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Related: About this forumNASA Satellite Reveals How Much Saharan Dust Feeds Amazon's Plants
What connects Earths largest, hottest desert to its largest tropical rain forest?
The Sahara Desert is a near-uninterrupted brown band of sand and scrub across the northern third of Africa. The Amazon rain forest is a dense green mass of humid jungle that covers northeast South America. But after strong winds sweep across the Sahara, a tan cloud rises in the air, stretches between the continents, and ties together the desert and the jungle. Its dust. And lots of it.
For the first time, a NASA satellite has quantified in three dimensions how much dust makes this trans-Atlantic journey. Scientists have not only measured the volume of dust, they have also calculated how much phosphorus remnant in Saharan sands from part of the deserts past as a lake bed gets carried across the ocean from one of the planets most desolate places to one of its most fertile.
A new paper published Feb. 24 in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union, provides the first satellite-based estimate of this phosphorus transport over multiple years, said lead author Hongbin Yu, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Maryland who works at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. A paper published online by Yu and colleagues Jan. 8 in Remote Sensing of the Environment provided the first multi-year satellite estimate of overall dust transport from the Sahara to the Amazon.
https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/goddard/nasa-satellite-reveals-how-much-saharan-dust-feeds-amazons-plants/
AllaN01Bear
(23,057 posts)BootinUp
(49,036 posts)AllaN01Bear
(23,057 posts)Igel
(36,108 posts)Every few years Houston's sunlight is a weak and vitiated because of Saharan dust, with the commentary that this dust is a really huge source of nutrients to feed the flora (and therefore the fauna) in the Atlantic Ocean.
c-rational
(2,868 posts)Sahara and the Amazon together so tightly..