I Desert surfaces and weathering: processes and productsDesert surfaces and their associated weathering processes have continued to attract attention over the past year. Research into surface characteristics includes studies of microbiotic crusts, desert pavements and coatings such as rock varnish. Kidron et al. (2000) present an interesting study of the factors influencing the formation of cyanobacterial-and moss-dominated crusts in the western Negev Desert, Israel, concluding that aspect-controlled surface moisture duration was the key influence upon crust development. Desert pavements have been used as a relative dating tool in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Oman (Al Farraj and Harvey, 2000), with pavement development shown to be closely linked to the age of particular landscape components. Three key papers describe the development and significance of terrestrial and extraterrestrial rock varnishes, including an extremely useful review of the history of dating varnishes by Watchman (2000). Analyses of laminae within rock varnish samples from Nevada, USA (Liu et al., 2000), reveal that Mn-rich layers developed during relatively wetter conditions between 10 and 11 ka BP corresponding to a regional end-Pleistocene wet event. Varnishes exposed at the Martian Pathfinder site have also been used as a means of identifying the effectiveness of aeolian abrasion processes on the surface of Mars, confirming previous studies that postulated that the Pathfinder area lacked efficient abrasive particles (Kraft and Greeley, 2000).Amongst the various publications concerning weathering processes, greatest attention has been paid to the weathering of limestone and the operation of biological weathering mechanisms. Smith et al. (2000) describe polygenetic active and inactive weathering features arising from a complex suite of interacting processes, including solution, salt weathering and attack by endolithic and epilithic algae, operating at the microscale within pits and pans on limestone surfaces in southern Tunisia. This study confirms the need for weathering studies to focus upon conditions operating at the microscale across the rock/air interface identified within the last progress report . Polyphase karstic surface development is also the subject of a study in the UAE