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Potentiality of land and water resources in African Sahara: a case study of south Egypt
Authors:A. H. El Nahry  E. S. Mohamed
Affiliation:(1) Soil Sciences Department, National Authority for Remote Sensing and Space Sciences, Cairo, Egypt
Abstract:The investigated area is located south Egypt, between latitudes 22°00′N and 24°15′N, and longitudes 28°00′E and 30°00′E. It covers a total area of about 95,000.17 km2. The area was remotely sensed to identify landscape and its land and water resources. A reconnaissance survey followed by detailed one was done to verify the information resulted from satellite images. The prevailing deposits of the area could be expressed as (1) the Nubian sandstone, (2) the Quaternary sediments, and (3) the sand dunes belt. Fourteen main and sub-main landforms were recognized, i.e., sand sheets (high, moderately high, moderate, and low), depressions (high, moderately high, moderate, and low), dry valleys, peniplains, footslopes, barchans, tablelands, and scattered hills. Associated soils were distinguished and classified as Typic Torripsamments, Typic Haplocalcids, Typic Torrifluvents, and Typic Haplodurids. Spatial variability of soil and water characteristics was identified through using ordinary Kriging interpolation method. Land surface temperatures in both summer and winter seasons were derived from thermal band, and soil temperature regimes were defined digitally as hyperthermic. Water potentiality was identified and classified according to salinity and sodicity hazards to C2-S1 and C3-S1. Using GIS techniques, soil potentiality spatial model (SPSM) was designed to get potentiality classes, i.e., high, moderately high, moderate, low, and very low.
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