موضوع انجليزي عن desert
برجراف عن استصلاح
الصحراء بالانجليزي
paragraph about desert reclamation
تعبير عن رحلة الى البر بالانجليزي
تعبير عن رحلة الى الصحراء
برجراف عن تحويل الصحراء الى ارض خضراء
موضوع تعبير عن استصلاح الصحراء
جمل عن الصحراء
information about desert
Deserts
Dune
fields, rocky plains, dry steppes: one-third of the world's land is dying of thirst.
Infertile regions where the rain is scarce, where the fauna, the flora and the
man deploy a thousand tricks to survive. Hang on to the caravan for a great
crossing of the deserts.
Agglutinated
in both tropics, they display as far as the eye can see their sand dunes,
pebbles and slabs of mud. Long sheltered from curious explorers, they are now
flattened on all maps of geography, the label "desert", they are now
flattened on all maps of geography, the label "desert" across. They already
monopolize a third of the land and, according to experts, nibble nearly 10,000
ha each day of the year ...
And
if the tectonic plates continue on their current momentum, in a hundred million
years, the globe will be transformed into a desert rock emerging in the middle
of the puddle of the oceans ... But will we be here to see it, that's another
question.
Any
handful of earth in the sun can not be called a desert; geologists have long
torn their hair to find a precise way of qualifying them: for a long time were
recognized desert lands that received no more than 25 cm of water per year. In
comparison, in Paris, it is the deluge; There is an average of 62.4 cm of water
per year. But in some parts of the world, although it rains a little more than
25 cm a year, the heat is such that the water evaporates immediately. It is
therefore necessary to take into account not only precipitation, but also
evaporation. When the quantity of water fallen from the sky is less than that
which goes into steam, the soil becomes arid, and the region becomes desert.
Arabian
desert: the country of the thousand and one dunes
Between
the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean, spread over 2,300,000 km² an infinity of
dunes. Or the largest stretch of sand in the world: the Arabian desert. No
mountain range on the horizon to hold the clouds, yet the drops desert the
region. The boycott of the peninsula is the result of a complicated game of air
movement: above the equator, where the sun beats hard, the air heats up easily.
Hot air being lighter than cold air, the air mass above the equator rises. This
column of warm, light air forms a low pressure zone at this location.
But
during her ascent, she gradually loses her heat. While cooling, the water vapor
that it contains is transformed into drops of water: it often rains near the
equator. The cloud, thus rid of its water, continues to move away from the
equator and descends a little further to a latitude of + 30 ° and -30 °, on
both sides of the equator, above the tropics exactly. An area of high pressure formed by dried air masses is formed at
this location. This dense and dry cloud pumps all the water from the ground and
causes a great evaporation of the surface water. This is why the majority of
deserts are stuck in the tropics.
Under
these dry skies, the Arabian desert looks like a field of croissants as far as
the eye can see. Crest against slope, dune against dune, waves at the regular
pace never repeat. Dunes dancing with the winds; Aridity and breath of air
sculpt the landscape: in the absence of water, the rocks become friable and the
wind manages to pick up particles of sand. More and more loaded in grains, the
wind slows down and deposits first the big heavier grains and then the others.
The whole forms a crescent that presents its back to the wind. Then gradually
the grains that are at the back of the dune are transported to the ridge. From
there they roll towards the base and fill the hollow of the crescent. Thus
fades a dune to reform immediately a few meters further. The same pile of sand
moves about ten meters a year.
Gobi
desert: drought on a plateau
A
few scattered tufts and a handful of pebbles lost in the sand, perched at 1000
m altitude, the Gobi desert is a collection of large natural bowls. Camped at
the same latitude as Paris, it is simply too far from the sea to enjoy the
arrival of moist air.
The
story begins 100 million years ago. At the time, the Indian peninsula was stuck
to ... Antarctica. Asia, surrounded by oceans, paddled quietly: the sea wind
brought a good dose of moisture and fertilized the regions. About 95 million
years ago, India comes off and sails at a rate of 30 cm per year through the
ancestor of the Indian Ocean. A tectonic journey that ends 50 million years ago
when the Indian plate hit Asia hard. This titanic shock that continues today
gave rise to the Himalayan mountain range and, as a result, isolated the
central regions of Asia. Far from the sea and a little protected by mountains
that stop the masses of humid air, the heart of Asia has gradually dried up in
Gobi desert. The arid zone has extended from Turkestan to Mongolia.
The
king camel
The
caravan, overwhelmed with heat, stopped for a moment at the top of a mound
bristling with pebbles. Below, a palm grove spreads out under the eyes of camel
drivers. Already, the dromedaries have felt the coolness of the water and
hasten the pace. At the oasis, the animals are unloaded and taken to the
watering place. Legs apart and heads bowed, the camels begin to drink. Ten
minutes later, they get up, stomach swollen with 135 liters of water! They can
again do without drinking for a fortnight without putting their lives in
danger. In periods of abstinence, the dromedary rehydrates his body by
"burning" the fats of his bump. One hundred grams of oxidized lipids
give exactly 107 g of water. A camel with a huge bump of 40 kg carries
therefore on its back a tank of more than 40 liters! Such a reserve does not
prevent it from being cautious and economical. The dromedary sweats very
little. It begins to lose water through the skin only when its internal temperature
reaches 40 ° C.
In
the desert, living beings sweat as little as possible and use various methods
to cool off: the fennec, the fox hungry, the Cape hare or the sand cat have
ears that are out of proportion to their heads. Irrigated by many small blood vessels,
they act as heat exchangers between the body and the surrounding air: the warm
blood of the animal is cooled in the ears. The animals thus decrease by a few
degrees their internal temperature. In general, the fauna of the Sahara avoids
cooking in full sun. During the day, the animals stay cool in their burrow. The
fennec, for example, only comes out one hour before sunset to go hunting. This
little fox hunts rodents and birds. The meat and blood of his prey is enough to
bring him the amount of water he needs. The fennec, as also the Cape hare or
the cat of the sands, almost never drinks!
Gangas
are less fortunate: eating only hard, dry seeds, these birds have to
periodically go to the oases to refuel. However, they have a big advantage:
they fly! And so can fetch water where it is, sometimes several tens of
kilometers. Nestlings, on the other hand, are stuck to the nest, and adult
gangas use Canadair's technology to quench their children's thirst. When they
drink, the parents immerse their chest sometimes for a quarter of an hour in
the pool before returning to the fold. The feathers of the belly, of a very
particular conformation, absorb the water like a sponge, and act as a
reservoir. When the adults are back, it is enough for young people to rummage
with the beak in their plumage to quench their thirst.
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