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19 - Biometeorology of humans in desert environments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2009

Thomas T. Warner
Affiliation:
National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado
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Summary

Just as the Irish are said to have 40 words for the color green, desert dwellers have many ways of expressing nuances of thirst. The following are Arabic expressions.

al-'atash thirst

al-Zama' thirst

al-Sada thirst

al-Ghulla burning thirst

al-Luhba burning thirst

al-Huyam vehement thirst (or passionate love!)

al Uwam burning thirst, giddiness

al-Juwad excessive thirst (this is the thirst which kills)

E. S. Hills, arid-land researcher Arid Lands (1966)

The psychological effects of desert heat and wind are described.

In the case of the Santa Ana winds, high pressure over Utah and Nevada causes air to spill off the Mojave Desert, rushing over the Pacific coastal range and onto the coastal lowlands. The coastal air is robbed of humidity by this thirsty invader and fills with static electricity. As it envelopes desert and littoral alike, the Santa Ana creates a weird atmosphere of impending doom. During its season, as Raymond Chandler wrote in his famous short story Red Wind, “Meek little wives feel the edge of the carving knife and study their husbands' necks. Anything can happen.”

Gregory McNamee, American author The Sierra Club Desert Reader (1995)

Biometeorology is the study of the response of living organisms to weather and climate. In particular, this chapter will address the effects of the desert environment on humans. First will be described the various mechanisms by which heat can be gained and lost by the body. This will be followed by a discussion of the ways in which the body attempts to maintain the thermal balance that is required to sustain life.

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Chapter
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Desert Meteorology , pp. 491 - 518
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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References

Adolph, E. F. (Ed.), 1969: Physiology of Man in the Desert – treats virtually all aspects of the physical effects of desert heat and dehydration on humans, based on field and laboratory studies
Clements, T., et al., 1963: A Study of Windborne Sand and Dust in Desert Areas – reviews the causes of dust storms and their properties, with some discussion of their effects on humans, primarily for the northern Sonoran and Mojave Deserts
Ingram, D. L., and L. E. Mount, 1975: Man and Animals in Hot Environments – general discussion of heat-exchange mechanisms, the thermal regulatory system, and adaptations to hot environments
Kerslake, D. McK., 1972: The Stress of Hot Environments – describes all the mechanisms of heat exchange with the environment, the heat balance and how it is maintained, clothing effects, and various indices of heat stress
Lee, D. H. K., 1968: Human adaptation to arid environments – discusses heat regulatory processes, physiological consequences of heat regulation, and adaptive processes
Monteith, J. L., and L. E. Mount (Eds.), 1974: Heat Loss From Animals and Man: Assessment and Control – a series of papers on the physical principles of heat transfer in humans, and the physiology of thermoregulation,
Oke, T. R., 1987: Boundary Layer Climates – contains a chapter on the climates of animals
Tromp, S. W., 1980: Biometeorology: The impact of the weather and climate on humans and their environment (animals and plants) – contains a brief discussion of thermoregulation in humans

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