Author:
Bakker Natalie L.,Drake Nick A.,Bristow Charlie S.
Abstract
Abstract. Northern African mineral dust provides the Amazon Basin with
essential nutrients during the boreal winter months, when the trajectory of the
Saharan dust plume is towards South America. This process, however, is still
poorly understood. There is little knowledge of where the dust is coming
from, and, thus, little information regarding the concentration of nutrients in the dust. This
information is vital to assess the impact it will have on the Amazon. In
order to further our understanding of the problem, this study analyses
northern African dust sources of the boreal winter dust seasons between the
years 2015 and 2017. It utilises high spatio-temporal resolution remote sensing
data from SEVIRI, MODIS, VIIRS, and Sentinel-2 to identify dust sources,
classify them according to a geomorphic dust source scheme, and quantify the
relative importance of source regions by calculating the total dust mass
they produce. Results indicate that palaeolakes emit the most dust, with the
Bodélé Depression as the single largest dust source region. However,
alluvial deposits also produce a substantial amount of dust. During the
boreal winter dust seasons of 2015–2017, ∼36 % of the total
dust mass emitted from northern Africa was associated with alluvial
deposits, yet this geomorphic category has been relatively understudied to
date. Furthermore, sand deposits were found to produce relatively little
dust, in contrast to the results of other recent studies.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Cited by
22 articles.
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