Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather forecast - Harm of sandstorm

Harm of sandstorm

Main failure modes of sandstorm

(1) Strong wind: Strong wind accompanied by fine dust damages buildings and public facilities, causing death.

⑵ Sand burial: Farmland, channels, cottages, railways, grasslands, etc. are buried by a large number of quicksand in the form of quicksand, especially posing a serious threat to transportation.

⑶ Soil wind erosion: The dust source and affected area of each sandstorm will be harmed by wind erosion in different degrees, and the depth of wind erosion can reach 1 ~ 10 cm. It is estimated that the annual loss of soil fine matter caused by sandstorms in China is as high as 106 ~ 107 tons, most of which are below 10 micron, which seriously damages the land productivity of farmland and grassland in the source area.

⑷ Air pollution: In the source area and influence area of sandstorm, the inhalable particulate matter (TSP) in the atmosphere increases, and air pollution intensifies. Taking 1993 "5.5" sandstorm as an example, the outdoor air TSP concentration in Jinchang, Gansu Province reached 10 16 mg/m3, and the indoor air TSP concentration was 80 mg/m3, exceeding the standard by 40 times. From March to April, 2000, Beijing was affected by sandstorms, and the number of days when the air pollution index reached Grade 4 or above was 10, which also affected many cities in eastern China. From March 24th to 30th, the daily pollution index of Nanjing, Hangzhou and other cities 18 exceeded Grade IV.

The harm of black wind

The harm of black wind mainly has two words, one is wind and the other is sand.

Strong winds have two other hazards: one is wind damage, and the other is scraping the ground.

Let's talk about the typhoon first. Strong winds destroy buildings, blow down or pull up tree stems, tear up farmers' plastic greenhouses and farmland plastic films, and so on. In addition, April and May in northwest China are the time when cash crops such as melons, fruits, vegetables, beets and cotton emerge, cotyledons or true leaves grow, and fruit trees bloom, at this time, they are least resistant to sandstorms. Light leaves are covered with dust, which weakens photosynthesis, affects respiration and reduces crop yield; In the worst case, the seedlings will die, not to mention the mature results. For example,1May 5, 1993, black wind in northwest China knocked out 85,000 stamens of fruit trees, and shelter forests and timber forests were broken or uprooted 109400. In addition, the strong wind blew down the telephone poles, causing water and electricity cuts and affecting industrial and agricultural production. 1On May 5, 993, the black wind caused power failure and water cut, and Jinchang Jinchuan Company alone caused economic losses of 83 million yuan.

When strong wind acts on loose soil in arid areas, it will scrape off a layer of topsoil, which is called wind erosion. For example,1May 5, 1993, the average wind erosion depth of black wind 10 cm (up to 50 cm), that is, an average of 60 to 70 cubic meters of fertile topsoil per mu was blown away by the wind. In fact, strong winds not only blow away the fine clay and organic matter in the soil, but also pile up the sand in the soil, which greatly reduces the fertility of the soil. In addition, the strong wind with sand will wear off a layer of buildings and crops, which is called abrasion and also a disaster.

The harm of sand is mainly sand burial. As mentioned above, in narrow pipelines, windward and uplifted terrain, due to high wind speed, the wind-blown sand hazard is mainly wind erosion, while in leeward depressions and other terrain with low wind speed, the wind-blown sand hazard is mainly sand burial. Such as1where sand burial occurred in the black wind on May 5, 993, the average thickness of sand burial was 20 cm, and the thickest part reached1.2 m.

More importantly, the loss of human life. For example,1May 5, 993, 85 people were killed, 264 people were injured and 3 1 person was missing. In addition, the death loss of large livestock was 1.2 million, the crops were affected by 5.6 million mu, the total length of the lifeline canal buried by sand in arid areas was more than 2,000 kilometers, and the Lanzhou-Xinjiang railway was stopped for 3 1 hour. The total economic loss exceeded 540 million yuan.

Hazards of sandstorm weather

Sandstorm weather is a disastrous weather in northwest China and northern North China, which can cause houses to collapse, traffic power supply to be blocked or interrupted, fires, casualties, etc., pollute the natural environment, destroy crop growth, and cause serious losses and great harm to national economic construction and people's lives and property safety. The hazards of sandstorms mainly include the following aspects:

1, ecological environment deterioration

When sandstorms occur, dust and floating dust carried by strong winds are everywhere, and the number of people passing through areas with air turbidity, choking nose and eyes, respiratory tract and other diseases increases. For example,1A serious sandstorm occurred in Jinchang on May 5, 993. The dust content in outdoor air is 10 16 mm/cm3, and the dust content in indoor air is 80 mm/cm3, which is 40 times higher than the national standard for dust content in living quarters.

2. Production and life are affected.

A lot of dust carried by sandstorm weather blocked the sun, and the weather was gloomy, which led to the decrease of solar radiation. A few hours to ten hours of poor visibility can easily make people feel depressed and reduce the efficiency of work and study. In light cases, a large number of livestock can be infected with respiratory and gastrointestinal diseases, and in severe cases, a large number of "spring-deficient" livestock will die, and fertile soil, seeds and seedlings in farmland will be scraped away. Sandstorm will also aggravate the wind erosion and desertification of the surface soil, cover thick dust on the leaves of plants, affect normal photosynthesis and cause crop yield reduction.

3. Loss of life and property

1On May 5, 1993, severe sandstorms occurred in Jinchang, Wei Wu, Minqin, Baiyin and other cities in Gansu Province, affecting 2,535,500 mu of farmland, losing 42,800 trees, resulting in a direct economic loss of 236 million yuan, 50 people died and 0/53 people were seriously injured. On April 12, 2000, strong sandstorms occurred in Yongchang, Jinchang, Wei Wu and Minqin. According to incomplete statistics, the direct economic losses of Jinchang and Wei Wu alone amounted to15.34 million yuan.

4, traffic safety (plane, car and other traffic accidents)

Sandstorm weather often affects traffic safety, causing planes to fail to take off or land normally, and making cars and train carriages rupture, stop or derail.

Sandstorms originate from soil wind erosion.

According to Xinhua News Agency, Lanzhou Electric Power Co., Ltd., with the efforts of experts from the Institute of Environment and Engineering in Cold and Arid Regions, Chinese Academy of Sciences, recently successfully completed a sandstorm wind tunnel simulation experiment specially designed to explore the mechanism of sandstorm initiation and propagation.

Experts found through experiments that soil wind erosion is the primary link in the occurrence and development of sandstorms. Wind is the most direct driving force of soil, among which the nature of airflow, the magnitude of wind speed and the related conditions of wind action in soil wind erosion are the most important factors. In addition, soil water content is also one of the important reasons that affect soil wind erosion.

This experiment also proves that plant measures are one of the effective methods to prevent and control sandstorms. Experts believe that plants usually affect wind erosion in three forms: dispersing certain wind momentum on the ground to reduce the transmission between airflow and dust; Stop the movement of soil, dust, etc.

In addition, through experiments, the researchers concluded that the occurrence of sandstorms is not only the product of specific natural environmental conditions, but also has a corresponding relationship with human activities. Man-made overgrazing, deforestation, industrial and mining traffic construction, especially man-made over-reclamation, destroyed the ground vegetation, disturbed the ground structure, formed a large area of sandy land, and directly accelerated the formation and development of sandstorms.