EGU23-11692, updated on 26 Feb 2023
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-11692
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Locally recycled late Pleistocene loess feeds modern dust storms at the desert margins of the eastern Mediterranean, Israel

Onn Crouvi1, Ohad Shalom1,2, Yehouda Enzel2, and Daniel Rosenfeld2
Onn Crouvi et al.
  • 1Geological Survey of Israel, Mapping Division, Jerusalem, Israel (crouvi@gsi.gov.il)
  • 2Institute of Earth Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Current dust storms, originating from afar, are common in Israel and the eastern Mediterranean, and thus most dust sources are considered to be distal. However, recent studies suggest that the latest Quaternary loess accreted in the Northern Negev can also serve as a proximal source of dust. These sources were mostly neglected in past discussions as contributors of dust. Here, we demonstrate that such proximal dust sources, mostly the Negev loess, currently contribute relatively large amounts of recycled dust to the regional dust cycle. We conducted a sampling campaign of deposited dust during individual dust storms and identified high content of coarse silt grains and quartzo-feldspathic minerals within and adjacent to the Negev loess that gradually decreases toward the north. These grains, characteristics of the Negev loess, indicate a short transport distance. In addition, our data reveal that local wind speed is the limiting factor for emitting proximal dust, regardless of the synoptic system. We determined that proximal sources in Israel emit dust during either local events or as a part of regional dust storms originating from afar. We evaluate the minimal contribution of this proximal dust to the total mass of deposited dust as 58–74%, 54–70%, 52–64%, and 26–34% for the northern Negev, central Negev, central mountainous region, and northern Israel, respectively. These estimates indicate that at the desert fringe, both proximal and distal sources of dust should be considered when inferring dust sources from dust geochemistry that can sometimes be similar due to the long dust history.

How to cite: Crouvi, O., Shalom, O., Enzel, Y., and Rosenfeld, D.: Locally recycled late Pleistocene loess feeds modern dust storms at the desert margins of the eastern Mediterranean, Israel, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-11692, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-11692, 2023.