Rock Fans,
After several decades of study and observation, the sailing stones of Racetrack Playa have been observed in motion!
During winter 2013-2014, members of our group were present while the playa was flooded and frozen. A steady wind drag moved the thin ice sheets covering the playa’s south end, and these sheets pushed the rocks along, creating the characteristic furrows in the playa’s muddy surface.
We’ve posted live videos of the rock movement and time-lapse images of the winter, linked below. Links to the scientific publications reporting these observations are also below.
Contact Brian Jackson (bjackson@boisestate.edu) for questions about the website.
PRESS RELEASES
- SIO Press Release, courtesy of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Communications Office: Robert Monroe — rmonroe@ucsd.edu, 858-822-4487
- “Sliding stones of Death Valley: Rocky riddle resolved” by Ralph Lorenz at New Scientist
- BSU Press Release (PDF, MS Word, or at BSU’s website), courtesy of Boise State University Office of Communications and Marketing: Kathleen Tuck — kathleentuck@boisestate.edu, 208-426-3275
IN THE NEWS
A google news search turns up a lot more.
- An Icy Solution To The Mystery Of The Slithering Stones — NPR
- Mystery of Death Valley’s ‘Sailing’ Stones Solved: Rocks Filmed Moving For The First Time — weather.com
- Mystery of how rocks move across Death Valley lake bed solved — LA Times
- High-Tech Sleuthing Cracks Mystery of Death Valley’s Moving Rocks — Yahoo! News
- Mystery of Death Valley’s ‘Sailing’ Stones Solved: Rocks Filmed Moving For The First Time — wunderground.com
- Finally! Secret of Death Valley’s ‘Sailing Stones’ is Solved — Discover Magazine
- ‘Wandering stones’ of Death Valley explained — Nature
- Watch Death Valley’s Rocks Walk Before Your Eyes — National Geographic
- Santa Barbara Team Helps Solve Death Valley Mystery — Noozhawk
- First Observation of Death Valley’s Sliding Rocks — Real Clear Science
- Death Valley Mystery Solved — The Independent
- Racetrack Playa mystery in Death Valley solved — Grind TV
- Mystery of rocks moving across Death Valley lake bed solved — Fox 5 San Diego
- Mystery Of Death Valley’s ‘Sailing Stones’ Has Finally Been Solved — Huff Po
- At Last, Scientists Unravel Mystery of Death Valley’s Moving Rocks — NBC
- Mystery of Death Valley’s Moving Rocks Solved — Discovery
- High-Tech Sleuthing Cracks Mystery of Death Valley’s Moving Rocks — Live Science
- The Mystery of Death Valley’s “Sailing Stones” Is Finally Solved — Gizmodo
- Scientists solve mystery of Death Valley’s ‘sailing’ stones — Christian Science Monitor
- Death Valley’s moving rocks caught in the act — Las Vegas Review-Journal
- Mystery solved: The sailing stones of Death Valley — CNet
- Scientists solve mystery of moving Death Valley rocks — Reuters
- What’s making rocks move silently across California’s Death Valley?— Toronto Star
- Scientists solve the mystery behind Death Valley’s ‘slithering’ stones — CBC
- Mobile rocks explained — Nature
- סוף סוף יודעים למה האבנים מתגלגלות — Haaretz
- Forscher lösen Rätsel der wandernden Steine — Der Spiegel
MEDIA
Several videos are available on our youtube channel and on Scripps’ channel.
- Videos and an image, courtesy of the Slithering Stones Research Initiative
These videos are also available on youtube: How Rocks Move and The Racetrack Playa’s Sliding Stones. - Images from recent field work (with credit to Jim Norris)
SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS
- Sliding rocks on Racetrack Playa, Death Valley National Park: first observation of rocks in motion. R. Norris et al. (2014) PLOS ONE.
- Contact James Norris (jim@interwoof.com) for further images, timelapse series and data.
- Trail formation by ice-shoved “sailing stones” observed at Racetrack Playa, Death Valley National Park. R. Lorenz et al. (2014) Submitted to “Earth Surface Dynamics” (see the open discussion on the paper here).
- Principal images from Lorenz et al. (2014) — Figures 1-6 by Ralph Lorenz, Figure 7 by Jim Norris.
Images may be used freely but must include a prominent caption crediting the photographer and citing www.racetrackplaya.org and/or the ESurfD paper as source.
Contact Ralph Lorenz (http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~rlorenz) for further timelapse, kite, and other images and data.
- Principal images from Lorenz et al. (2014) — Figures 1-6 by Ralph Lorenz, Figure 7 by Jim Norris.
- Declining rock movement at Racetrack Playa, Death Valley National Park: an indicator of climate change? R. Lorenz & B. Jackson. Geomorphology (2014).
Examines the record of rock movement and suggests climate change has reduced its frequency since the 1970s (the observation of movement this year does not qualitatively change the conclusion.)
Free pre-print available here.
- Wandernde Steine — an impressive school science project by Ronja Spanke of Germany (shared with permission).
Some other papers at http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~