Paper
14 July 2003 Land-use and land-cover changes and dust storms in Tarim Basin, northwest China
Honglie Qiu, Junping Zhong, Xinguang Dong
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 4890, Ecosystems Dynamics, Ecosystem-Society Interactions, and Remote Sensing Applications for Semi-Arid and Arid Land; (2003) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.465921
Event: Third International Asia-Pacific Environmental Remote Sensing Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere, Ocean, Environment, and Space, 2002, Hangzhou, China
Abstract
MODIS image products were used to examine dust and sand storms occurred in Tarim Basin and identify major land cover types that may have contributed most to the recent severe dust storms. The near daily global coverage and multispectral capability of the MODIS sensors have made MODIS image products one of the best satellite observation data sources for monitoring large-scale Earth surface features and phenomena. The Level 1-B granule image quicklooks provided by the MODIS Atmosphere Science Team have proved sufficient for tracking dust storms in Tarim Basin. Within the last twenty-two months, Tarim Basin was covered by different scales of dust or sand storms almost year round. However, the basin-wide dust or sand storms were rare and they occurred mostly in March and April, when soil surface protection is the poorest and wind speed is the highest. As indicated by the compiled image quicklooks series, all dusts and sands were derived from within the basin. Once suspended in the air they were confined to the basin by the high mountains bordering the Basin. Only a relative small amount of dusts were exported to the east when they were associated with strong cold frontal systems. Analysis on the land cover type maps derived from full-resolution and cloud free MODIS Level 1-B radiance images suggest that the former Tarim River delta complex and current and past fluvial plains are the newest additions to the source areas of dust and sands. These two land cover types deserve the highest priority in the restoration of desert ecosystems effects in the region.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Honglie Qiu, Junping Zhong, and Xinguang Dong "Land-use and land-cover changes and dust storms in Tarim Basin, northwest China", Proc. SPIE 4890, Ecosystems Dynamics, Ecosystem-Society Interactions, and Remote Sensing Applications for Semi-Arid and Arid Land, (14 July 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.465921
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KEYWORDS
MODIS

Clouds

Satellites

Climatology

Earth observing sensors

Ecosystems

Remote sensing

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