Dust storms are a major natural hazard to human health. Severe erosive storms in parts
of the Central Plateau of Iran have made the situation very difficult for the inhabitants, to
the extent that some areas have become depopulated. To better understand this phenomenon,
dust day counts at 37 synoptic stations from 1999 to 2018 were analyzed. Dust days
were most common in June, with 45% of the total number occurring in summer (June–
August) and 34% in spring (March–May), and were more frequent since 2008, as compared
to 1999-2007. While the spatial pattern of dust days was complex, the highest number
tended to be in the southeast of the region. The stations with the most dust days, Zabol,
Zahedan, and Arak, averaged 126 days, 74 days, and 73 days of dust per year, respectively.
The statistical distributions that most often best fitted the time series of number of dust
days (NDD) per year were Johnson SB, Log-Logistic 3-Parameter, and Burr. These fitted
probability distributions were used to estimate different return period values for annual
number of dust days. For example, Zabol and Sirjan stations had, respectively, the highest
and lowest 2-year return period NDD values, 125 and 2 days, respectively. Overall, the spatial
pattern of the NDD at different return periods indicated that southeastern Iran, as well
as some northwestern and eastern portions of the study region, had particularly high values
of NDD at longer return periods, while much of the northern and southwestern margins of
the region have low NDD at all return periods. These results may be useful for informing
the regional management of dust storms.