The landforms of deserts, like those of high
mountains and the polar areas, are much more
visible than those of more vegetated landscapes.
Bareness also allows much more active surface
processes in all these areas, but in different
combinations. Deserts suffer much more wind
erosion than any other environment. Additionally, if
slopes are steep and when the rain does fall, they
also experience very fast water erosion. Desert
landscapes come in two categories: (1) "shield"
deserts and (2) "mountain-and-basin" deserts
(Cooke and others 1992 , Mabbutt 1977).
Shield deserts have developed on very ancient
crystalline basements; that is, rocks that have
been folded and faulted and hardened by heat and
pressure over many millions of years. Granites,
injected originally deep within the earth, have been
unearthed by erosion and form steep-sided hills in
many places (as at Uluru in Australia). The Sahara,
the Arabian deserts, the southern African deserts,
and the Australian deserts are in this group. Though
very tough, the basement has been folded into gentlysloping
swells and basins, and the basins have been
filled over millions of years with sediments eroded
from the swells, although these sediments have
remained virtually unfolded themselves. They contain
the best supplies of groundwater in the deserts, as
in the northeastern and southern Sahara, and in
Australia; and in some areas they are also rich in oil.
Here and there recent volcanic rocks have overflowed
at the surface, as in the Ahaggar and Tibesti
mountains of the central Sahara.
In their long lives
these landscapes have experienced many different
climates (partly because they were moved round the
earth by continental drift) and many features formed in
the different climates survive. There are even ancient
glacial features in parts of Arabia and the Sahara;
there are many more ancient river gorges, and ancient
soils like silcretes or even laterites - ancient soils
that formed under wet tropical conditions. The deep
rotting of the rock in wetter times penetrated further
in softer than harder rocks, and when the loose
rotted material was stripped off, the uneven surface
of the sub-soil landscape was revealed: a process
appropriately called etching.

Water is the main agent of erosion only on the few
hills of the shield deserts, and cuts deep gullies on
their edges. Elsewhere low gradients mean that
water erosion is not very effective, and this leaves
the field free to the wind: the great plumes of
dust travel from the Sahara over towards Europe,
southwest Asia and the Americas, removing much
more sediment than do rivers from the same
area, and have taken even more dust in recent
geological periods. With the dust winnowed out,
sand is left behind, and most of it collects in dunes,
which cover 20-30 per cent of these landscapes.
Some of the larger "sand seas" cover more than
300 000 square kilometres; their median size is
123 000 km .
Mountain-and-basin deserts are those in the much
more recently folded and faulted rocks of the
earth's active tectonic belts. Up-faulted mountains
alternate irregularly with down-faulted basins. The
American deserts, both North and South, are all
of this kind, as are the deserts of Central Asia
(where some of the basins, however, cover many
hundreds of thousands of square kilometres).
Water erosion in the mountains cuts deep, steepsided
valleys and gorges, and takes the debris
out into the basins, where the broadening and
shallowing of the ephemeral washes (called arroyos
in the Americas and wadis in Northern Africa
and West Asia) first cause the coarser debris to
be dropped in broad "alluvial fans." Occasional
extreme storms may carry huge boulders onto
these as well. Further down, the alluvial fans
coalesce into a long slope of finer alluvium - the
bajada.
Sand may be winnowed out of the alluvial
deposits and form dunes (and in Central Asia, even
a few sand seas). Only the finest debris (silt and
clay) reaches the bottom of the basin, where it is
deposited in ephemeral lakes or playas. The salts
carried in the waters also accumulate there. |