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Sailing stone in Racetrack Playa
The
sailing stones (
sliding
rocks,
moving rocks) 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.
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.
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.
Speed is an unknown variable. Since these stones are rarely
transported and nobody has witnessed the movement, the speeds at
which the rocks travel are not known.
Description

Tracks are sometimes non-linear
Most of the so-called
gliding stones originate
from an 850 foot (260 m) high hillside made of dark
dolomite on the south end of the playa, but some
are intrusive
igneous rock from
adjacent slopes (most of those being tan-colored
feldspar-rich
syenite).
Tracks are often tens to hundreds of feet (low to high tens of
meters) long, a few to 12 inches (8 to 30 cm) wide, and typically
much less than an inch (2.5 cm) deep.
A balance of specific conditions are thought to be needed for
stones to move:
- A saturated yet non-flooded surface,
- Thin layer of clay,
- Very strong gusts as initiating force,
- Strong sustained wind to keep stones going.
Research history

Rocks on Racetrack Playa
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 and sometimes idiosyncratic
possible explanations have been put forward over the years that
have ranged from the supernatural to the very complex. 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, who published a
paper on the topic in 1955, 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
floes.
Bob Sharp and Dwight Carey started a Racetrack stone movement
monitoring program in May 1972. Eventually thirty stones with fresh
tracks were labeled and stakes were used to mark their locations.
Each stone was given a name and changes in the stones' position
were recorded over a seven year period. Sharp and Carey also tested
the ice floe hypothesis by corralling selected stones. A corral 5.5
feet (1.7 m) in diameter was made around a 3 inch (7.5 cm) wide, 1
pound (0.5 kg) track-making stone with seven
rebar segments placed 25 to 30 inches (64 to 76 cm)
apart. If a sheet of ice around the stones either increased
wind-catching surface area or helped move the stones by dragging
them along in ice floes, then the rebar should at least slow down
and deflect the movement. Neither appeared to occur; the stone
barely missed a rebar as it moved 28 feet (8.5 m) to the northwest
out of the corral in the first winter. Two heavier stones were
placed in the corral at the same time; one moved five years later
in the same direction as the first but its companion did not move
during the study period. This indicated that if ice played a part
in stone movement, then ice collars around stones must be
small.
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).
Karen (stone J) is a 29 by 19 by 20 inch (74 by 48 by 51 cm) block
of dolomite and weighs an estimated 700 pounds (about 320 kg).
Perhaps not surprisingly Karen didn't move during the monitoring
period. The stone may have created its 570 straight and old track
from momentum gained from its initial fall onto the wet playa.
However, Karen disappeared sometime before May 1994, possibly
during the unusually wet winter of 1992 to 1993. Removal by
artificial means is considered unlikely due to the lack of
associated damage to the playa that the needed truck and winch
would have done. A possible sighting of Karen was made in 1994 a
half mile (800 m) from the playa.
Professor
John Reid led six research students from Hampshire
College
and the University of Massachusetts in a
follow-up study in 1995. They found highly congruent trails
from stones that moved in the late 1980s and during the winter of
1992-1993. At least some stones were proved beyond a reasonable
doubt to have been moved in ice floes that may be up to half a mile
(800 m) wide. Physical evidence included swaths of lineated areas
that could only have been created by moving thin sheets of ice. So
wind alone as well as in conjunction with ice floes are thought to
be motive forces.
Physicists studying the phenomenon in 1995 found that winds blowing
on playa surfaces can be compressed and intensified. They also
found that
boundary layers (the
region just above ground where winds are slower due to ground drag)
on these surfaces can be as low as 2 inches (5 cm). This means that
stones just a few inches high feel the full force of ambient winds
and their gusts, which can reach 90 mph (145 km/h) in winter
storms. Such gusts are thought to be the initiating force while
momentum and sustained winds keep the stones moving, possibly as
fast as a moderate run (only half the force required to start a
stone sailing is needed to keep it in motion).
Wind and ice both are the favored hypothesis for these mysterious
sliding rocks. Noted in Don J. Easterbrook's "Surface Processes and
Landforms", he mentioned that because of the lack of parallel paths
between some rock paths, this could be caused by the breaking up of
ice resulting in alternate routes. Even though the ice breaks up
into smaller blocks, it is still necessary for the rocks to
slide.
References
- Messina, P., 1998, The Sliding Rocks of Racetrack Playa, Death Valley
National Park, California: Physical and Spatial Influences on
Surface Processes. Published doctoral dissertation,
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, City University of
New York, New York. University Microfilms, Incorporated, 1998.
- Messina, P., Stoffer, P., and Clarke, K. C. Mapping Death
Valley's Wandering Rocks. GPS World
April, 1997: p. 34-44
- Sharp, R.P., and A.F. Glazier, 1997, Geology Underfoot in
Death Valley and Owens Valley. Mountain Press Publishing
Company, Missoula. ISBN 0-87842-362-1
- Stanley, G. M., 1955, Origin of playa stone tracks,
Racetrack Playa, Inyo County, California. Geological Society
of America Bulletin, v. 66, p. 1329-1350.
- Reid, J.B., Jr., Bucklin, E.P., Copenagle, L., Kidder, J.,
Pack, S. M., Polissar, P.J., and Williams, M. L., 1995, Sliding
rocks at the Racetrack, Death Valley: What makes them move?.
Geology v. 23, p. 819-822
- Sharp, R.P., Carey, D. L., Reid, J.B., Jr., Polissar, P.J., and
Williams, M.L., 1996, Sliding rocks at the Racetrack, Death
Valley: What makes them move?; Discussion and Reply. Geology,
v. 25, p. 766-767
External links