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Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Climates of the World’s Deserts. Some General Properties. Meteorological characteristics Surface characteristics Vegetation characteristics. Variety of Properties. Cold deserts and hot deserts

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Chapter 3

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  1. Chapter 3 Climates of the World’s Deserts

  2. Some General Properties • Meteorological characteristics • Surface characteristics • Vegetation characteristics

  3. Variety of Properties • Cold deserts and hot deserts • Deserts with winter precipitation and deserts with summer precipitation and deserts with virtually no precipitation • Perpetually foggy deserts and deserts with near the maximum possible sunshine • Barren deserts and heavily vegetated deserts • Sand-dune deserts and deserts with rocky plains

  4. Summary of MeteorologicalCharacteristics (Then we’ll cover physiographic and vegetation characteristics)

  5. Desert Climate Types

  6. Warm Versus Cold Deserts

  7. Daily total solar energy received at top of atmosphere on horizontal surface COLD DESERT WARM DESERT

  8. Climate% arid landsColdest moWarmest moExamples Hot 43 10-30 >30 Central Sahara Great Sandy (Aust) Mild Winter 18 10-20 10-30 Southern Sahara Kalahari Mexico Deserts Simpson (Aust) Cool Winter 15 0-10 10-30 Northern Sahara Atacama Mojave Cold Winter 24 <0 10-30 Canadian Prairie Gobi Turkestan Deserts of China Great Basin

  9. Coastal/Foggy Desert • Summer temperatures are not especially high, but the winters are not cold because the ocean is close • Can be very uncomfortable because of high humidity

  10. Temperature (solid) and Relative Humidity (dashed), at Different Distances From Namib Desert Coast FOG 30 km from coast 5 km from coast Far inland

  11. Precipitation

  12. Seasonality of Precipitation (some/none of each)

  13. A Closer Look

  14. Rule of Thumb • Summer precip on Equatorial side • Winter precip on mid-latitude side

  15. Desert Temperature • Why is it high? • Lack of evaporation from surface • Lack of vegetation (transpiration) • Not much cloud cover

  16. Cloud Cover

  17. Desert Winds • Subtropical deserts - High pressure areas are generally characterized by weak winds - Thunderstorms can produce high winds - Mid-latitude disturbances (lows) with high winds can penetrate into deserts • Cold deserts in mid-latitudes, experience mid-latitude cyclones (lows) that can have strong winds • Lack of vegetation – near-surface winds higher • Winds are very desiccating – high temperature coupled with high winds

  18. Desert Humidity • Relative humidity can be as low as a few percent, or as high as 100% (foggy coastal desert) • Specific humidity • Compared to hot humid tropics, desert air is drier • But desert air of 95 F and 15% RH has more water vapor than does saturated air at 32 F in a winter storm

  19. Humidity Calculations • Use the table on the previous slide to find vapor pressure, saturation vapor pressure, and relative humidity for: • Temperature = 38 C, Dew point = 7 C • Temperature = -1 C, Dew point = -4 C • Which location is more humid? • It depends on how you define humidity!!!!

  20. Desert Humidity • Compare the relative and absolute humidity of a desert and winter storm • Desert • 95 F and 15% RH • Find dew point temperature for these conditions • Winter storm • 32 F and 100% RH • Find dew point temperature for these conditions • Which location is more humid?

  21. General Physiographic Characteristics(Why do we care in a meteorology course?)

  22. Types • Sand “sheets” and sand dunes • Bare flat rock • “Desert pavement” – matrix of pebbles cemented together on the surface • Salt flats • Large rocks and mountains • Clay plains

  23. Mojave

  24. Northern Chihuahuan Desert

  25. Areas With Interior Drainage

  26. General Vegetation Characteristics

  27. Vegetation Types • Small trees • Shrubs • Succulents • Grasses • Herbs • Lichens

  28. Vegetation Types That are Adapted to Desert Conditions • Phreatophyte – long roots • Xerophyte – mechanisms for conserving water • Halophytes – adapted to saline soils • Psammophytes – grow in sandy soils • Therophytes (annuals) – seeds remain dormant in soil during dry season or dry years (contrast with perennial)

  29. Landscape Types in Terms of Vegetation • Steppes – grassland without trees, generally in midlatitudes • Savannas – also open grassland, but there are scattered shrubs and trees (subtropical, representing a transition between tropical forests and grassland of arid areas)

  30. The Deserts of Africa

  31. African Deserts

  32. Orography of the Sahara and Sahel

  33. Large-Scale Weather Patterns of the Sahara and Sahel

  34. Climate of the Horizontal Wind and Sea-level Pressure

  35. Penetration of Monsoon and Frontal Precipitation

  36. Monthly Precipitation

  37. Maximum Observed 24-h Precipitation (mm)

  38. Maximum Observed Annual Precipitation (mm)

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