Rock Levitation by Water and Ice; an Explanation for Trails in Racetrack Playa, California
Abstract
Through a process that is nearly a century-old mystery, rock fragments race over a desiccated layer of sediment in the California desert, forming the infamous rock trails of the Racetrack playa, found in Death Valley, California. Rocks, randomly distributed over the playa, have indented grooves or trails next to them, appearing as if someone had dragged them over the playa surface when wet. Interestingly, no one has ever witnessed the movement of these rocks. Furthermore, the mechanism responsible for these trails behind the rocks has not yet been explained. Rocks have masses ranging from 0.5 kg to 300 kg, and the trails have a chaotic character, with some trails as long as 1/2 km. Each rock has a mound of raised clay on one side and a mud trail on the other; no other unusual marks are visible. A number of trails have no rocks at the end, with only a mound of solid clay where a rock once appeared to be, as if something was pushing the clay forwards to make the trail but disappeared after the trail was made. Measurements of the humidity and temperature of the sediment pointed towards a unique mechanism of how the trails could form on their own and how simple environmental changes could result in the aforementioned trails in the sediment.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2010
- Bibcode:
- 2010AGUFMEP21A0743K
- Keywords:
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- 5215 PLANETARY SCIENCES: ASTROBIOLOGY / Origin of life;
- 5419 PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETS / Hydrology and fluvial processes;
- 5422 PLANETARY SCIENCES: SOLID SURFACE PLANETS / Ices;
- 6055 PLANETARY SCIENCES: COMETS AND SMALL BODIES / Surfaces