Horrific Arizona dust storm only the beginning of alarming new trend?

July 13, 2011 PHOENIX –  The massive dust storm that engulfed Phoenix last week was unusual for the 20th century, but could become more common in the 21st. The storm resulted from thunderstorm-cooled air plummeting into the ground like mist pouring from an open freezer, only exponentially more powerful. Combine those winds with extremely dry conditions, and the result was a wall of dust 100 miles wide and 5,000 feet high. Dust storms are common in the U.S. southwest, but not storms this big. No formal records are kept, but meteorologists said it was the largest such storm in at least 30 years. It was on par with storms seen in China’s Gobi desert and Australia. Some commentators invoked the apocalyptic storms of the 1930’s Dust Bowl. As dry as it’s been in the southwest this year, with precipitation 50 percent below mid-20th century levels, there’s reason to think that extra-dry conditions will continue to prevail. Extreme, century-long droughts are not uncommon in the southwest, and the drought that started in the late 1990s appears to fit that pattern. Whether it’s a consequence of climate change or would have happened regardless is debated, but the bottom line is a dry one. Moreover, temperatures in the southwest, which have already risen by 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit since the mid-20th century, are expected to rise by another 4 to 10 degrees by this century’s end. Researchers have studied what this will mean for dust. In January, scientists from the United States Geological Survey released the results of a 20 year-long survey of relationships between temperature, vegetation and soil loss on the Colorado Plateau, a region spanning Utah, New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona. They found that higher temperatures reduce plant density, which in turn removes roots that hold soil together. “Our results suggest that increased temperatures associated with climate change will indirectly lead to increased wind erosion and dust emission on the Colorado Plateau,” they concluded. -Wired
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This entry was posted in Climate unraveling, Dust Storm, Earth Changes, Earth Watch, Extreme Weather Event, Food chain unraveling. Bookmark the permalink.

8 Responses to Horrific Arizona dust storm only the beginning of alarming new trend?

  1. pam says:

    Did anyone else see the CNN video with what appeared to be UFOs darting out in advance of the cloud? Really interesting. Apparently even the CNN media person slowed the film down to point them out.

    • Summer says:

      No, and I live here. I did see the CNN video, which I questioned up until the last few seconds when you could see the objects actually flying in the dust. At first I thought it might just be the sun reflecting off of other helicopters that were also in the area filming the storm. CNN seemed to be the only one that captured those pictures. Which I think is interesting as there’s a ton of footage of the storm from media to personal pictures and videos and no one else caught the “unidentified flying objects”. Hmmmm???? Real??… Unless someone else can come forward with pictures, I’m doubting it.

      • kathrin says:

        could you please share the link?
        kathrin

      • Jim Speiser says:

        This was most likely electrical discharges caused by a buildup of potential within the cloud. These can become quite large and bright, and appear to dart around. Has something to do with the friction between the dust particles.
        *Not a scientist…but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night…

    • Jim Speiser says:

      Or that.

  2. Bildo says:

    A 20 year study? Why didn’t they just call me? I knew that hot air dries out soil and plants die and then there’s no roots to hold the soil, so the soil blows away.

  3. luisport says:

    Regarding the VEI of Puyehue-Cordón Caulle

    In the study, published in the Website of the academic organization, hypothesis like the area covered by volcanic ashes – about 1,700 square kilometres, with thickness average of ten centimetres – were among the most interesting findings.

    http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/72965/chile%C2%B4s-puyehue-volcano-eruption-equals-70-atomic-bombs

    By my calculation, it’s .17 km3 of tephra which would make it a VEI 4

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