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Dust climatology of Mildura,Victoria, Australia: transport direction
Authors:Benjamin M Love  John F Leys  Craig L Strong  Grant H McTainsh
Institution:1. Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University, Brisbane, QLD, Australia;2. Science Division, Office of Environment and Heritage, Gunnedah, NSW, Australia;3. The Fenner School of Environment and Society;4. ANU College of Science, The Australian National University, ACT, Australia
Abstract:Large-scale geomorphic drivers that operate at continental scale are often climate driven. Changes in land use can accelerate wind erosion. The range of land management practises within one land use can have dramatic effect on ground cover and wind erosion. This study uses meteorological observations, land use, land management and dust concentration measurements of 129 dust events recorded between 1990 and 2007 to describe a dust chronology of Mildura, in south-eastern Australia. Frontal and frontal trough weather systems account for 74% of dust events. Furthermore, 88% of dust events come from rangelands in the northwest and the cropping lands to the southwest. The cropping areas to the southwest are the most common source of dust, accounting for 66% of events There is no relationship between rainfall and dust activity in this study, suggesting that land-management practices, especially on cropping lands, over-ride the controlling effect of rainfall. When cropping lands received above average rainfall in spring and summer during the 1990s, cultivation for weed control lead to rapid decline in ground cover that predisposed the land to wind erosion in following summer and autumn. In drought years, dust blows into Mildura from all directions suggesting that dust is climate driven rather than controlled by land use. © 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:dust storm  dust transport  land use  Australia
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