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Eolian features in the Western Desert of Egypt and some applications to Mars.

January 1, 1979

Relations of landform types to wind regimes, bedrock composition, sediment supply, and topography are shown by field studies and satellite photographs of the Western Desert. This desert provides analogs of Martian wind-formed features and sand dunes, alternating light and dark streaks, knob 'shadows' and yardangs. Surface particles have been segregated by wind into dunes, sand sheets, and light streaks, that can be differentiated by their grain size distributions, surface shapes, and colors. Throughgoing sand of mostly fine to medium grain size is migrating S in longitudinal dune belts and barchan chains whose long axes lie parallel to the prevailing W winds, but topographic variations such as scarps and depressions strongly influence the zones of deposition and dune morphology. -from Authors

Publication Year 1979
Title Eolian features in the Western Desert of Egypt and some applications to Mars.
Authors F. El-Baz, C. S. Breed, M. J. Grolier, J.F. McCauley
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Geophysical Research
Index ID 70012315
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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