UN meeting to review global progress on desertification, land degradation, drought

November 4, 2025 Representatives of 196 countries and the European Union will meet in Panama from December 1 to 5, 2025, to review their efforts …

UN meeting to review global progress on desertification, land degradation, drought
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Baroque Planning of Urban Systems

Baroque planning is a 17th-century urban design style known for its grand and symmetrical layouts, emphasising strong central control by powerful states and rulers. Key features include wide avenues, large public spaces, and strict zoning, which create a dramatic and orderly city that showcases power and status. Notable examples are the Palace of Versailles and the Baroque redesign of Rome under Pope Six .

Key Features :

  • Hierarchical and radial layouts: Cities had a clear center with wide streets radiating outward.
  • Grand public spaces: Large squares served as central points for community life.
  • Strict zoning: Cities had separate areas for public, private, residential, and industrial uses.
  • Reinforcement of authority: Monumental designs emphasized the power of the state, monarchy, or church.

Examples

  • Palace of Versailles: The symbol of royal power with radiating avenues.
  • Rome: The urban fabric connects major churches and sites.
  • St. Petersburg: An example of grand Baroque planning.
Plan of Baroque Replanning of Rome, yellow lines represent new axes carved through the existing context of city, connecting churches and urban sites

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Keep Watering

Patience and persistence are two of the greatest allies on your journey to success. Every meaningful accomplishment requires time, focus, and the …

Keep Watering
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Aeolian Processes and Landforms

Aeolian processes refer to the geomorphic actions performed by wind, which shape landscapes primarily in arid and semi-arid regions through erosion, transportation, and deposition of sediments. The resultant landforms are collectively termed aeolian landforms and are prominent in desert environments such as the Thar Desert, Sahara, and the Great Victoria Desert.

  • Erosion: Wind erodes the land by deflating loose particles and abrading surfaces (abrasion).
  • Transportation: Particles are transported via suspension, saltation (bouncing), or surface creep.
  • Deposition: When wind energy decreases, it deposits carried sediments, building various landforms.

Erosional Landforms

  • Ventifacts: Rocks polished, grooved, or faceted by wind-driven sand.
  • Yardangs: Streamlined, elongated ridges sculpted by persistent winds.
  • Mushroom Rocks: Narrow “stems” and wide tops formed by selective wind abrasion.
  • Deflation Hollows (Blowouts): Broad, shallow depressions produced where wind removes loose sediment.
  • Desert Pavement: Surfaces covered by closely packed pebbles as finer particles are blown away.

Depositional Landforms

  • Sand Dunes: Accumulations of sand into various shapes — barchans, transverse, parabolic, longitudinal.
  • Loess Deposits: Extensive blankets of windblown silt and clay, resulting in fertile soils, commonly seen in China and the US.
  • Ripples: Small wavy ridges of sand that indicate local wind action.

Conditions Favoring Aeolian Activity

  • Sparse or no vegetation.
  • Abundant supply of fine, loose material (sand, silt, clay).
  • Strong and persistent winds.

Importance and Examples

Many aeolian landforms are stable once formed and can dominate the landscape in deserts and polar areas. Notable examples include sand dunes in the Sahara, loess plains in Iowa, and mushroom rocks in Arizona.

Aeolian processes are critical not only for understanding physical geography and earth system dynamics but also for addressing challenges like desertification, land degradation, and even extraterrestrial geomorphology, as similar features have been observed on Mars and Pluto.


LInk(s) and Source(s):

Agents of Erosion

Some Desert Related Geographic Terms

Weathering

Mountains

Endogenetic and Exogenetic Forces and Evolution of Landforms: Some Terms





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