The Tifernine Dune Field in Algeria is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition 17 crewmember on the International Space Station. The Tifernine Dune Field is located at the southernmost tip of the Grand Erg Oriental, a dune sea that occupies a large portion of the Sahara Desert in eastern Algeria. This view illustrates the interface between the yellow-orange sand dunes of the field and adjacent dark brown consolidated rocks of the Tinrhert Plateau to the south and east (right). NASA scientists point out that three distinct landform types are visible in the image, each providing information about past and present climate in the area. The oldest landform is represented by the rocks of the Tinrhert Plateau, which are characterized by a number of incised channels in the bedrock -- these formed during a wet and cool climate period, most probably by glacial meltwater streams. As the present dry and hot climate that characterizes the Sahara became established, water ceased to flow in these channels, and large amounts of drying sediment (sand, silt, and clay) were eroded and transported by predominantly northeast-southwest winds -- forming large linear dunes that roughly parallel the prevailing wind direction (center). The present climate regime is still hot and dry, but current wind directions are more variable, leading to the formation of star dunes -- recognizable by a starfish-like pattern when seem from above -- that are modifying the older large linear dunes. White to grey regions within the dune field are exposed deposits of silt and clay, together with evaporite minerals (such as halite, or common table salt) formed by evaporation of water that collected in small basins between the dunes.

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