'Eolian' (or 'aeolian' or 'æolian') processes pertain to the activity of the
winds and more specifically, to the winds' ability to shape the surface of the Earth and other planets. Winds may erode, transport, and deposit materials, and are effective agents in regions with sparse vegetation and a large supply of unconsolidated
sediments. Although water is much more powerful than wind, æolian processes are important in arid environments such as
deserts.
The term is derived from the name of the Greek god,
Æolus, the keeper of the winds.
Wind Erosion
Wind
erodes the Earth's surface by deflation, by the removal of loose, fine-grained particles, by the
turbulent eddy action of the wind and by
abrasion (the wearing down of surfaces by the grinding action and
sand blasting of windborne particles).
Most æolian deflation zones are composed of
desert pavement, a sheet-like surface of rock fragments that remains after wind and water have removed the fine particles. Almost half of Earth's desert surfaces are stony deflation zones. The rock mantle in desert pavements protects the underlying material from deflation.
A dark, shiny stain, called desert varnish or rock varnish, is often found on the surfaces of some desert rocks that have been exposed at the surface for a long period of time.
Manganese,
iron oxides,
hydroxides, and
clay minerals form most varnishes and provide the shine.
Deflation basins, called
blowouts, are hollows formed by the removal of particles by wind. Blowouts are generally small, but may be up to several kilometers in diameter.
Wind-driven grains abrade landforms. Grinding by particles carried in the wind creates grooves or small depressions.
Ventifacts are rocks which have been cut, and sometimes polished, by the abrasive action of wind.
Sculpted landforms, called
yardangs, are up to tens of meters high and kilometers long and are forms that have been streamlined by desert winds. The famous
sphinx at
Giza in Egypt may be a modified yardang.
Transport
Particles are transported by winds through
suspension,
saltation, and
creep.
Small particles may be held in the atmosphere in suspension. Upward currents of air support the weight of suspended particles and hold them indefinitely in the surrounding air. Typical winds near Earth's surface suspend particles less than 0.2 millimeters in diameter and scatter them aloft as dust or haze.
Saltation is downwind movement of particles in a series of jumps or skips. Saltation normally lifts sand-size particles no more than one centimeter above the ground, and proceeds at one-half to one-third the speed of the wind. A saltating grain may hit other grains that jump up to continue the saltation. The grain may also hit larger grains that are too heavy to hop, but that slowly creep forward as they are pushed by saltating grains. Surface creep accounts for as much as 25 percent of grain movement in a desert.
Æolian turbidity currents are better known as
dust storms. Air over deserts is cooled significantly when rain passes through it. This cooler and denser air sinks toward the desert surface. When it reaches the ground, the air is deflected forward and sweeps up surface debris in its turbulence as a dust storm.
Crops, people, villages, and possibly even climates are affected by dust storms. Some dust storms are intercontinental, a few may circle the globe, and occasionally they may engulf entire planets. When the
Mariner 9 spacecraft entered its orbit around
Mars in 1971, a dust strom lasting one month covered the entire planet, thus delaying the task of photo-mapping the planet's surface.
Most of the dust carried by dust storms is in the form of
silt-size particles. Deposits of this windblown silt are known as
loess. The thickest known deposit of loess, 335 meters, is on the
Loess Plateau in China. In Europe and in the Americas, accumulations of loess are generally from 20 to 30 meters thick.
Small whirlwinds, called
dust devils, are common in arid lands and are thought to be related to very intense local heating of the air that results in instabilities of the air mass. Dust devils may be as much as one kilometer high.
Deposition

The edge of a slipface on a sand dune in
Death Valley National Park
Wind-deposited materials hold clues to past as well as to present wind directions and intensities. These features help us understand the present climate and the forces that molded it. Wind-deposited sand bodies occur as
sand sheets, ripples, and
dunes.
Sand sheets are flat, gently undulating sandy plots of sand surfaced by grains that may be too large for saltation. They form approximately 40 percent of eolian depositional surfaces. The
Selima Sand Sheet, which occupies 60,000 square kilometers in southern Egypt and northern Sudan, is one of the Earth's largest sand sheets. The Selima is absolutely flat in some places; in others, active dunes move over its surface.
Wind blowing on a sand surface ripples the surface into crests and troughs whose long axes are perpendicular to the wind direction. The average length of jumps during saltation corresponds to the wavelength, or distance between adjacent crests, of the ripples. In ripples, the coarsest materials collect at the crests. This distinguishes small ripples from dunes, where the coarsest materials are generally in the troughs.
Wind-blown sand moves up the gentle upwind side of the dune by saltation or creep. Sand accumulates at the brink, the top of the slipface. When the buildup of sand at the brink exceeds the angle of repose, a small avalanche of grains slides down the slipface. Grain by grain, the dune moves downwind.
Accumulations of sediment blown by the wind into a mound or ridge, dunes have gentle upwind slopes on the wind-facing side. The downwind portion of the dune, the lee slope, is commonly a steep avalanche slope referred to as a slipface. Dunes may have more than one slipface. The minimum height of a slipface is about 30 centimeters.
Some of the most significant experimental measurements on eolian sand movement were performed by
Ralph Bagnold, a British engineer who worked in
Egypt prior to World War II. Bagnold investigated the physics of particles moving through the atmosphere and deposited by wind. He recognized two basic dune types, the crescentic dune, which he called "
barchan," and the linear dune, which he called longitudinal or "sief" (Arabic for "sword").
See also
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Cross bedding
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Wind Erosion on European Light Soils
References
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Eolian Processes
External links
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The Bibliography of Aeolian Research
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''Facts about wind erosion and dust storms on the Great Plains'' hosted by the
UNT Government Documents Department