A barchan dune, also barkhan is an arc-shaped sand ridge, comprising well-sorted sand. This type of dune possesses two "horns" that face downwind, with the slip face (the downwind slope) at the angle of repose of sand, or approximately 35 degrees (Strahler & Archibold, 2008, pg.442). The upwind side is packed by the wind, and stands at about 15 degrees. Simple barchan dunes may stretch from meters to a hundred meters or so between the tips of the horns. The word is of Turkic origin, borrowed into English via Russian.[1]
Simple barchan dunes may appear as larger, compound barchan or megabarchan dunes, which may migrate with the wind. Barchans and megabarchans may coalesce into ridges that extend for hundreds of kilometers.
As barchan dunes migrate, smaller dunes outpace larger dunes, bumping into the rear of the larger dune and eventually appear to punch through the large dune to appear on the other side. The process seems to be similar to waves of light, sound or water that pass directly through each other; the detailed mechanism is, however, very different, being nonlinear. These are known as solitons.
The dunes emulate soliton behavior but unlike solitons, the sand particles do not pass through each other. When the smaller dune rear-ends the larger dune, the winds begin to deposit sand on the rear dune while blowing sand off the front dune without replenishing it. Eventually, the rear dune has assumed dimensions similar to the former front dune which has now become a smaller, faster moving dune that pulls away with the wind. (Schwämmle & Herrmann, 2003)
Fine examples of barchan dunes are found near La Joya, Arequipa, Peru (); a number of dunes are readily visible from the Pan American Highway at the intersection with the Carretera Interoceanica just north of La Joya, where they can be seen passing over cement block buildings. In mid-2010, several smaller barchan dunes are approaching the Carretera from the south. These gray-colored dunes are formed from fine-grained volcanic ash from the Huaynaputina eruption in 1600.
The Great Sand Dunes National Park in the American state of Colorado has spectacular examples of barchan dunes.
Barchan dunes have been observed to exist on Mars, where the thin atmosphere often produces fierce winds, strong enough to move sand and dust.[2]
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Strahler, A. & Archibold, O.W. Physical Geography: Science and Systems of the Human Environment. 4th ed. 2008. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Hoboken, NJ. pg. 442.
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