A sandstorm can transport and carry large volumes of sand unexpectedly. Dust storms can carry large amounts of dust, with the leading edge being composed of a wall of thick dust as much as high. Dust and sand storms which come off the
Sahara Desert are locally known as a
simoom or simoon. The
haboob is a sandstorm prevalent in the region of
Sudan around
Khartoum, with occurrences being most common in the summer. The
Sahara desert is a key source of dust storms, particularly the
Bodélé Depression and an area covering the confluence of
Mauritania,
Mali, and
Algeria. Sahara dust is frequently emitted into the Mediterranean atmosphere and transported by the winds sometimes as far north as central Europe and Great Britain. Saharan dust storms have increased approximately 10-fold during the half-century since the 1950s, causing
topsoil loss in
Niger,
Chad, northern
Nigeria, and
Burkina Faso. In Mauritania there were just two dust storms a year in the early 1960s; there are about 80 a year since 2007, according to English
geographer Andrew Goudie, professor at the
University of Oxford. Levels of Saharan dust coming off the east coast of Africa in June 2007 were five times those observed in June 2006, and were the highest observed since at least 1999, which may have cooled Atlantic waters enough to slightly reduce hurricane activity in late 2007. shrouded in dust during the
2009 Australian dust storm.
Health impact Dust storms are a major health hazard. Short-term effects of exposure to desert dust include immediate increased
symptoms and worsening of the
lung function in individuals with
asthma, increased
mortality and
morbidity from long-transported dust from both Saharan and
Asian dust storms suggesting that long-transported dust storm particles adversely affects the circulatory system.
Dust pneumonia is the result of large amounts of dust being inhaled. Prolonged and unprotected exposure of the
respiratory system in a dust storm can also cause
silicosis, which, if left untreated, will lead to
asphyxiation; silicosis is an incurable condition that may also lead to
lung cancer. There is also the danger of
keratoconjunctivitis sicca ("dry eyes") which, in severe cases without immediate and proper treatment, can lead to
blindness. Dust storms have also been shown to increase the spread of disease across the globe.
Bacteria and
fungus spores in the ground are blown into the atmosphere by the storms with the minute particles and interact with urban
air pollution.
Economic impact Dust storms cause soil loss from the drylands, and worse, they preferentially remove organic matter and the nutrient-rich lightest particles, thereby reducing agricultural productivity. Also, the abrasive effect of the storm damages young crop plants. Dust storms also reduce visibility, affecting aircraft and road transportation. Dust can also have beneficial effects where it deposits: Central and South American rainforests get significant quantities of mineral nutrients from the Sahara; iron-poor ocean regions get iron; and dust in Hawaii increases
plantain growth. In northern China as well as the mid-western U.S., ancient dust storm deposits known as
loess are highly fertile soils, but they are also a significant source of contemporary dust storms when soil-securing vegetation is disturbed. == On Mars==