In early February 2013, dust plumes
blew off the coast of Oman and over the Arabian Sea. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
on NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites captured these natural-color images on the
morning (top) and afternoon (bottom) of February 4. In the roughly three hours
separating these images, the dust plumes lengthened and shifted southward.
Source points for the dust storm are
not apparent in these images, but sandy desert covers large stretches of Oman.
In addition, a massive sand sea extends over parts of Oman, Saudi Arabia,
Yemen, and the United Arab Emirates. Known as Rub’ al Khali or
the Empty Quarter, this sand sea is the world’s largest, holding roughly half
as much sand as the entire Sahara Desert. Particles in the February 4 dust
storm may have arisen from the Empty Quarter.
Dust blowing off the coast of Oman
was not the only dust-storm activity over the Arabian Sea on February 4.
Smaller dust plumes also blew off the coasts of Iran and Pakistan (visible in
the high-resolution images linked to above).
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