Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/50006
Title: Dust deposits on La Graciosa Island (Canary Islands, Spain): Texture, mineralogy and a case study of recent dust plume transport
Authors: Menéndez, Inmaculada 
Pérez-Chacón, Emma 
Mangas, José 
Tauler, Esperança
Engelbrecht, Johann P.
Derbyshire, Edward
Cana, Luis 
Alonso, Ignacio 
UNESCO Clasification: 251110 Mineralogía de suelos
Keywords: Canary Islands
Saharan airborne dust
Dust deposit
Wind transport
Giant quartz, et al
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: 0341-8162
Project: Consecuencias Ambientales Inducidas Por El Desarrollo Turistico en Espacios Insulares: Alteraciones de Los Procesos Naturales en Sistemas de Dunas Litorales de Canarias y Cabo Verde. 
Diagnóstico Ambiental de Los Sistemas de Dunas de Canaris Para la Elaboración de Modelos Sostenibles 
Ciclos Lunares y Fertilización Con Hierro. 
Journal: Catena 
Abstract: La Graciosa volcanic island evolved in the late Pleistocene–Holocene. It is situated along the northeast of the Canarian Archipelago, with a subaerial surface of 27 km2. This island is located close to the Western Sahara, being 80 km from the north-western African continental shelf and 145 km from the coast. The island supports a very small permanent population. The climate is coastal-arid (116 mm precipitation per annum). Regular occurrences of Saharan dust plumes (about 30% of the year), with a dust accumulation rate of 20 g− 2 year− 1, produce sedimentation of dust on the island of ca. 540 t year− 1. Wind-blown sediments cover a large area (more than 52%) of the otherwise volcanic island, forming sandy beaches, sand sheets, nebkhas and other aeolian deposits. Re-distributed dust deposits often occur on the leeward sides of inter-volcano areas, inter-dune areas and in endorheic sediment traps. Many of these deposits are edaphized and carbonatized. Textural analysis of the dust deposit samples shows a variable proportion of silt (80–20%), clay (19–9%), and fine to very fine sand (71–4%). The general mineralogical composition of these sediments as measured by XRD and SEM-EDS is calcite (26%), illite (26%), quartz (11%), augite (10%), aragonite (6%), anorthite (8%), kaolinite (5%) and montmorillonite (3%). The mineralogy in different size fractions is very consistent; for example, quartz content decreases from 15% in the coarse silt fraction to 5% in the fine sand. A mineral and grain-size comparison with airborne dust collected on Gran Canaria Island was undertaken; close similarities were found in the two sample sets. Such closely-matched characteristics point to a similar origin for both airborne dust and dust deposits, in line with the Saharan plume dust that regularly traverses this archipelago. It is unusual to find so much quartz in the fine sand fraction of these aeolian dust deposits. Individual quartz grains with an intermediate axial length of ~ 160 μm were identified by SEM-EDS. Previous investigators have found similar “giant” particles in long-range transported aeolian dust (Middleton et al., 2001), in contrast to the classic model for gravity settling of airborne dust particles. The debate on this subject remains open for discussion. We present evidence of long-range, wind-transported large mineral particles and a 2004 case study of uplift wind velocity vs. plume dust generation, as well as a transport efficiency model that can explain the existence of fine sand in the dust deposits on La Graciosa Island and in the airborne samplers on Gran Canaria Island. Recent Saharan dust shows that about 10% of similar coarse-grained particulate matter is also present.
ISSN: 0341-8162
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2013.05.007
Source: Catena [ISSN 0341-8162], v. 117, p. 133-144
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