Chalbi Desert
The Chalbi Desert is a small desert in northern Kenya near the border with Ethiopia. It is east of Lake Turkana, within the Marsabit County. Marsabit is the closest major urban center.
Etymology
In the language of the Gabra people, Chalbi means "bare, salty area".Location and description
The Chalbi Desert is located in between Mount Marsabit and Lake Turkana. The area is 110 km long and 10 to 20 km wide and it extends over 100,000 km2.The area is composed of an ancient lake-bed, rocky surface and lava regions. The ancient lake-bed of Chalbi used to be a shallow lake around 10,000 to 11,000 years ago. The lava hills provide some altitudinal change in an otherwise plain region. The ground is a combination of dried mud and salt. When it rains, the ground becomes a soft, sticky surface.
Chalbi desert has been recognized as an important geosite of Kenya. The preserved fossils of the area have been critical to the understanding of the Quaternary climate in East Africa. These fossils include aquatic animals like the Nile perch. It is also a site of the mineral eugsterite.
Climate
Chalbi is a rain-shadow desert. Mean annual rainfall is approximately . Rainfall is erratic and in some years the area barely receives any rainfall at all. In 1973, for example, only of rainfall were recorded. Meanwhile, the potential evaporation likely is over. At the edge of the desert, there are numerous springs, which create oases of water and grasses.Occasionally, rain falls as a heavy downpour, and the water runs off through the hard desert surface and pools at surface depressions. In years of exceptional rainfall, a temporary lake is formed that can last several months. This happened during 1978, for example, when a temporary lake of in depth was formed long enough for waterfowl to make use of it.
The Chalbi desert sustains high winds. In fact, the area has some of the strongest and most sustained wind systems of the world. The area sustains for over 50 days per years wind speeds of over. Sandstorms are a common feature of the region.