Sand from the Sahara Desert causing recent lull in the hurricane season: scientists
HALIFAX — Tiny grains of sand from the Sahara Desert are to blame for the almost month-long lull in this year’s Atlantic hurricane season, scientists say. But it could soon come to an end.
Every June and July, there is a peak in the amount of dust from the North African desert that is lifted high above the North Atlantic by strong winds, disrupting the formation of tropical storms.
This annual phenomenon, known as the Sahara Air Layer (SAL), hurled an unusually large amount of sand into the upper atmosphere earlier this month, according to NASA.
“You can see it in the atmosphere, moving from Africa eastward across the Atlantic,” says Chris Fogarty, manager of the Canadian Hurricane Centre in Dartmouth, N.S. “Hurricanes are not likely to form when you’ve got a lot of this dry air from the desert in it.”