humid parts of
the world are prone to complain that their own lands are not getting
their proper share of world rainfall, as if there were some self-evident
reason for believing that precipitation is a process to be taken
for granted. As a meteorologist, I am forced to the opposite view;
to me it seems rather more remarkable that our world is not entirely
arid.
As a first point in defense of this thesis we may note that neither
of our neighbor planets, Venus nor Mars, possesses spectroscopically
observable traces of water in its atmosphere--hence, the very presence
of this substance is not guaranteed even within the confines of
the solar system. Furthermore, it has been made clear through geochemical
studies that, early in its history, the earth lost all but perhaps
one part in 1010 of its initial stock of substances with molecular
weight as low as that of water, so our present hydrologic cycle
now operates on the relatively small amounts of water derived either
from breakdown of hydrates in the earth's crust or from volcanically
released juvenile water. Astronomical factors also enter the argument
through the fact that the earth would have to be moved only about
25 per cent farther from the sun to lower the global mean temperature
from the present value of 15°C to a value of about -15°C,
thereby locking up as relatively nonvolatile ice nearly all of the
world's surface waters and hence powerfully suppressing the intensity
of the hydrologic cycle.
But even given the earth's present abundance of ocean waters and
its present mean temperature, it is not immediately obvious why
the steady-state solution to the disposition of the available water
substance did not turn out to be merely an evaporation--condensation
equilibrium maintained across the air-ocean interface without any
continental precipitation at all. Indeed, when one considers low-latitude
west-coast deserts such as the Namib of South Africa or the Vizcaino
of Baja California with their near rainlessness in spite of prevailing
humilities near 100 per cent, this suggestion does not seem at all
unreasonable. Certainly such an equilibrium is a physically possible
state of affairs, and were such an evaporation-condensation equilibrium
the actual nature of the terrestrial hydrologic cycle, continental
areas would receive only such meager amounts of water as they could
extract by dew deposition at night. Under such circumstances general
aridity would prevail over all land areas.
The factor which enters to change radically the picture just outlined
is the adiabatic ascent of moist air, which can result from forced
lifting at mountain barriers, from buoyant ascent in areas of strong
surface heating, or from forced ascent due to large-scale convergence
of air in cyclonic storms. When air ascends adiabatically, it cools
and this process, if carried far enough, finally brings the vapor
to its point of condensation. But before taking this very important
process for granted, it must be noted that most vapors must be compressed
to cause them to condense. Were water one of these substances, our
clouds would be found not at the tops of updrafts, but at the bottoms
of downdrafts: The latter case would yield a greatly altered hydrologic
cycle, since then the air feeding into clouds would originate in
higher, drier strata; but still worse, the released latent heat
of condensation would inhibit further growth (descent) of the cloud
rather than enhance growth as is true under actual conditions. This
major difference is produced simply by the circumstance that water
has an anomalously large latent heat of condensation (though the
thermodynamics of the point cannot be examined here).
But even if we take for granted the occurrence of adiabatic ascent
and take for granted the consequences of the odd thermodynamic properties
of water vapor, we still face an obstacle to cloud formation that
ought not be put aside lightly. This is the nucleation barrier standing
in the way of the phase transition from vapor to liquid that must
precede the appearance of visible cloud material. Were it not for
the fact that our atmosphere always contains tiny hygroscopic particles
("condensation nuclei") having diameters of the order
of microns down to tenths of microns, clouds could form only on
the ubiquitous ions created continually by cosmic ray bombardment
of our atmosphere. Ionic condensation, however, is known to require
about four-fold supersaturations (x+00 per cent relative humidity),
from which requirement one can show that summer "cloud bases"
over Arizona, .for example, would lie at about 25,000 feet altitude
were there no hygroscopic debris in our atmosphere. It seems quite
unlikely that dynamical processes would frequently produce updrafts
of such depth as to reach so high a condensation level; but even
if they did there remains the fact that the large numbers of cosmic
ray ions would almost certainly give rise to a cloud composed of
such tiny droplets that these could not quickly aggregate into raindrop-sized
particles, so precipitation would be inhibited.
Finally, even if we take for granted the observed abundance of
hygroscopic condensation nuclei, and hence assume existence of clouds
of familiar kind, there remains an intricate series of improbable
steps by which these clouds of tiny droplets (order of 10 micron
diameter) are converted into much larger raindrops (order of 1 millimeter
diameter). Since knowledge of precipitation physics is still in
a rudimentary state, it is not possible to point to the most crucial
requirements Nature must meet to complete the precipitation process.
Nevertheless, from the easily observed fact that only a small percentage
of all clouds (a reasonable guess would be 1 to 5 per cent) succeed
in reaching the precipitation stage, we know that much more often
than not the last requirements are not fulfilled and the cloud simply
evaporates back into invisible vapor.
All of the above considerations are offered in support of the contention
made earlier here: It is actually quite remarkable that our world
is not entirely arid. Thus, when we note that 25-30 per cent of
the continental areas are too arid to support agriculture we must
not be surprised; rather we must be grateful that the percentage
is actually that low:
What Is A Desert?
Speaking etymologically, the term "desert" implies simply
a deserted place; hence it is not improper to speak of the "desert
wastes of Antarctica." Speaking climatologically, however,
the term invariably connotes precipitation deficiency. A rather
commonly used rule-of-thumb holds that deserts are areas with less
than 10 inches of precipitation per year. This rule serves surprisingly
well as a first approximation, especially in the thermally rather
homogeneous lower latitudes (e. g Africa, Australia). The rule overlooks,
however, the basic ecologic fact that the determinant of plant,
growth and hence of the overall carrying power of a given region
is not simply the amount of precipitation, but rather the fraction
of the precipitation that survives immediate evaporation from the
soil. The latter fraction is strongly influenced by temperature.
Hence one is forced to define desert climatic boundaries in terms
of some function of both precipitation and temperature. This is
done, for instance, in the familiar definition of a desert as an
area where potential evapotranspiration exceeds precipitation. Similarly,
dependence of desert climatic boundaries upon both precipitation
and temperature is built into the well-known Koeppen system of climatic
classification. In the present discussion, the Koeppen definitions
will be understood to dictate locations of deserts and their surrounding
semiarid steppes. Neither the algebraic nor the graphical form of
these definitions will be given here, however, since they are readily
found in many sources in the literature.
Factors Governing the Geographic Location of Deserts
Desert geography is controlled ultimately by precipitation physics.
Of all of the factors governing the series of steps culminating
in precipitation, the two that exhibit most marked geographic variability
are: (1) frequency of occurrence of adiabatic ascent of large bodies
of air, and (2) availability of an oceanic moisture source in the
prevailingly upwind direction. The principal deserts of the world
will be found where one or both of these factors operate negatively.
The great low-latitude deserts, such as the Sahara, the Arabian
Desert, and the Australian Desert, are dry primarily because of
chronic lack of lifting processes. This is revealed to us in one
simple way by the fact that isolated mountain areas lying within
such deserts usually tend to be "humid islands" by virtue
of their ability to cause orographic lifting. Thus the Ahaggar Mountains
and the Atlas of North Africa, the Macdonnell Range in the middle
of the Australian Desert, and all of the many faultblock mountains
of the Arizona desert areas have markedly more rainfall than their
surrounding plains. Were the aridity of these surrounding plains
due solely to low humidity, no amount of mountain lifting would
create the humid montane islands that are so strikingly present.
This generalization needs qualification in the sense that deep within
the interiors of the larger low-latitude deserts, sheer remoteness
from oceanic moisture sources can dominate over even orographic
lifting. Thus in the Sahara, the dryness of the Tibesti Range (as
contrasted with the more humid Ahaggar Range) is probably an instance
of this, since the Tibesti mass lies further from the Atlantic moisture
source. The generalization also requires the qualification that
presence of a mountain range upwind of a given lowlatitude desert
may so effectively lower the humidity due to rain-out on the upwind
slopes of the range that the desert is to some extent a "rainshadow
desert." Thus, even the relatively low Eastern Highlands of
Australia so block the southeast trades impinging on the Queensland
coast that interior Australia is denied much moisture now falling
on this barrier's east slopes. The arid limit is thereby drawn much
closer to the coast than would otherwise be true.
When we look for the reasons for the chronic shortage of dynamical
lifting processes in these low-latitude west coast deserts, we find
that they are: (a) too far equatorward to be strongly influenced
by the extratropical wave cyclones that so enhance the precipitation
of the lands lying poleward from these deserts, (b) too far poleward
to be benefitted by the doldrum (intertropical convergence) belt
in its poleward excursions during the summer half-year, and (c)
too far westward to be influenced by typical hurricane activity
of low-latitude east coast littorals.
If we turn from the low-latitude, west coast deserts to the highlatitude
continental arid regions (most of these, incidentally, are steppes
and not deserts), we find that the principal factor imposing aridity
is the second of the two main factors cited above--remoteness from
an oceanic moisture source. This remoteness may be simply geographic,
as in the case of the Kirghiz Steppe and the Gobi of Asia, or it
may be "hydrometeorological remoteness" created by mountain
barriers blocking the inflow of moisturebearing winds, as in the
case of the steppes of North American (High Plains area) or as in
the case of the peculiar Patagonia desert lying in the lee of the
mid-latitude Andes. Mountain barriers not only reduce, by simple
rainout, the absolute moisture content of the air currents traversing
them, but, still worse, they lead to increase in potential temperatures
of the traversing air currents by virtue of addition of the latent
heat of condensation of the vapor released as precipitation on the
upwind slopes of the barrier. What makes these effects seem to us
so striking in the case of so-called "rainshadow deserts"
is the fact that the entire desiccation process often occurs in
horizontal distances of the order of only 100 miles or less. The
desertic southwestern portions of all of the mountainous Hawaiian
Islands, when contrasted with the lush tropically vegetated northeast
portions, offer a particularly impressive instance of this process.
The moist trade winds strike the northeast flanks of these island
ranges and yield annual rainfall totals that exceed 100 inches over
most of the upwind slopes (and reach about 450 inches in the world's
wettest spot, northeast Kauai, in the Hawaiian chain), whereas amounts
below 20 inches per year are typical of the cactusand algaroba-covered
leeward coasts of the Hawaiian archipelago.
The above-outlined meteorological factors operate to hold precipitation
amounts to below the Koeppen desert limits in a total area amounting
to about 14 per cent of the entire land area of the earth. This
figure has been determined here by measuring an equal-area map of
the Koeppen climatic system, the accuracy of the planimetry process
being of the order of a few per cent. The Koeppen steppes comprise
an additional 14 per cent of the continents, so the combined desert-steppe
areas account for 28 per cent of the global land area. Because the
literature does not seem to contain any recently published figures
on these areas, the complete list of the Koeppen deserts (BW*areas
in the Koeppen system) derived from planimetry measurements is given
below:
| Area |
Desert Region
(Millions of square miles) |
| Sahara |
3.32 |
| Australian |
1.31 |
| Arabian |
.93 |
| Turkestan |
.76 |
| North American |
.44 |
| Patagonian |
.26 |
| Thar-Afghanistan |
.23 |
| Namib-Kalahari |
.22 |
| Taklamakan |
.20 |
| Iranian |
.15 |
| Atacama |
.14 |
- Total area of world deserts 7.96 million
sq. mi.
- Total land area of world is 56 million square
miles. Hence Koeppen deserts comprise 856 or 14.3 percent
of all land area.
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Some Climatological Highlights of the Principal Deserts
of the World
The Sahara Desert
The 3.3 million square miles of Saharan desert area amount to
over eight times the total desert area of the North American continent
(Koeppen definitions assumed here and below), and, in fact, exceeds
the entire United States area of 3.0 million square miles. Curiously,
the Sahara does not, as far as records indicate, contain the driest
spot on earth (a distinction reserved to the Atacama Desert of South
America) but it holds the record for the world's highest temperature,
136.4°F, observed near Azizia in Libya. Nevertheless, most of
the interior Sahara is believed to receive less than one inch average
yearly rainfall (Kendrew, 1942). The Libyan desert is significantly
drier than the Algerian Sahara, almost certainly a matter of remoteness
from the Atlantic. This area must depend chiefly upon the occasional
invasion of a cold front trailing from a cyclone traversing the.Mediterranean;
and such fronts, by the time they reach Libya, are no longer lifting
air masses containing appreciable moisture. In
*In the Koeppen system of climatic classification, BW stands for
desert; BS stands for steppe, and BWk stands for cold-high-latitude
desert.
In addition, it is Libya's misfortune that the deep indentation
of the equatorial Atlantic coast does not extend far enough eastward
to place a warm water surface directly south of Libya, while the
Algerian Sahara, at least on its southern margins, enjoys occasional
summer precipitation derived from vapor evaporated into the southwest
monsoon of the Guinea coast area. The greater aridity of Libya as
compared with the western Sahara has apparently characterized most
of post-Pleistocene time, for the abundant evidence of neolithic
occupancy in the western Sahara is not duplicated in Libya.
The Australian Desert
Surely the most outstanding feature of this desert area is the
unusually large fraction of its parent continent that it occupies:
4per cent of all Australia is a desert by Koeppen standards. This
may be contrasted with the 31 per cent of all Africa which is desert
(Sahara plus Namib), the 6 per cent of South America, and the 5
per cent of North America that is desert (all values derived from
planimeter data presented above).
Why does Australia exhibit so unusually large a desert-fraction?
Clearly, one part of the answer lies in the simple observation that
Australia's latitudinal extent precludes its possessing either extensive
tropical rainforests such as suppress the desert-fraction in both
Africa and South America, or extensive high-latitude tree climates
to dilute the desert influence. In addition, Australian winter synoptic
patterns of weather are prevailingly dominated by anticyclones to
such an extent that the steady succession of cyclones passing by
in the "Roaring Forties" south of Australia exerts only
weak winter influence on the precipitation of the interior and of
the north. Furthermore, for synoptic climatologic reasons that are
not clear to me, the subtropical anticyclone of the winter halfyear
over the Indian Ocean (upwind from Australia), produces low-level
divergence (Mintz and Dean, 1952), unparalleled in extent and intensity
elsewhere in the north or south subtropics, and such divergence
enhances dryness due to subsidence. Finally, as has been noted before,
the Eastern Highlands add a rainshadow influence that is surprisingly
effective considering the low altitude of this barrier (mostly under
3000 feet).
The driest portions of the Australian Desert, in the Lake Eyre
area, average about 5 inches rainfall per year. Thus we see that
aridity is here not nearly as intense as in the central Sahara,
on which only an inch falls annually. Even the annual average of
about 3 inches on Yuma, Arizona is not matched for dryness in Australia,
despite the latter's desert area being threefold greater than that
surrounding Yuma. We can correctly say that desert climate is very
extensively but not intensively developed in Australia.
Grazing activities are pushed much farther beyond the dry side
of the 10-inch isohyet in Australia than, for example, in North
America. Taylor (199) states that the grazing density in the "sparse-lands"
of western Australia is about one cow per 640 acres, whereas in
Arizona there are few active ranges where the carrying power is
not at least one cow per 75 acres. This difference is a difference
in availability, outside the arid zone, in good grazing lands in
these two geographic areas.
The Arabian Desert
It would be difficult to decide whether it is the vast Sahara with
its Foreign Legion or the smaller Arabian Desert with its bedouin
horsemen that the layman pictures when he thinks of "the desert."
Since we can scarcely doubt that the harsh climatic stress of Arabia
Deserta shaped the life-views of the horsemen who swept out of this
wasteland during the Dark Ages and established a Moslem culture
across all of North Africa and into Iberia, we must admit that here
is a region whose climate has influenced history.
Covering almost a million square miles (0.93 million according
to the table above), the Arabian Desert seems to enjoy the distinction
of being the sandiest of all deserts in terms of total coverage.
Nevertheless, even in Arabia, the sand-covered portion is estimated
as covering only about one-third of the total desert area--illustrating
the rule that most of the world's deserts are far less sandy than
is popularly believed to be the case. (Only about 10 per cent of
the Sahara is sand-covered, the zest being "reg" or "serir,"
a desert pavement, or else bare rock called "hammada."
Of the Gobi Desert, which is actually a steppe under the Koeppen
system, about 5 per cent is sandy.)
Arabia has as another interesting distinction the complete absence
of permanent rivers originating within it, or flowing across it.
The latter absence stems from the accidental disposition of highlands
in the vicinity of Arabia. No well-watered mountain sources send
across this desert any analogs of the Nile, the Colorado, or the
Indus.
The Turkestan Desert
The truly desert areas of Turkestan cover about 0.76 million square
miles, but these areas are small compared with the great steppes
that border the true deserts of the region. The oasis towns of Turkestan
bear names steeped in history--Tashkent, Samarkand, Bokhara--but
viewed more prosaically they appear as communities wherein man has
struggled with aridity for centuries. The melting snowfields of
the Hindu Kush and the Pamirs send out annual succor to the oases
along the Amu Darya and Sir Darya, but agriculture is most precariously
balanced here. As much as 10 acre-feet of irrigation water per acre
of tilled land are required annually in most of this region. The
peculiar kanatz-type of subterranean irrigation channels, now employed
throughout widely scattered parts of the Afro-Asian arid zone, are
utilized in all of the Turkestan farm villages, though modern irrigation
methods are slowly appearing under Soviet development of this area.
The Caspian Sea bounds the Turkestan desert region on the west.
Evidences of repeated strandline fluctuations in this now undrained
sea have long been studied by paleoclimatologists seeking clues
to the rainfall variations of this region. During the Pleistocene
period the Caspian overflowed into the Black Sea through a channel
lying 150 feet above the present surface of the Caspian, and this
present level is about 85 feet below the present Black Sea level.
It is generally believed that the Caspian, like the basin lakes
of western North America, was completely dried up during the Climatic
Optimum some five to eight thousand years ago, and that it was reestablished
as a modern sea when the Near East began to receive more rainfall
in the millenium or two before the Christian era. Historical records
place its A.D. 1300 stand at about 45 feet above the present level,
yet even today one can look down through ten feet of water and see
foundation-work revealing locations of a community built on its
shores in even drier Dark Ages. The Caspian stands two feet higher
today than it did in 1845--an upswing that is strikingly opposed
to the concurrent sharp downswing in the Great Salt Lake of the
western United States. The latter has lost almost fifty per cent
of its total volume in the last century. Since these two quite different
trends are not understood in meteorological (or hydrologic) terms,
they stand as danger-signs in the way of easy globalscale extrapolation
of climatic inferences from one desert to another.
The North American Desert
In the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico, 0.44
million square miles of land fit the Koeppen desert specification.
Because those of us who live in or near this desert area naturally
tend to regard it as "quite extensive," it is well to
note here that it is only about an eighth as large as the Sahara
Desert and only about a third as large as the Australian Desert.
It is interesting to speculate on what changes we might have asked
of the geologic processes that shaped North America in order to
yield much greater areas of desert than we actually find on our
continent. Surely the chief requirement would be obliteration of
the deep embayment of the Gulf of Mexico. Were the Gulf all land
area, desertic conditions would quite certainly extend eastward
from the present Sonoran and Chihuahuan deserts across all of Texas;
and Louisiana would probably be in the steppe fringe. The now well-watered
Mississippi Valley and marginally-watered Great Plains would suffer
heavily from such an imaginary change of land-sea distribution.
In addition, very much greater area of Koeppen BWk climates (high-latitude
cool deserts) would exist if the Gulf were filled, at least as long
as we did not also:permit, in our speculations, the removal of the
Cordilleran barrier to influx of Pacific moisture.
The southwestern deserts illustrate quite well the climatic dictum,
cited earlier here, that low-latitude deserts are dry due to three
main causes, which for the North American case run as follows: a)
Our southwestern desert region is too far equatorward to be appreciably
influenced by cyclonic storms coming in off the Pacific, except
in winter when fringe effects give, say, southern Arizona its very
modest winter rainfall. b) On the other hand, the region is too
far poleward to be sensibly influenced by any precipitation that
can be correctly attributed to the summer-migrating intertropical
convergence belt. c) Finally, the region is too far westward from
the east coast to receive any direct rainfall contributions from
trade winds or hurricanes.
The last point requires some qualification. The peculiar summer
rainy season of the Sonoran Desert is influenced by the trade circulation
in the sense that the injection of moisture into the deep easterly
currents that swirl in around the high-level anticyclone over the
North American continent in midsummer occurs within the trade wind
belt. Also, there appear to be weak but unmistakable indications
that dissipating easterly waves originating in the Gulf or Caribbean
area drift into the Sonoran desert occasionally and cause temporary
increase in the convective activity of the July-August rainy spell.
Finally, hurricane influences of a different sort than envisaged
in the climatic dictum cited above do appear in the Sonoran Desert.
Hurricanes forming not in the Caribbean but off the west coast of
Mexico occasionally drift up into our desert area, and though they
no longer have the surface circulations characteristic of true hurricanes,
they do provide deep moist air masses that have given the Southwest
and northern Mexico some of the heaviest rainfalls on record in
the late summer period. (This situation is only parallelled climatologically,
I believe, by the southward drifting hurricanes, locally called
"willie-willies," that move down into the northern fringes
of the Australian desert from the Timor Sea.)
I should like to stress that investigators dealing with any ecologic
aspect of the arid Southwest need to bear constantly in mind the
danger of loose extrapolation of climatological arguments (above
all paleoclimatological arguments) from the western to the eastern
limits of this desert region. The danger stems from the fact that
the western portions (Pacific coastal areas) receive almost all
of their precipitation in winter, but are almost rainless in summer
due to the inhibiting influence of subsidence in the Pacific anticyclone,
while the eastern portions (Texas high plains, Coahuila, etc.) receive
almost all of their precipitation in summer. World-wide circulation
changes which favor increased precipitation in one of these two
subregions will tend to leave the other drier; so one must be constantly
on guard against overlooking this opposition in seasonal phase of
the rainfall of the east and west extrema. Tucson lies near the
half-way point, with just about half its precipitation coming from
each season. This two-season feature of the precipitation of southeastern
Arizona is quite important to the sustenance of grazing plants and
to the existence of the oddly arboreal character of the natural
desert vegetation of the area. In this respect, I believe that the
part of the world most likely to resemble southeastern Arizona with
respect to its seasonal precipitation pattern is the Thar Desert
of Pakistan. There the winter rains come as scanty leftovers in
the cyclonic storms that move in from the Mediterranean basin, while
the summer rains are due, broadly speaking, to convectional release
from the western margin of the monsoonal current of moist air sweeping
in from the south.
The monsoonal nature of the summer rainfall of Arizona and New
Mexico is a final climatological feature of this arid region worth
noting here. In southern Arizona, July typically receives about
six or seven times as much rainfall as June. The rather sudden arrival
of the rainy season is associated with a midtropospheric wind shift
from southwesterly flow out of the dry-subsiding source regions
of the Pacific to southeasterly flow from the deeply-moist Gulf
of Mexico region. The shift results ultimately from continental
heating over the central United States, but details are not yet
well understood. It is paradoxical that this monsoonal current of
moist air flows into the western United States in July and August
across the country's most arid region on its way to supplying the
vapor for the precipitation over the comparatively humid Rockies
area of Utah and Colorado.
The Patagonian Desert
In the narrow southern tip of South America, some 0.26 million
square miles of desert area lie in a region where mere land-sea
geography ought to preclude any but a very cool moist climate. The
Patagonia area is dry for one reason--it is the world's outstanding
example of a "rainshadow" desert.
The Andes barrier immediately to the west effectively shut off
the moist westerlies blowing in from the South Pacific. Perhaps
half or more of this desert lies within only 200 miles of either
the Atlantic or the Pacific oceans. One is tempted to term Patagonia
a "maritime desert."
The Thar Desert
This desert lies along both sides of the Indus near the tatter's
mouth, a seemingly odd location when one thinks of the general pattern
of India's Southwest Monsoon. That the Thar is dry is due to the
rather sharp northwestward boundary to the moist current of the
monsoon. The analogy between, say, Karachi in the Thar and, say,
Yuma in the Sonoran Desert is very close. Both lie just a bit too
far west of the main monsoonal upperair flow to receive much monsoonal
rainfall, save in exceptional years.
The Indus Valley, like the Nile and the Mesopotamian Valleys, was
the site of very early civilizations. The cities of Mohenjo-Daro
and Harappa were large communities four thousand years ago. Whether
their decline was due to climatological changes is controversial.
Archaeological evidence such as oversized street-drains, baths in
most houses, and various pictorial representations of humid-zone
fauna have been adduced by Piggott (1950) to support the view that
the Southwest Monsoon must have lain farther west four thousand
years ago than it does today and that the decline of these cities
was dictated by an eastward shift to the modern pattern. Here, as
in all other paleoclimatic arguments, caution is indicated.
The Kalahari Desert
Although the Kalahari bears the name of "desert," most
of the Kalahari is only a Koeppen steppe (BS area). The portion
truly constituting a Koeppen BW area covers 0.22 million square
miles, exactly half the area of the BW region of North America.
The Kalahari is to be regarded as chiefly a rainshadow arid region.
The southeast trades of the Indian Ocean strike the east coast of
Africa and lose so much moisture in crossing the Drakensberg Range
that they descend as a warm, dry current into the Kalahari. The
Kalahari extends out to the coastal desert known as the Namib, a
close analog of the Atacama-Peruvian Desert.
The Taklamakan Desert
This desert occupies about 0.20 million square miles in the middle
of the Tarim Basin of Sinkiang. Like Turkestan, its history is intimately
entwined with that of the caravan routes from China to the Near
East. It is difficult to decide whether to assert that the Taklamakan
is a rainshadow desert or just a land-locked region too far from
any moisture source to receii much rainfall. The area is agriculturally
unimportant, but has some fascinating regional hydrologic problems
that have been most confusing to students of climatic fluctuation.
The Iranian Desert
This is a very small desert--only 0.15 million square miles in
area. The presence of many Neolithic occupation sites plus the ruins
of capitols of powerful empires in or near this desert area raise
questions of climatic change. The bleak landscape surrounding Persepolis
today is probably enough to encourage such speculation on the part
of anyone viewing it, but the evidence-for marked desiccation in
this area is not conclusive.
The sand dunes of the southeastern parts of the Iranian Desert
are reportedly the largest (highest) of any desert in the world,
rivalled only by those of the Taklamakan, according to desert explorers.
The Atacama-Peruvian Desert
The smallest desert area of all these here considered (0.14 million
square miles), the Atacama enjoys the reputation of being the driest
area on earth. The town of Arica averaged only 0.02 inches per year
over a 17year period of record, and all of this came in just three
measurable showers. Iquique, another town in the area, has a long-term
average annual precipitation of only 0.05 inches. This may be compared,
for example, with the rough estimate of one inch per year in the
heart of the Sahara, about three inches per year near Yuma, Arizona,
and about five inches per year in interior Australia. The great
dryness of the Atacama Desert is chiefly attributable to the persistent
subsidence of air in the South Pacific anticyclone, but upwelling
of cold bottom water along the coast is a secondary factor. As in
the Namib, or as in the Vizcaino of Baja California, the coastal
strip (perhaps ten miles deep) of this desert is extremely foggy
despite its rainlessness. The cold offshore water is responsible
for this feature of the climates of such low-latitude west coast
littoral deserts. It is, perhaps, one of the most ironical aspects
of the entire disposition of climatic liabilities to the world's
arid region, that in the Atacama coastal region the native suffers
under the joint climatic handicaps of frequent, heavy fogs and of
almost utter lack of precipitation:
Bibliography
Kendrew, W.G. The Climates of the Continents, 3rd Edition,
New York, Oxford University Press, 1937.
Mintz, G., and Dean, G. "The Observed Mean Field of Motion
of the Atmosphere," (Geophysics Research Paper No. 17), Air
Force Cambridge Research Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1952.
Piggott, S. 1950. Prehistoric India. Harmondsworth, Penguin
Books, 1950.
Taylor, G. Australia.5th Edition, London, Methuen and
Co., 1949.
From:
Arid Lands Colloquia,
1958-1959. Tucson, Ariz.: The University of Arizona Press,
1959. p.3-13.
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Residents
of arid lands looking out upon the more humid parts of the world are
prone to complain that their own lands are not getting their proper
share of world rainfall, as if there were some self-evident reason
for believing that precipitation is a process to be taken for granted.
As a meteorologist, I am forced to the opposite view; to me it seems
rather more remarkable that our world is not entirely arid. |