The Mysterious Sailing Stones... |
The sailing stones are a geological
phenomenon where rocks move in long tracks along a smooth valley floor
without human or animal intervention. They have been recorded and
studied in a number of places around Racetrack Playa, Death Valley,
where the number and length of travel grooves are notable. The force
behind their movement is not understood and is subject to research.
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Racetrack stones only move every two
or three years and most tracks develop over three or four years. Stones
with rough bottoms leave straight striated tracks while those with
smooth bottoms wander. Stones sometimes turn over, exposing another edge
to the ground and leaving a different track in the stone's wake.
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Sliding rock trails fluctuate in
direction and length. Some rocks which start next to each other start
out traveling parallel, but one may abruptly change direction to the
left, right, or even back the direction it came from. Length also varies
because two similarly sized and shaped rocks could travel uniformly,
then one could burst ahead or stop dead in its track.
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Speed is an unknown variable. Since
these stones are rarely transported and nobody has witnessed the
movement, the speeds the rocks travel at are not known.
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Geologists Jim McAllister and Allen
Agnew mapped the bedrock of the area in 1948 and made note of the
tracks. Naturalists from the National Park Service later wrote more
detailed descriptions and Life magazine featured a set of photographs
from The Racetrack. Speculation about how the stones may move started at
this time. Various explanations have been put forward over the years
that have ranged from the supernatural to the very complex.
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Most hypotheses favored by interested
geologists posit that strong winds when the mud is wet are at least in
part responsible. Some stones weigh as much as a human, which some
researchers, such as geologist George M. Stanley, feel is too heavy for
the area's wind to move. They maintain that ice sheets around the stones
either help to catch the wind or move in ice flows.
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Researches studied some stones for
several years. Ten of the initial twenty-five stones moved in the first
winter with Mary Ann (stone A) covering the longest distance at 212 feet
(64.5 m). Two of the next six monitored winters also saw multiple
stones move. No stones were confirmed to have moved in the summer and
some winters none or only a few stones moved. In the end all but two of
the thirty monitored stones moved during the seven year study. At 2.5
inches (6.5 cm) in diameter Nancy (stone H) was the smallest monitored
stone. It also moved the longest cumulative distance, 860 feet (262 m),
and the greatest single winter movement, 659 feet (201 m). The largest
stone to move was 80 pounds (36 kg).
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Wind and ice both are the favored
hypothesis for these mysterious sliding rocks. But as those are only
hypothesises, we can say that the mystery remains...
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lundi 11 août 2014
The Mysterious Sailing Stones...
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