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  1. Jun 21, 2024 · The dust storm, also known as a "haboob" hit New Mexico and northern Mexico, carving 200-mile path through the area in seconds, according to satellite video footage obtained by USA TODAY ...

    • 1 min
    • Amaris Encinas
    • Overview
    • What are dust and sandstorms?
    • Are dust storms getting worse?
    • What do we do in the meantime?

    We’ve known how to mitigate them for nearly a century, but these storms will likely grow in intensity as farming expands and climate change intensifies.

    A sandstorm rolls across the Meroë pyramids in Sudan in 2021. Dust and sandstorms can wreak havoc by getting into our respiratory systems and suddenly reducing visibility.

    The May sun hadn’t yet risen over Interstate 55 in central Illinois when wind began to blow from the west, sending a coating of dry soil on nearby fields billowing into the sky—and reducing visibility to near-zero for vehicles speeding along the highway. Dozens of cars crashed. Illinois State Police later said 37 people were hospitalized, and at least seven died.

    The tragedy illustrates a wider problem. Dust storms have killed hundreds in the U.S. over the last decade, a death rate similar to those of hurricanes, wildfires and tornadoes. Those casualties are likely to increase as climate change intensifies.

    (What are hurricanes, typhoons, and cyclones?)

    We’ve known how to prevent these storms for decades, but help isn’t getting into the hands of farmers that need it. Here’s what you need to know about dust and sand storms, and what to do if you’re caught in one.

    Dust storms typically occur when strong winds sweep across dry areas without plant cover, explains Natalie Mahowald, a professor of atmospheric science at Cornell University. As the wind strafes the earth, it breaks up the layer of dust on top of the soil and lifts the light, tiny dust particles into the air. Eventually, the dust and wind combine to create enormous clouds that roll across the landscape.

    Historically, dust storms have been most intense in dry regions of the American southwest, which were nicknamed the Dust Bowl in the 1930s for the prevalence of dust storms there. Farming can contribute to these storms through practices like tilling, which involves removing plants and breaking up ground to expose the soil to moisture and air. In the process, tilling severs the bonds holding soil together. If moisture from rain doesn’t come, the soil turns to dust, leaving it vulnerable to strong winds.

    Left: A dust storm enveloped Beijing in March 2021, reducing visibility to around a half mile.

    Photograph by Chen Yehua, Xinhua/eyevine/Redux

    Right: Jiayu Pass, the western starting point of the Great Wall, is coated in dust after a March 2021 dust storm.

    Photograph by Zhang Zhimin, Xinhua/eyevine/Redux

    According to a 2020 study, levels of wind-blown dust across much of the Great Plains have doubled over the last two decades, which the study attributed to expanded agriculture and intensifying climate change.

    Experts expect that trend to continue. “I think they’re going to get worse,” says Mahowald. “We’ll probably have an expansion of agricultural land, and that allows more dust storms.” Tong says another key driver is climate change, which means “droughts become more frequent and more severe”, increasing the risk that land will dry out and become susceptible to dust storms.

    One response would be to reduce the amount of land used for agriculture: this could be by reducing consumption, reducing production, or intensifying production in a smaller space Other traditional answers include farming without tilling the land (which requires other interventions to prepare the soil, like fertilizer), or planting ‘cover crops’ like rye and barley that hold the soil together between harvests and planting, according to Jonathan Coppess, a legal academic at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and former administrator of the Department of Agriculture’s Farm Service Agency. Another solution would be to integrate animals to fields and plant a diverse array of crops.

    Ironically, the country learned to apply these practices following the Dust Bowl storms of the 1930s, says Mahowald. “We know what to do,” she says. “It just really seems like they stopped paying attention to soil conservation.”

    Coppess says preventative practices “are increasingly being adopted, but clearly they’re not prevalent.” He pointed to a lack of government support, with aid programs for farmers dealing with “a lot more demand than there is funding.”

    Nonetheless, says Coppess, even these solutions are “not necessarily always going to work.” That’s especially true, he says, when climate change is making these weather phenomena worse.

    When the May dust storm hit central Illinois, Kevin Schott, the local emergency management director, was among those who responded. Schott has served for decades as a firefighter, including a stint in Iraq with the Illinois National Guard, where he saw the devastation sandstorms can cause. Even then, he says of the May dust storm, he has experienced “nothing like this that I can remember.”

    Part of the problem was that his team was underprepared. Like most Americans, they thought of dust storms as a southwestern problem. As a result, Schott’s team lacked specialized equipment, which meant that while retrieving victims their eyes filled with dust and their only protection was low-grade masks through which the particles easily passed.

    According to Mahowald and Tong, while dust storms will continue to be most intense in the American southwest, the problem will increasingly affect other states, making that lack of readiness a significant risk for both first responders and ordinary people.

    If you’re caught in a dust storm, pull off the roadway wherever it’s safe to do so, put your flashers on, and wait until the storm blows out. That simple advice will save lives, says Schott. Part of the reason the Illinois dust storm was so deadly, he says, “was that people just did not slow down.”

    • Pete Mckenzie
  2. Jul 11, 2023 · Yes. Human activities, like deforestation, over grazing and the overuse of water, are causing deserts to spread and increasing the likelihood of sand and dust storms. Climate change – which is bringing droughts and more extreme temperatures – is amplifying these factors. In some areas, desert dust has doubled in the 20 th century ...

  3. May 4, 2023 · May 4, 2023, 3:40 PM PDT. By Phil McCausland and Evan Bush. The kind of dust storm that suddenly darkened an Illinois highway on Monday and left seven people dead is becoming more common in parts ...

  4. Jul 25, 2020 · Earlier this month, the ESA's Copernicus Sentinel and Aeolus satellites tracked a massive dust plume travelling all the way from the Sahara Desert to North America. The Saharan dust plume over the Atlantic Ocean in 2020. (ESA/CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO) This article was originally published by Universe Today. Read the original article.

  5. Sep 26, 2018 · Monster haboob that tracked across southern Arizona on July 10, 2018, via veteran storm-chaser Reed Timmer. See the video below. Haboobs are intense sand-and-dust storms, carried on winds blowing ...

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  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dust_stormDust storm - Wikipedia

    A dust storm, also called a sandstorm, is a meteorological phenomenon common in arid and semi-arid regions. [ 1 ] Dust storms arise when a gust front or other strong wind blows loose sand and dirt from a dry surface. Fine particles are transported by saltation and suspension, a process that moves soil from one place and deposits it in another ...

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