Desert Landforms
Desert Landforms
Desert Landforms
RIZWAN AHMED
DESERT
BY MD. RIZWAN AHMED
• A desert is a barren area of landscape where little precipitation occurs and, consequently, living
conditions are hostile for plant and animal life. The lack of vegetation exposes the unprotected surface
of the ground to the processes of denudation. About one-third of the land surface of the world is arid
or semi-arid.
• This includes much of the Polar Regions, where little precipitation occurs, and which are sometimes
called polar deserts or “cold deserts”. Deserts can be classified by the amount of precipitation that
falls, by the temperature that prevails, by the causes of desertification, or by their geographical
location.
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Types of Deserts
• Hamada/Rocky Desert
➢ Consist of large stretches of bare rocks, swept clear of sand & dust by wind.
➢ Exposed rocks are thoroughly smoothened, polished & highly sterile
• Reg/Stony Desert
➢ Composed of extensive sheets of angular pebbles & gravels which the wind is not able to blow
off.
➢ Stony deserts are more accessible than sandy deserts & large herds of camels kept there.
• Erg/Sandy Desert
➢ Also known as the sea of sand
➢ Winds deposit vast stretches of undulating sand dunes in the direction of winds
• Mountain Deserts
➢ Deserts which are found on the highlands such as on plateaus & mountain ranges, where
erosion has dissected the desert highland into rough chaotic peaks & uneven ranges.
➢ Their steep slopes consist of Wadis (dry valleys) with sharp & irregular edges carved due to
the action of frost.
5. BADLANDS
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• Action of Wind
• Efficient in arid regions as little vegetation or moisture to bind the loose surface materials.
• It is carried out in the following ways:
• Deflation
❖ Involves lifting & blowing away of loose materials from the ground.
❖ Blowing capacity depending largely on the size of the material lifted from the
surface.
❖ Finer dust & sands may be removed miles away from their place of origin &
may get deposited even outside the desert margins.
❖ Deflation results in the lowering of the land surface to form large depressions
called Deflation hollows.
• Abrasion
❖ Sandblasting of rock surfaces by the wind when they hurl sand particles against
them. (When wind loaded with sand grains erodes the rock by grinding against
its walls is called abrasion or sandblasting)
❖ This results in rock surfaces being scratched, polished & worn away.
❖ Abrasion is most effective near the base of the rocks, where the amount of
material the wind is able to carry is greatest.
❖ This explains why telegraphic poles in the deserts are protected by covering of
metal for a foot or two above the ground.
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• Attrition
❖ When wind-borne particles roll against one another in the collision, they wear
each other away. (Wear and tear of sand particles while they are being
transported)
❖ Hence their sizes are greatly reduced & grains are rounded into millet seed sand.
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Arid Landforms
✓ Wind Eroded Arid Landforms.
✓ Depositional Arid Landforms.
✓ Water Eroded Arid Landforms.
• Zeugen
❖ Tabular masses which have a layer of soft rocks lying
beneath a surface layer of more resistant rocks. (A
table-shaped area of rock found in arid and semi-
arid areas formed when more resistant rock is
reduced at a slower rate than softer rocks around
it).
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❖ Difference in the erosional effect of the wind on soft & resistant rock surfaces, carve them into
weird looking ridge & furrow landscape.
❖ Mechanical weathering initiates their formation by opening up joints of the surface rocks.
❖ Wind abrasion further eats into the underlying softer layer so that deep furrows are developed.
❖ The hard rock then stands above the furrows as ridges or Zeugen.
❖ Zeugen may stand 10 to 100 feet above the sunken furrows.
❖ Continuous abrasion by winds gradually lowers the Zeugen & widens the furrow.
• Yardangs
• Yardangs looks quite similar to Zeugen but instead of lying on horizontal strata
upon one another, the hard & soft rocks of Yardangs are vertical bands.
• Rocks are aligned in the direction of prevailing winds.
• Winds abrasion excavates the bands of softer rocks into long, narrow corridors,
separating the steep-sided over handing ridges of hard rock called Yardangs.
abrasion to shapes resembling Brazil nuts. Rock fragments, mechanically weathered from
mountains and upstanding rocks, are moved by wind and smoothed on the windward side.
• If the wind direction changes another facet is developed. Such rocks have characteristic flat
facets with sharp edges.
• Amongst the ventifacts those with three wind-faceted surfaces are called dreikanter. These
wind-faceted pebbles form the desert pavement a smooth, mosaic-like region, closely covered
by the numerous rock fragments and pebbles.
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• Deflation Hollows
• Winds lower the ground by blowing
away the unconsolidated materials,
and small depressions may form.
Similarly, minor faulting can also
initiate depressions and the eddying
action of on-coming winds will wear
off the weaker rocks until the water
table is reached.
• Water then seeps out forming oasis
or swamps, in the deflation hollows
or depressions.
• Large areas in the western U.S.A., stripped of their natural vegetation for farming, were
completely deflated when strong winds, moved materials as dust storms, laying waste crops
and creating what is now known as the Great Dust Bowl.
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As wind borne materials are shifted according to their coarseness, it can be expected that the
coarser sands will be too heavy to be blown out of desert limits.
They remain as dunes or other depositional landforms within desert themselves.
Dunes
➢ Dunes are, in fact, hills of sand formed by the accumulation of sand and shaped by the movement
of winds.
➢ They may be active or live dunes, constantly on the move, or inactive fixed dunes, rooted with
vegetation.
➢ Dunes are most well represented in the erg desert where a sea of sand is being continuously moved,
reshaped, and re-deposited into a variety of features.
➢ Generally, their heights vary from a few meters to 20 meters but in some cases dunes are several
hundred metres high and 5 to 6 km long.
➢ Two most common types of dunes are Barchan & Seifs.
➢ Barchan:
➢ These are crescentic or moon-shaped dunes that occur individually or in groups. They are live
dunes that advance steadily before winds that come from a particular prevailing direction. They
are most prevalent in the deserts of Turkestan and in the Sahara.
➢ Barchans are initiated probably by a chance accumulation of sand at an obstacle, such as a
patch of grass or a heap of rocks. They occur transversely to the wind, so that their horns thin
out and become lower in the direction of the wind due to the reduced frictional retardation of
the winds around the edges.
➢ The windward side is convex and gently sloping while the leeward side, being sheltered, is
concave and steeps (the slip-face).
➢ The crest of the sand dune moves forward as more sand is accumulated by the prevailing wind.
➢ The sand is driven up the windward side and, on reaching the crest, slips down the leeward side
so that the dune advances.
➢ The migration of the barchans may be a threat to desert life for they may encroach on an oasis
burying palm trees or houses.
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➢ Long-rooted sand-holding trees and grasses are therefore planted to halt the advance of the
dunes thus preventing areas of fertile land from being devastated.
➢ Under the action of winds, barchans take a chaotic changing pattern. Several barchans may
coalesce into a line of irregular ridges, ever-
changing with the direction of the winds. Ergs
or sandy deserts are thus most difficult to cross.
Transverse Dunes:
Parabolic Dunes:
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They are U-shaped and are much longer and narrow than barchans.
Star Dunes:
Loess
• The fine dust blown beyond the desert limits is deposited on neighbouring lands as loess. It is a yellow,
friable material and is usually very fertile. Loess is in fact, fine loam, rich in lime, very coherent, and
extremely porous. Water sinks in readily so that the surface is always dry. (In some parts of the world,
windblown dust and silt blanket the land. This layer of fine, mineral-rich materials is called
loess).
• Streams have cut deep valleys through the thick mantle of soft loess and Badland topography may
develop. It is so soft that roads constructed through a loess region soon sink and their walls rise steeply.
The most extensive deposit of loess is found in northwest China in the loess plateau of the Hwang- Ho
basin.
• It is estimated to cover an area of 250,000 square miles, and the deposits have accumulated to a depth
of 200 to 500 feet! In China, such yellowish wind-borne dust from the Gobi Desert is called ‘Hwangtu’
— the yellow earth! But the original tern loess actually comes from a village in Alsace, France bearing
that name, where such deposits occurred.
• Similar deposits also occur in some parts of Germany France and Belgium and are locally called Limon
They are also wind-borne but were blown from material deposited at the edge of ice sheets during the
Ice Ages. In parts of the Mid-West, U.S.A. loess was derived from the ice sheets which covered
northern North America and is termed adobe.
• The thickest loess deposits are near the Missouri River in the U.S. state of lowa.
• Loess often develops into extremely fertile agricultural soil. It is full of minerals and drains water very
well. It is easily tilled, or broken up, for planting seeds.
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BOLSONS – The intermontane basins in dry regions are generally known as Bolsons.
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➢ Three unique landforms viz. pediments, bajadas, and playas are typically found in bolsons.
➢ Small streams flow into bolsons, where water is accumulated. These temporary lakes are called
Playas.
➢ Formed in arid or semi-arid areas by intermittent streams flowing into depressions.
➢ Contain high percentage of salts due to high
evaporation & lower precipitation.
➢ The playa plain covered up by salts is called
alkali flats/After the evaporation of water, salt-
covered playas are called Salinas.
• Pediment
• An erosional plain formed at the base of the surrounding mountain scarps -steep slope.
• They are gently inclined rocky floors
close to the mountains at their foot
with or without a thin cover of
debris.
• They form through the erosion of
mountain front through a
combination of lateral erosion by
streams and sheet flooding.
• Through parallel retreat of slopes, the pediments extend backwards at the expense of
mountain front
• Gradually, the mountain gets reduced leaving
an inselberg which is a remnant of the
mountain.
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• That’s how the high relief in desert areas is reduced to low featureless plains called
Pedi-plains.
• Badlands
➢ Consists of gully & ravines formed on hill slopes & rock surfaces by the extent of water action
➢ In arid regions occasional rainstorms produce numerous rills and channels which extensively
erode weak sedimentary formation.
➢ Ravines and gullies are developed by linear fluvial erosion leading to the formation of Badlands
topography.
➢ Not fit for agriculture & survival.
➢ Finally leads to the abandonment of the entire region by its inhabitant.
➢ Example: Chambal Ravines.
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• Alluvium fans
Alluvium fans are cone shaped heaps of sand that are deposited on the exit of a wadi or valley.
A wadi is a narrow dry valley with ephemeral water flow (water that flows during heavy rains
only). The valley is dry and baked most of the time, but during heavy downpours they can fill
up with water and transport all the alluvium from the upslope as sheet wash.
This alluvium is deposited as the wadi terminates into an open space. Energy is dissipated in
the open space and material spreads apart into a fan shape.
• Canyons/Gorges
Gorges (canyons in America) are deep narrow valleys that are excavated and eroded vertically
by rivers that flow along deserts.
The Grand Canyon in Arizona USA was formed by vertical erosion of sedimentary strata by
the Colorado River for millions of years.
1. CANYONS 2. GORGES
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