E3S Web of Conferences (Jan 2019)

Impact of the Aral Sea Syndrome - the Aralkum as a Man-Made Dust Source

  • Opp Christian,
  • Groll Michael,
  • Semenov Oleg,
  • Vereshagina Natalya,
  • Khamzina Asia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/20199903003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 99
p. 03003

Abstract

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Ground based dust monitoring is an important tool for the long-term monitoring of aeolian sediment transport in Central Asia as it provides valuable insights into the spatial and temporal dynamics of dust deposition as well as grants access to the transported material for further analyses. Between 2006 and 2012 such a monitoring was carried out in the Turan lowland to analyze the effects of the newly formed Aralkum. The detected spatial and temporal dust deposition variability was significant and encourages further studies. The dust deposition increased over time, which correlates with a decreasing trend in precipitation, increasing wind speeds and a shift towards northern winds. More than 50% of all dust samples collected exceed the health based deposition threshold and the most intense dust storm events reached ground level deposition rates of up to 150 g/m2 per hour. This study showed the impact of the Aralkum, but also that the Kyzylkum is a far more active dust source. With regard to climate change and an increasing aridity in the region it can be expected that the aeolian dust transport will continue to increase, making a wide-spread monitoring program even more important.