Slashdot Mirror


Sliding Rocks Bemuse Scientists

An anonymous reader writes "Scientists can't figure out why these rocks — weighing up to several hundred pounds each — slide across a dry lake bed. The leading theory proposes that wind moves the rocks after a rain when the lake bed consists of soft and very slippery mud.

5 of 433 comments (clear)

  1. Answer on page 42 ... by foobsr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... literally:
    Quote: "Research of the Racetrack has continued. In the April 1997 GPS World, Paula Messina, Phil Stoffer and Keith C. Clarke reported a GPS study they conducted of the Racetrack. In ten days of intense field work they mapped every featured of the playa using differential GPS to produce, "the first-ever, complete, georeferenced, submeter-resolution map of the wandering rocks." (Messina, 1997, p. 42)"
    http://sophia.smith.edu/~lfletche/deathvalley.html

    But it seems they have no real conclusion too.

    What about 'The Force"?

    CC.

    --
    TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
  2. Re:no buildup in front by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In all those pictures, I don't see any buildup of dust in front of the rocks, though there is plenty on the sides of the paths. Usually, when I push something through the dirt/mud/snow/whatever, I end up with a good buildup in front, too. I wonder where that has gone.

    I had to think about this for a second... I think the answer is that if a rock was digging into the mud, you wouldn't have this effect, because of having to shove the mass of the mud. If you look at the pictures, the fronts of a lot of them tend to be sticking up, implying they're "surfing" over the mud.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  3. One possibilty by edwardpickman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd be curious if the under sides of the sliding sliding stones were concave? Why I mention it is I still remember a certain chinese restaurant's tea cups had a habit of sliding across the table. The table tops were resin coated and the concave cups tended to capture moisture under them so when the tea heated the moisture under the cup the expansion provided enough lift to break the friction and allow them to slide. They would move randomly in different directions then stop for a few minutes then slide again. Since the area is hot a unique combination of heated rocks with slippery mud and wind could in combination cause the effect. I remember that some rocks slid and others didn't as well as the direction changes.

  4. Re:Mark Newman Poster by Basehart · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's not just beer. I was bathing the other day and my pint sized glass of heavily iced water all of a sudden moved across the smooth plastic surface of the toilet seat lid and fell to the floor.

    The toilet seat lid was covered in a fine layer of condensation from the bath water at the time.

    I'm betting if the stones are cooled way down to almost freezing by the wind, or maybe frozen overnight and still cold when the rains hit, and the top surface of the mud turns into a slurry of fine particles, the stone will move around all on its own just like my cold glass of water on a fine layer of condensation.

    Either that or space aliens.

  5. Re:Mark Newman Poster by vought · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just seems to me that instead of crazy rocks sliding round on their own, some damn kids were up there fucking round with rocks. Considering how difficult it is to get out to the Racetrack, I doubt this. Otherwise, I would think someone might camp out there during a storm and find out if they really skate around on their own.

    Problem is that storms come up rarely but suddenly there (usually) and it takes almost two hours to get to the Racetrack from the nearest paved road - three hours from the Death Valley visitor's center - and if you get out there before a storm, there's no guarantee that even a very capable 4x4 will get you back afterwards.