Litcius/Paper detail

The Role of Moisture Conveyor Belts for Precipitation in the Atacama Desert

Christoph Böhm, Mark Reyers, Leon Knarr, Susanne Crewell

2021Geophysical Research Letters27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In the hyperarid Atacama Desert in northern Chile, rare precipitation events can leave long‐lasting geomorphological traces and have strong impacts on biota. While moisture conveyor belts (MCBs) and atmospheric rivers (ARs) have been associated with extreme precipitation in semiarid regions, their role for the Atacama Desert has not been previously investigated. This study reveals that about four MCBs per year make landfall in the Atacama Desert. According to simulated precipitation, 40–80% of the total precipitation between the coast and the Andean foothills is associated with MCBs. A case study reveals an elevated moisture transport decoupled from the maritime boundary layer, which is generalized by a composite analysis. Back trajectories reveal the Amazon Basin as the main source of moisture. MCB landfall times are derived from the AR catalog by Guan and Waliser (2015), https://doi.org/10.1002/2015jd024257 . Implications of the results on paleoclimate reconstructions are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

PrecipitationFoothillsAridMoistureEnvironmental scienceGeologyDesert climateDesert (philosophy)ClimatologyBiotaAtmospheric sciencesPhysical geographyMeteorologyGeographyPaleontologyEcologyEpistemologyPhilosophyBiologyCartographyGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchTree-ring climate responsesLandslides and related hazards