geology

Saturday, 4 June 2011

The Sliding Rocks

The Sliding Rocks of Racetrack Playa


One of the most interesting mysteries of Death Valley National Park is the sliding rocks at Racetrack Playa (a playa is a dry lake bed). These rocks can be found on the floor of the playa with long trails behind them. Somehow these rocks slide across the playa, cutting a furrow in the sediment as they move.

Some of these rocks weigh several hundred pounds. That makes the question: "How do they move?" a very challenging one.

The truth: No one knows for sure exactly how these rocks move - although a few people have come up with some pretty good explanations. The reason why their movement remains a mystery: No one has ever seen them in motion!

Let's learn how they are thought to move....


About Racetrack Playa



Racetrack playa is lake bed that is almost perfectly flat and almost always dry. It is about 4 kilometers long (2.5 miles - north to south) and about 2 kilometers wide (1.25 miles - east to west). The surface is covered with mudcracks and the sediment is made up mainly of silt and clay.

The climate in this area is arid. It rains just a couple of inches per year. However, when it rains, the steep mountains which surround Racetrack Playa produce a large amount of runoff that converts the playa floor into a broad shallow lake. When wet, the surface of the playa is transformed into a very soft and very slippery mud.


Are They Moved by People or Animals?



The shape of trails behind the rocks suggest that they move during times when the floor of Racetrack Playa is covered with a very soft mud. A lack of disturbed mud around the rock trails eliminates the possibility of a human or animal pushing or assisting the motion of the rocks.


Are They Moved by Wind?



NASA Racetrack Playa research
Recent research by NASA on Racetrack Playa
This is the favorite explanation. The prevailing winds that blow across Racetrack Playa travel from southwest to northeast. Most of the rock trails are parallel to this direction. This is strong evidence that wind is the prime mover or at least involved with the motion of the rocks.

Strong wind gusts are thought to nudge the rocks into motion. Once the rock begins to move a wind of much lower velocity can keep the rock in motion as it slides across the soft and very slippery mud. Curves in the rock trails are explained by shifts in wind direction or in how the wind interacts with an irregularly shaped rock.


Are They Moved by Ice?



A few people have reported seeing Racetrack Playa covered by a thin layer of ice. One idea is that water freezes around the rocks and then wind, blowing across the top of the ice, drags the ice sheet with its embedded rocks across the surface of the playa.

Some researchers have found highly congruent trails on multiple rocks that strongly support this movement theory. However, the transport of a large ice sheet might be expected to mark the playa surface in other ways - these marks have not been found.

Other researchers experimented with stakes that would be disturbed by ice sheets. The rocks moved without disturbing the stakes. The evidence for ice-sheet transport is not consistent.


Wind is the Favored Mover!



All of the best explanations involve wind as the energy source behind the movement of the rocks. The question remains is do they slide while encased in an ice sheet or do they simply side over the surface of the mud? Perhaps each of these methods is responsible for some rock movement?

Perhaps this story will remain more interesting if the real answer is never discovered!


NASA Studies on Sliding Rocks



NASA sent a team of interns and mentors to Racetrack Playa during Summer 2010. They made observations, performed tests, compiled data and developed some ideas about how the rocks might move. Check out their report and photos.


Photos of Sliding Rocks Below!



Movement of a large rock across a barren surface is almost impossible to believe. However, good photographs can serve as evidence for those who can not travel to Death Valley National Park. Thanks to Steve Geer, Stephan Hoerold, Skye Bajoul, sartriano, John Alcorn and Mike Nortan for the great images used here.



Lots of sliding rocks and trails on Racetrack Playa © iStockphoto / Stephan Hoerold



Rocks of many shapes leave trails across Racetrack Playa. © iStockphoto / sartriano



Rocks of many shapes leave trails across Racetrack Playa. © iStockphoto / John Alcorn


Diamonds Don't Form From Coal
Largest Oil Spills Map
San Andreas Fault
Igneous, Metamorphic, and Sedimentary Rocks
The Only Diamond Mine in the USA
Marcellus Shale
What is Geology?
  source:  www.geology.com



      


A sliding rock that has left a long track across the surface of Racetrack Playa. Some tracks are hundreds of feet long! (See below for several more sliding rock photos.) © iStockphoto / Steve Geer.




One of the favored ideas for how the rocks move assumes that they occasionally are embedded in a thin sheet of ice.



Landsat image of Racetrack Playa. It is the flat white area in the center of the image.(click for more detail)



Rocks of many sizes and shapes leave tracks across Racetrack Playa. © iStockphoto / David Choo.



Closer view of the sliding rock in the top image on this page. © iStockphoto / Skye Bajoul


No comments: