Hot Arid Wind Landforms
- Each desert landscape is unique due to past and present interactions of rocks and processes operating on them
- Wind and water action are the most important processes, although weathering, mass movement and vegetation also play a role
Wind landforms of erosion
- The wind is responsible for the formation of a number of distinct landforms, including:
- Deflation hollows and desert pavements
- Ventifacts
- Yardangs and zeugens
- Rock pedestals
Ventifacts
- Ventifacts are faceted cobbles and pebbles that have undergone erosion and shaping by wind-blown sediment
- Formed in the direction of the prevailing winds
- There are sharp edges separating the leeward side from the windward side
Diagram showing the formation of a ventifact
Yardangs
- Yardangs look like an upturned boat
- They are elongated, streamlined ridges, that are less than 10 m high and more than 100 m long
- They are formed where vertical layers of resistant and less resistant rock are aligned to the direction of the prevailing wind
- Abrasion causes the less resistant rock to erode, leaving behind vertical yardangs of resistant rock and creating deep troughs.
- People are not 100% sure about their formation yet, but due to their alignment with the prevailing winds and the abrasion from sand erosion at their bases, this suggests that wind plays a part in their formation
Yardangs and zeugens form in the same way, but the layers of resistant and less resistant rock lie differently
Zeugens
- Zeugens form in the same way as yardangs, but the layers of resistant and less resistant rock lie horizontally
- The resulting ridges can be anything from 3 to 30 metres high
- Joints in the resistant rock widen through weathering
- Abrasion deepens the furrows down into the less resistant rock beneath
- Undercutting of the furrows may also occur to give them a pedestal-like shape with a flat cap rock which protects the underlying, less resistant rock
- As the primary process is abrasion, which is concentrated within 2 m of the desert floor, zeugens often have an eroded, narrower base
Pedestal rocks
- Pedestal rocks are also called 'mushroom rocks'
- Thought to be the final remains of a zeugen, they are again primarily formed as a result of aeolian abrasion
- It can also be found in areas where isolated rock peaks are exposed to the surface
- Made of alternating, horizontal bands of sedimentary rock
- Winds carrying fine sand particles act as an abrasive and start cutting and polishing the exposed rock
- Abrasion works up to a maximum height of 2m
- The softer, least resistant rock is eroded faster than the case hardened upper cap
- Effectively creating a mushroom-like structure
- Continued erosion leads to the eventual collapse of the pedestal
Image showing the formation of a pedestal 'mushroom' rock
Examiner Tip
You may have to describe the formation of a landform. Refer to shape, size, geology and field relationship (the position of the landform in relation to the landscape). Make sure you are able to draw a labelled diagram of the landform to support your description.
Wind landforms of deposition
- Wind-deposited material occurs as:
- Sand sheets
- Ripples
- Dunes and sand seas
Sand sheets
- These are flat areas of sand with sand grains that are too large to saltate (bounce)
- 45% of all depositional surfaces are of this type, e.g. Selima in South Egypt
Sand ripples
- These are small landforms formed by the wind
- They consist of crests and troughs and develop at right angles to the wind
- The main difference between a ripple and a dune is size, with dunes being taller than about 10 cm
Sand dunes
- The wind eventually blows sand into a network of troughs, crests and ripples that are perpendicular to the wind direction
- They are the consequence of saltation
- They become a dune when the crest is about 30 cm high and the slip-face's angle of repose is 34°
- Dunes grow as sand particles move up the gentle, windward slope by the processes of saltation and surface creep
- The sand particles continually fall over the crest of the dune, onto the steeper, slightly concaved, leeward slope/slip face
- The top of the slip face is steep because it is made of fine-grained sand and it is kept steep by wind eddies
- The bottom of the slip face is gentle, contains coarse-grained sand and may have further sand ripples
- A sand dune can move up to 30 metres a year and can be several metres high
- The Duna Federico Kirbus, Argentina is the highest dune in the world, measuring 1234 metres in height (2845 metres above sea level)
- The Big Dipper, Merthyr Mawr, Wales, is home to the tallest dune in the UK and the second-largest in Europe, measuring around 61m
Image showing how a sand dune is formed, dependent on wind and loose sand.
Types of sand dunes
- There are many types of sand dunes but the two most common are:
- Barchan dunes
- Seif or longitudinal dunes
Barchan dunes
- These are the typical crescent-shaped dunes
- Found in isolation in deserts where there is a limited supply of sand but a very dominant wind direction
- Barchan dunes form at right angles to the prevailing wind in one direction
- They have wind-pushed horns that curve in the direction of the slip face
Diagram showing the characteristic features and formation of barchan dunes
Seif or longitudinal dunes
- These are elongated, linear sand dunes
- Most often found in extensive areas of sand known as sand seas
- They can stretch for several hundred metres
- Formed from two dominant prevailing winds in two different directions
- One blows in one direction for part of the year
- The second blows from the other direction for the remainder of the year
- Seif dunes form parallel to the wind direction and may develop from barchan dunes
Diagram showing the formation of seif dunes