2011
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-21117-1_7
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Dynamics of Dust Transfer from the Desiccated Aral Sea Bottom Analysed by Remote Sensing

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Cited by 13 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The current generation of chemical transport models is unlikely to represent the source near the Aral Sea without an explicit parameterization of the drying sea. The desiccation of the Aral Sea over recent decades has resulted in a steady decline in water coverage over the area (Shi et al, 2014;Shi and Wang, 2015) and has led to the dried up sea bed becoming an increasing source of dust activity in the region (Spivak et al, 2012). Indoitu et al (2015) found that most dust events are directed towards the west, consistent with the OMI observations.…”
Section: Mean Uvai Values For 2005-2015supporting
confidence: 74%
“…The current generation of chemical transport models is unlikely to represent the source near the Aral Sea without an explicit parameterization of the drying sea. The desiccation of the Aral Sea over recent decades has resulted in a steady decline in water coverage over the area (Shi et al, 2014;Shi and Wang, 2015) and has led to the dried up sea bed becoming an increasing source of dust activity in the region (Spivak et al, 2012). Indoitu et al (2015) found that most dust events are directed towards the west, consistent with the OMI observations.…”
Section: Mean Uvai Values For 2005-2015supporting
confidence: 74%
“…However, only 9.4 erosive event days/year occurred due to favorable conditions such as dry soil, predominant wind directions from east, northeast, west, and northwest. The data matches with aerosol observations reported by Spivak et al (2012), recorded on average 13 SDS event days/year between 2000 and 2009.…”
Section: Various Soil Conditions Present In the Drysupporting
confidence: 90%
“…In the last thirty years of the 20th century, however, the dust storm activities showed a significant downward trend over the entire region (Indoitu et al, 2012). In contrast, the Aral Sea region has shown a major increasing trend in dust storms' strength and frequency (Spivak et al, 2012). In the absence of the conventional system of dust storm monitoring -there are no meteorological stations established on the dried bottom of the Aral Sea, and the meteorological station on Vozrojdenie Island was closed in 1992 -the only source of information is remote sensing.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%