Godzilla dust cloud from Sahara blankets Caribbean on its way to US
A vast cloud of Sahara dust is blanketing the
Caribbean as it heads to the US with a size and concentration that experts say
hasn’t been seen in half a century.
Air quality across most of the region reached record
“hazardous” levels and experts who nicknamed the event the “Godzilla dust
cloud” warned people to stay indoors and use air filters if they had them.
“This is the most significant event in the past 50
years,” said Pablo Méndez Lázaro, an environmental health specialist at the
University of Puerto Rico. “Conditions are dangerous in many Caribbean
islands.”
Many health specialists were concerned about those
battling respiratory symptoms tied to the coronavirus pandemic. Lázaro, who is
working with Nasa to develop an alert system for the arrival of Sahara dust,
said the concentration was so high in recent days that it could even have
adverse effects on healthy people.
Extremely hazy conditions and limited visibility
were reported from Antigua down to Trinidad & Tobago, with the event
expected to last until late Tuesday. Some people posted pictures of themselves
on social media wearing double masks to ward off the coronavirus and the dust,
while others joked that the Caribbean looked like it had received a yellow
filter movie treatment.
José Alamo, a meteorologist with the US National
Weather Service in San Juan, Puerto Rico, said the worst days for the US
territory would be Monday and Tuesday as the plume heads toward the US south-east
coast. The main international airport in San Juan was reporting only 8km (5
miles) of visibility.
The mass of extremely dry and dusty air is known as
the Saharan Air Layer and forms over the Sahara desert. It moves across the
North Atlantic every three to five days during the northern hemisphere’s late
spring to early autumn, peaking in late June to mid-August, according to the US
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The layer can be 3km thick,
the agency said.




