Abstract

Raked linear dunes were rarely reported, except in the Kumtagh Desert, leaving little known about the dynamic process. However, numerous raked linear dunes have formed in the Kat Kum dunefield of the southeastern Taklimakan Desert, which provides a new case to study the morphodynamics of these dunes. We conducted a comprehensive analysis on the dune morphometry, wind regime, sedimentary characteristics, and sand availability of these dunes. We found that grain size variation is an essential factor affecting the formation of raked linear dunes in addition to wind regime and limited sand availability. These dunes in the Kat Kum present small scale and easily reshaped with fast migration rate compared with these in the Kumtagh Desert, and distributed in areas with low sand cover. The primary ridge extended obliquely to the resultant drift direction, whereas the subsidiary ridge extend is nearly parallel to this direction. The grain size of the primary ridge is noticeably coarser than that of the subsidiary ridge. These dunes seem to have evolved from barchans. Under a north-northeast wind, barchans reshaped to asymmetrical barchans by extending their southeast limbs and eroding their northwest limbs, causing the ridge to be oblique to the resultant drift direction. The strong east-northeast wind erodes and reshapes the primary ridge, transporting fine sand to the northwest and resulting in the formation of proto-subsidiary ridges. With the elongation and lateral movement of primary ridge, a continuous subsidiary ridge with regular dune spacing forms on the northwest flank.

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