December
28, 2006
DUST
TO GUST: HEALTH OF BRAZILIAN
RAINFOREST DEPENDS ON DUST FROM
ONE VALLEY
IN AFRICA
More
than half of the dust needed for
fertilizing the Brazilian rainforest is supplied by a valley in
northern Chad,
according to an international research team headed by Dr. Ilan Koren of
the
Institute's Environmental Sciences and Energy Research Department. In a
study
published recently in Environmental Research
Letters, the scientists have explained how the Bodélé
Valley's
unique features might be responsible for making it such a major dust
provider.
It has
been known for more than a decade that
the existence of the Amazon rainforest depends on a supply of minerals
washed
off by rain from the soil in the Sahara and blown across the Atlantic
by dust. By combining various types of satellite data, Dr. Koren and
colleagues
from Israel,
the United Kingdom,
the United States,
and Brazil
have now for the first time
managed to obtain quantitative information about the weight of this
dust.
Analyses of dust quantities were performed near the Bodélé
Valley
itself, on the shore of the Atlantic
and at an additional spot above the ocean.
The
data revealed that some 56 percent of the
dust reaching the Amazon forest originates in the Bodélé
Valley.
They also showed that a total of some 50 million tons of dust make
their way
from Africa to the Amazon region every year, a much higher figure than
the
previous estimates of 13 million tons. The new estimate matches the
calculations on the quantity of dust needed to supply the vital
minerals for
the continued existence of the Amazon rainforest.
The
researchers suggest that the Bodélé
Valley
is such an important source of dust due to its shape and geographic
features:
it is flanked on both sides by enormous basalt mountain ridges, which
create a
cone-shaped crater with a narrow opening in the northeast. Winds that
"drain" into the valley focus on this funnel-like opening similarly to
the way light is focused by an optical lens, creating a large wind
tunnel of
sorts. As a result, gusts of surface wind that are accelerated and
focused in
the tunnel lift the dust from the ground and blow it toward the ocean,
allowing
the Bodélé
Valley
to export the vast amount of dust
that makes a life-sustaining contribution to the Amazon rainforest.
##
Contact:
Jennifer
Manning
American
Committee for the Weizmann Institute of
Science
212-895-7952
jennifer@acwis.org
This text derived from:
http://www.weizmann-usa.org/site/PageServer?pagename=index
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