Deck 14: The Work of Wind and Deserts

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Question
What type of weathering is dominant in deserts and why? What about other types of weathering?
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Question
What are ventifacts? How are multiple facets formed on ventifacts? Where are they found?
Question
What is desertification? Which regions are most susceptible to desertification? What causes desertification, and what are its effects?
Question
Why do dunes form? How are they self-generating?
Question
What are deserts, and where are they located on Earth?
Question
Think about what you learned about sedimentary rocks. Why would ancient cross-bedded sandstone beds, as seen in Zion National Park, Utah, be useful to geologists?
Question
How do dunes build their characteristic asymmetrical profile?
Question
Briefly describe the four main dune types and how they differ from each other?
Question
Briefly explain how mesas and buttes form.
Question
Briefly explain how a pediment is formed.
Question
What is air pressure, and how does it vary with temperature?
Question
Briefly explain how a rain-shadow desert forms.
Question
How does air flow with regard to air pressure? How would air flow on Earth if the planet didn't rotate? How does air flow since it does rotate?
Question
Describe sediment transport as bed load, including saltation.
Question
Why are flash floods and sheet flows common in deserts? What do these events have to do with erosion in the desert?
Question
Briefly explain why sand is moved by wind before clay and silt during wind erosion.
Question
Define the Coriolis effect. Which direction does Coriolis deflect winds? What does the word "apparent" mean in the definition?
Question
What is desert pavement, and how does it form?
Question
What are alluvial fans, and why are they common in desert mountain ranges?
Question
What produces the worldwide pattern of east-west-oriented wind belts?
Question
Briefly explain why most deserts develop in the mid-latitude dry climate zone.
Question
What are deflation hollows?
Question
What are some of the ways in which desert plants have adapted to the conditions in which they live?
Question
Briefly explain why loess can originate in, but is not deposited in, deserts.
Question
Explain the ways in which alluvial fans and deltas are similar.
Question
How do sand dunes migrate?
Question
Explain how wind can be a significant intercontinental agent of erosion and deposition.
Question
What are the four major dune types generally recognized?
Question
What are some of the characteristics of playas?
Question
Equatorial regions receive the most heat, while polar regions receive the lowest. Therefore, what air pressures would you expect to be characteristic of these regions?
Question
What can lithified or ancient sand dunes tell us?
Question
Besides deserts, where does wind play a role as a significant geologic agent?
Question
Why is wind unable to transport sediment with the same grain size competency as water?
Question
Since most deserts have internal drainage, why are there through-flowing streams, such as the Nile, Niger, Indus, and Colorado Rivers in some deserts?
Question
What are the three main sources from which loess is derived?
Question
Why do most desert streams never reach the sea?
Question
Briefly explain how the geological conditions that produced and deposited loess have determined the sites of the world's major grain belts.
Question
What factors enhance water erosion in deserts?
Question
What factors affect the type of dune that forms?
Question
How does saltation by wind differ from that in streams?
Question
Wind deposits composed of sand-sized particles that are deposited near their source are called ____________________.
Question
A saline, temporary lake in a desert is known as a(n) ____________________ lake.
Question
The two types of sediment load transported by wind are ____________________ and ____________________ load.
Question
Wind travels at a _____ speed than water but has a _____ density which allows it to carry mainly clay- and silt-size particles.
Question
Regions that receive more precipitation than arid regions but are moderately dry are ____________________ regions.
Question
Although loess forms in only a few environments, it covers approximately ____________________% of Earth's land surface.
Question
Stones whose polished, pitted, faceted surfaces have been produced by wind erosion are called ____________________.
Question
Alluvial fans are composed of sediment that is ____________________-sorted and ____________________ stratified.
Question
The Coriolis effect causes winds to be deflected to the ____________________ of their direction of motion in the Northern Hemisphere and to the ____________________ of their direction of motion in the Southern Hemisphere.
Question
The deflection of a moving mass from a straight line is known as the ____________________.
Question
Deserts receive less than ____________________ centimeters of rain per year, on average.
Question
The size of material that is frequently carried as suspended load by wind is ____________________ and ____________________.
Question
The drainage characteristic of most deserts in which streams dry up and do not have enough water to become integrated and reach outside their drainage areas is called ____________________ drainage.
Question
The transformation of formerly productive lands into deserts is called ____________________.
Question
Dunes that form long-parallel ridges of sand aligned generally parallel to the direction of the prevailing winds where sand supply is somewhat limited are ____________________ dunes.
Question
Air flows from ____________________ pressure regions to ____________________ pressure regions.
Question
A playa forms by ____________________ of a playa lake.
Question
____________________ involves the impact of saltating sand grains on an object.
Question
High pressure troughs exist where cooler, denser air begins to descend at about ____________________ to ____________________ degrees latitude, N and S.
Question
Dunes that form long ridges perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction in areas with abundant sand and little vegetation are ____________________ dunes.
Question
The most mobile dunes are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
Question
The size of particles that are usually the first to be set in motion by wind is(are):

A) silt.
B) clay.
C) sand.
D) pebbles.
E) boulders.
Question
Loess is important because it:

A) is an important source of building material.
B) is rich in important ore deposits.
C) sometimes contains petroleum.
D) makes fertile soil.
E) is an important source of groundwater.
Question
Desertification is a cause of concern as arable regions are lost as the deserts are expanding.
Question
Wind-blown deposits of silt and clay are called:

A) dunes.
B) loess.
C) ventifacts.
D) yardangs.
E) till.
Question
All dunes originate in desert conditions.
Question
Deserts mostly occur at ____ latitudes.

A) low
B) middle
C) high
D) low and middle
E) middle and high
Question
A common mode of mass wasting in deserts is:

A) mudflows.
B) rock fall.
C) creep.
D) slumps.
E) slides.
Question
The close-fitting mosaic of pebbles, cobbles, and boulders covering the floor of many deserts and semiarid regions is called:

A) ventifact.
B) desert pavement.
C) longitudinal dune.
D) yardang.
E) barchan dune.
Question
Long, parallel ridges of sand aligned parallel to the wind direction are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
Question
Sandblasting in nature is caused by the process of saltation.
Question
An erosional bedrock surface of low relief that slopes gently away from a mountain base is a(n):

A) alluvium.
B) bajada.
C) playa.
D) plain.
E) pediment.
Question
In the desert, wind is a more effective agent of erosion and deposition than water.
Question
Wind erodes by:

A) saltation.
B) abrasion.
C) deflation.
D) saltation and abrasion.
E) abrasion and deflation.
Question
Desertification is taking place in the Sahara but not in the developed world.
Question
Dunes that form when vegetation cover is broken by deflation and the dune tips point upwind are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
Question
Landforms that are made of relatively easily weathered sedimentary rocks capped by nearly horizontal more resistant rocks include

A) mesas.
B) ventifacts.
C) playas.
D) pediments.
Question
Long, parallel ridges of sand aligned perpendicular to the wind direction are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
Question
The process of encroachment/invasion of deserts into regions that were once productive is termed as?

A) evaporation
B) expansion
C) desertification
D) desiccation
E) dehydration
Question
The Coriolis effect is caused by:

A) wind shear between water and the atmosphere.
B) the axial tilt of the Earth.
C) the rotation of the Earth.
D) differences in air pressure in different regions.
E) Milankovitch cycles.
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Deck 14: The Work of Wind and Deserts
1
What type of weathering is dominant in deserts and why? What about other types of weathering?
Mechanical weathering is dominant because temperatures can fluctuate a great deal in a day and frost wedging is common in winter. Plant roots and salt crystal growth may also break down some rocks. Chemical weathering is almost slow to non-existent as the land is very arid because of scarcity of moisture and fewer plants mean fewer organic acids.
2
What are ventifacts? How are multiple facets formed on ventifacts? Where are they found?
Ventifacts are stones with polished, pitted, grooved, or faceted surfaces caused by wind abrasion. If the wind blows from different directions, the ventifacts will have multiple facets. Ventifacts are most common in deserts, but they can also form on beaches or outwash.
3
What is desertification? Which regions are most susceptible to desertification? What causes desertification, and what are its effects?
Desertification is the expansion of deserts into formerly productive lands. Regions that are most susceptible to desertification are those on the margins of existing deserts. Natural changes in climate can cause deserts to expand or contract, but currently human activities are accelerating the rate of desertification. These activities include improper farming activities, farming marginal lands, and overgrazing livestock. In regions experiencing desertification, people are potentially displaced, and in extreme cases it results in deaths due to starvation.
4
Why do dunes form? How are they self-generating?
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5
What are deserts, and where are they located on Earth?
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6
Think about what you learned about sedimentary rocks. Why would ancient cross-bedded sandstone beds, as seen in Zion National Park, Utah, be useful to geologists?
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7
How do dunes build their characteristic asymmetrical profile?
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8
Briefly describe the four main dune types and how they differ from each other?
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9
Briefly explain how mesas and buttes form.
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10
Briefly explain how a pediment is formed.
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11
What is air pressure, and how does it vary with temperature?
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12
Briefly explain how a rain-shadow desert forms.
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13
How does air flow with regard to air pressure? How would air flow on Earth if the planet didn't rotate? How does air flow since it does rotate?
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14
Describe sediment transport as bed load, including saltation.
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15
Why are flash floods and sheet flows common in deserts? What do these events have to do with erosion in the desert?
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16
Briefly explain why sand is moved by wind before clay and silt during wind erosion.
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17
Define the Coriolis effect. Which direction does Coriolis deflect winds? What does the word "apparent" mean in the definition?
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18
What is desert pavement, and how does it form?
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19
What are alluvial fans, and why are they common in desert mountain ranges?
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20
What produces the worldwide pattern of east-west-oriented wind belts?
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21
Briefly explain why most deserts develop in the mid-latitude dry climate zone.
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22
What are deflation hollows?
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23
What are some of the ways in which desert plants have adapted to the conditions in which they live?
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24
Briefly explain why loess can originate in, but is not deposited in, deserts.
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25
Explain the ways in which alluvial fans and deltas are similar.
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26
How do sand dunes migrate?
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27
Explain how wind can be a significant intercontinental agent of erosion and deposition.
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28
What are the four major dune types generally recognized?
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29
What are some of the characteristics of playas?
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30
Equatorial regions receive the most heat, while polar regions receive the lowest. Therefore, what air pressures would you expect to be characteristic of these regions?
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31
What can lithified or ancient sand dunes tell us?
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32
Besides deserts, where does wind play a role as a significant geologic agent?
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33
Why is wind unable to transport sediment with the same grain size competency as water?
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34
Since most deserts have internal drainage, why are there through-flowing streams, such as the Nile, Niger, Indus, and Colorado Rivers in some deserts?
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35
What are the three main sources from which loess is derived?
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36
Why do most desert streams never reach the sea?
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37
Briefly explain how the geological conditions that produced and deposited loess have determined the sites of the world's major grain belts.
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38
What factors enhance water erosion in deserts?
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39
What factors affect the type of dune that forms?
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40
How does saltation by wind differ from that in streams?
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41
Wind deposits composed of sand-sized particles that are deposited near their source are called ____________________.
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42
A saline, temporary lake in a desert is known as a(n) ____________________ lake.
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43
The two types of sediment load transported by wind are ____________________ and ____________________ load.
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44
Wind travels at a _____ speed than water but has a _____ density which allows it to carry mainly clay- and silt-size particles.
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45
Regions that receive more precipitation than arid regions but are moderately dry are ____________________ regions.
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46
Although loess forms in only a few environments, it covers approximately ____________________% of Earth's land surface.
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47
Stones whose polished, pitted, faceted surfaces have been produced by wind erosion are called ____________________.
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48
Alluvial fans are composed of sediment that is ____________________-sorted and ____________________ stratified.
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49
The Coriolis effect causes winds to be deflected to the ____________________ of their direction of motion in the Northern Hemisphere and to the ____________________ of their direction of motion in the Southern Hemisphere.
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50
The deflection of a moving mass from a straight line is known as the ____________________.
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51
Deserts receive less than ____________________ centimeters of rain per year, on average.
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52
The size of material that is frequently carried as suspended load by wind is ____________________ and ____________________.
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53
The drainage characteristic of most deserts in which streams dry up and do not have enough water to become integrated and reach outside their drainage areas is called ____________________ drainage.
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54
The transformation of formerly productive lands into deserts is called ____________________.
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55
Dunes that form long-parallel ridges of sand aligned generally parallel to the direction of the prevailing winds where sand supply is somewhat limited are ____________________ dunes.
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56
Air flows from ____________________ pressure regions to ____________________ pressure regions.
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57
A playa forms by ____________________ of a playa lake.
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58
____________________ involves the impact of saltating sand grains on an object.
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59
High pressure troughs exist where cooler, denser air begins to descend at about ____________________ to ____________________ degrees latitude, N and S.
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60
Dunes that form long ridges perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction in areas with abundant sand and little vegetation are ____________________ dunes.
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61
The most mobile dunes are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
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62
The size of particles that are usually the first to be set in motion by wind is(are):

A) silt.
B) clay.
C) sand.
D) pebbles.
E) boulders.
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k this deck
63
Loess is important because it:

A) is an important source of building material.
B) is rich in important ore deposits.
C) sometimes contains petroleum.
D) makes fertile soil.
E) is an important source of groundwater.
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64
Desertification is a cause of concern as arable regions are lost as the deserts are expanding.
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k this deck
65
Wind-blown deposits of silt and clay are called:

A) dunes.
B) loess.
C) ventifacts.
D) yardangs.
E) till.
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66
All dunes originate in desert conditions.
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67
Deserts mostly occur at ____ latitudes.

A) low
B) middle
C) high
D) low and middle
E) middle and high
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k this deck
68
A common mode of mass wasting in deserts is:

A) mudflows.
B) rock fall.
C) creep.
D) slumps.
E) slides.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
The close-fitting mosaic of pebbles, cobbles, and boulders covering the floor of many deserts and semiarid regions is called:

A) ventifact.
B) desert pavement.
C) longitudinal dune.
D) yardang.
E) barchan dune.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Long, parallel ridges of sand aligned parallel to the wind direction are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
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k this deck
71
Sandblasting in nature is caused by the process of saltation.
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k this deck
72
An erosional bedrock surface of low relief that slopes gently away from a mountain base is a(n):

A) alluvium.
B) bajada.
C) playa.
D) plain.
E) pediment.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
In the desert, wind is a more effective agent of erosion and deposition than water.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Wind erodes by:

A) saltation.
B) abrasion.
C) deflation.
D) saltation and abrasion.
E) abrasion and deflation.
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k this deck
75
Desertification is taking place in the Sahara but not in the developed world.
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k this deck
76
Dunes that form when vegetation cover is broken by deflation and the dune tips point upwind are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Landforms that are made of relatively easily weathered sedimentary rocks capped by nearly horizontal more resistant rocks include

A) mesas.
B) ventifacts.
C) playas.
D) pediments.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Long, parallel ridges of sand aligned perpendicular to the wind direction are:

A) longitudinal.
B) transverse.
C) barchan.
D) parabolic.
E) none of the above
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
The process of encroachment/invasion of deserts into regions that were once productive is termed as?

A) evaporation
B) expansion
C) desertification
D) desiccation
E) dehydration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
The Coriolis effect is caused by:

A) wind shear between water and the atmosphere.
B) the axial tilt of the Earth.
C) the rotation of the Earth.
D) differences in air pressure in different regions.
E) Milankovitch cycles.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.