Particle production and aeolian transport from a "supply-limited" source area in the Chihuahuan desert, New Mexico, United States

TitleParticle production and aeolian transport from a "supply-limited" source area in the Chihuahuan desert, New Mexico, United States
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2001
AuthorsGillette D.E, Chen W
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research
Volume106
Pagination5267-5278
Date Published2001
Call Number00767
Keywordsaeolian processes, particle production, aeolian processes, Scrape Site, aeolian processes, transport, article, articles, dust emission, journal, journals, soil erosion, wind erosion
AbstractWind erosion mechanisms were investigated for the "scrape site" at the Jornada Experimental Range near Las Cruces, New Mexico, in the Chihuahuan desert. The scrape site was denuded of vegetation and scraped flat in 1991. We adopted the site in 1994 because it offered an opportunity to study wind erosion mechanisms for a large area of unprotected sandy and crusted soil in an otherwise natural setting and over a period of several years. We installed and operated the following instrumentation for a period of 35 months; three meteorological towers, each 2 m in height, with wind speed sensors at 0.2, 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 m above ground; air temperature at 0.2 and 2 m height; rain gauge; seven sets of particle collectors at 0.1, 0.5, and 1.0 m heights; and three fast-response particle mass flux sensors at 0.02, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.5 m heights; all along a transect crossing the site and parallel to the predominant southwesterly wind direction. The minimum threshold friction velocity for the scrape site with a thin layer of loose material was 25 cm s-1. This minimum threshold velocity increased to as high as 100 cm s-1 depending on the degree of particle depletion and the site's status which varied between supply unlimited just after a high wind episode and supply limited which was more typical for the rest of the time. The dominant mechanism producing fresh sediment for transport was sandblasting of the surface crust. The measurements showed that supply and availability of loose, fine particles on the surface is a strong control of rates of erosion rather than wind energy alone.
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