HOLOCENE EOLIAN ACTIVITY IN THE MOJAVE DESERT-LINKAGES TO FLUVIAL AND LACUSTRINE SYSTEMS
Late Pleistocene and early Holocene eolian activity and construction of dune fields and other eolian deposits was controlled mainly by the availability of sediment from paleolake basins and their influent fluvial systems. Once these systems had desiccated in the early Holocene, eolian activity was influenced by extreme events, notably periods of flooding in the Mojave River that provided sediment to its terminal basins; and periods of extended drought that reduced vegetation cover and enhanced eolian mobility throughout the region. The geomorphic response to these events varies spatially, depending on the factors that control the eolian system.
The varied geomorphic response to Holocene climatic events is evaluated in terms of a conceptual model that considers the influence of sediment supply, availability, and mobility on rates of eolian processes to understand Holocene patterns of eolian activity and to provide an assessment of the response of eolian systems to projected future climate change in the region.