This may be historical. There is no date.
Gigantic
Sahara sandstorm in Atlantic
A
massive sandstorm blowing off the northwest African desert has
blanketed hundreds of thousands of square miles of the eastern
Atlantic Ocean with a dense cloud of Saharan sand. The massive nature
of this particular storm was first seen in this SeaWiFS image
acquired February 26, 2000 when it reached over 1000 miles into the
Atlantic.
These
storms and the rising warm air can lift dust 15,000 feet or so above
the African deserts and then out across the Atlantic, many times
reaching as far as the Caribbean where they often require the local
weather services to issue air pollution alerts as was recently the
case in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Recent
studies by the U.S.G.S. have
linked the decline of the coral reefs in the Caribbean to the
increasing frequency and intensity of Saharan Dust events.
Additionally, other studies suggest that Sahalian Dust may play a
role in determining the frequency and intensity of hurricanes formed
in the eastern Atlantic Ocean.
For
more information, see:
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