Abstract

Zibar is an Arabic word for aeolian bedforms that are coarse-grained, of limited relief, have no slipfaces, and occur on sand sheets and within interdune corridors of many sand seas. They may also be called granule-armored dunes, undulations, transverse aeolian ridges, mega-ripples, giant ripples, and chevrons and whalebacks. Zibars, though very extensive, are by no means ubiquitous in the world’s aeolian environments. They occur in thirteen main locations in dry, warm deserts: Algodones, USA; Gran Desierto, Mexico; eastern Mauritania; Ubari, Libya; Libyan Desert; Erg of Fachi-Bilma/Tenéré; Selima, Sudan; Namib, Namibia; Lut, Iran; southern Rub’ al Khali, Arabia; Thar, India; Kumtagh, China; and Atacama, Peru. They can occur as transverse ridges, as parabolic shapes, and as oblique features. In many regions they tend to have a spacing of around 8 to 14 per km. They tend to be modest in height, varying between tens of centimeters to up to c 6–8 m. All researchers seem to agree that they are mound-like forms without slipfaces and that their slope angles are no more than 5-15o. Nearly all zibars occur in the interdunes between various types of linear dune. They are composed of ill-sorted sand, often with a large coarse component.

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