This work is funded by the Army Research Office, Terrestrial
Sciences Program.
Pelletier, J.D., and J.P. Cook, Deposition of playa windblown dust over geologic time scales, in review.
Abstract: Unusually thick eolian deposits are commonly observed
beneath desert pavements downwind of dust-emitting playas. These
deposits play an important role in piedmont-surface evolution,
controlling surface hydrologic conductivity and rates of pedogenesis. To
better understand the factors controlling the spatial distribution of
eolian deposition, we developed a numerical model that treats
deposition from spatially-distributed playa sources using analytic,
point-source solutions for deposition from a Gaussian plume. The model
also accounts for complex downwind topography. As a test case, model
predictions were compared to eolian-deposit thicknesses on the Eagle
Mountain Piedmont, southern Amargosa Valley, which receives dust from
nearby Franklin Lake Playa. The close relationship between the model
predictions and mapped thicknesses suggests that eolian transport and
deposition can be modeled from basin to regional scales within this
framework. These results have important implications for hydrologic,
pedogenic, and air-quality problems.
figures from the paper:

