نتایج جستجو برای: climate aridity

تعداد نتایج: 171002  

Journal: :desert 0
a. pahlavanravi faculty of natural resources, university of zabol, zabol, iran a. miri faculty of natural resources, university of zabol, zabol, iran h. ahmadi islamic azad university, science and research branch, tehran, iran m.r. ekhtesasi faculty of natural resources, university of yazd, yazd, iran

dust storms are catastrophic natural disasters that beside other disasters frequency occur in the arid and semiaridregions worldwide. drought occurrence, climate aridity, dryness of the hamoun lake cause strong winds to below.these conditions have been prepared for dust storms in sistan region. the damages to sistan society have beenmeasured using different criteria. the result shows that, peak...

2005
Toshiyuki Fujioka John Chappell Masahiko Honda Igor Yatsevich Keith Fifield Derek Fabel

Stony deserts are durable indicators of aridity but until now have not been directly dated. Using 21Ne and 10Be produced in surface rocks by cosmic rays, we show that Australian stony deserts formed 2–4 Ma, at the time when global cooling initiated the Quaternary ice ages and intensified aridity-induced major landscape changes in central Australia. This is the first direct determination of ston...

2006
G. S. McGrath M. Sivapalan

The episodic nature of hydrological flows such as surface runoff and preferential flow is a result of the nonlinearity of their triggering and the intermittency of rainfall. In this paper we examine the temporal dynamics of threshold processes that are triggered by either an infiltration excess (IE) mechanism when rainfall intensity exceeds a spec5 ified threshold value, or a saturation excess ...

Journal: :Remote Sensing 2015
Troy Sternberg Henri Rueff Nick Middleton

Deserts are critical environments because they cover 41% of the world’s land surface and are home to 2 billion residents. As highly dynamic biomes desert expansion and contraction is influenced by climate and anthropogenic factors with variability being a key part of the desertification debate across dryland regions. Evaluating a major world desert, the Gobi in East Asia, with high resolution s...

2007
M. C. Quigley

Geologic and chronometric studies of alluvial fan sequences in south-central Australia provide insights into the roles of tectonics and climate in continental landscape evolution.The most voluminous alluvial fans in the Flinders Ranges region have developed adjacent to catchments uplifted by Plio-Quaternary reverse faults, implying that young tectonic activity has exerted a ¢rstorder control on...

2012
Soumaïla Pagabeleguem Mamadou Sangaré Zakaria Bengaly Massouroudin Akoudjin Adrien M. G. Belem Jérémy Bouyer

BACKGROUND In sub-Saharan countries infested by tsetse flies, African Animal Trypanosomosis (AAT) is considered as the main pathological constraint to cattle breeding. Africa has known a strong climatic change and its population was multiplied by four during the last half-century. The aim of this study was to characterize the impact of production practices and climate on tsetse occurrence and a...

2003
R. S. Thompson

Simulations of the climatic response to midHolocene (6 ka BP) orbital forcing with two coupled ocean–atmosphere models (FOAM and CSM) show enhancement of monsoonal precipitation in parts of the American Southwest, Central America and northernmost South America during Northern Hemisphere summer. The enhanced onshore flow that brings precipitation into Central America is caused by a northward dis...

2011
R. Singh T. Wagener K. van Werkhoven M. E. Mann

Projecting how future climatic change might impact streamflow is an important challenge for hydrologic science. The common approach to solve this problem is by forcing a hydrologic model, calibrated on historical data or using a priori parameter estimates, with future scenarios of precipitation and temperature. However, several recent studies suggest that the climatic regime of the calibration ...

2012
Nelson Ting Christos Astaras Gail Hearn Shaya Honarvar Joel Corush Andrew S Burrell Naomi Phillips Bethan J Morgan Elizabeth L Gadsby Ryan Raaum Christian Roos

It is difficult to predict how current climate change will affect wildlife species adapted to a tropical rainforest environment. Understanding how population dynamics fluctuated in such species throughout periods of past climatic change can provide insight into this issue. The drill (Mandrillus leucophaeus) is a large-bodied rainforest adapted mammal found in West Central Africa. In the middle ...

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