China’s Sea Of Green Algae Has Beachgoers Seeing Red

[ By Steve in Geography & Travel & History & Trivia & Nature & Ecosystems. ]


Summer’s arrived and China‘s green menace has returned along with it… we kudzu not! The massive bloom of stringy, slimy, and smelly Enteromorpha Prolifera algae that recently infested the seashore near Qingdao succeeded in keeping most (but not all) swimmers from enjoying a day at the beach.

Green Goo Go Home!

(images via: BBC, Chinabuzz and Sochina.net)

The east may be red, in the words of the popular Chinese government anthem, but the shocking green tide of algae that swamped beaches in the northeast part of the country is neither politically, aesthetically not environmentally correct.

(images via: Debosh, CoastalCare and China Daily)

Enteromorpha Prolifera, to give it its official name, is a form of green algae that bursts into bloom if nutritional and meteorological conditions are just right. When that happens, the results are, well, just wrong.

(images via: DailyMail UK and Yahoo News)

According to the North China Sea Branch (NCSB) of the State Ocean Administration, reports of the unsightly algae infestation began to be received in late June at the busy port and popular resort of Qingdao.

(images via: Ghana Nation, Coastal Care and SMH)

Air temperatures approaching 30°C (86°F) and water temperatures just offshore reaching 20°C (68°F) had created the perfect storm for the mother of all algae blooms. Anyone complaining about China being “slow to go green” obviously hasn’t spent a summer in Qingdao!

(images via: National Geographic, Qingdao(nese) and Reuters)

From an initial area of 330 sq km (127 sq mi), the algae bloom rapidly grew to cover a 12,400 sq km (4,790 sq mi) expanse of the Yellow Sea by June 23.

(images via: SMH)

The advent of a persistent onshore wind then drove waves of floating algae onto the beaches near Qingdao: at one point approximately 440 km (275 miles) of shoreline was subsumed in bright green goop!

A Verdant History

(images via: Qingdao(nese), MilitaryPhotos.net and China Mike)

Qingdao’s green plague is of relatively recent origin and can be directly attributed to the exponential growth of the city of Qingdao. A little over a century ago, the city’s current location on the Shandong Peninsula was occupied by a small and sleepy fishing village.

(images via: Metropolis and Dr. Hostel)

The peninsula, however, was/is strategically located and Qingdao itself boasts a fine natural harbor. In 1897, Imperial Germany seized the environs and arm-twisted China’s decadent and decrepit government into granting the Kaiser a 99-year lease of the Kiautschou Bay concession.

(image via: Travelpod)

Development of the city and surrounding area proceeded quickly: within just a few years several large stone churches had been built, the city and port boasted clean water and electric lighting, and the Tsingtao Brewery opened for business. It all seemed too good to be true, and so it was. Shortly after World War I began, a joint Japanese-British force conquered the German concession. Given the tumultuous series of wars and revolutionary upheaval which followed, it’s a wonder any hints of Qingdao’s German heritage remain, but they do – most notably the brewery (above).

(images via: TripAdvisor/Mark Wilson and TripAdvisor/Mies)

From an original population of around 85,000 at the time of the German seizure of Qingdao, the city itself has ballooned to an astounding 7.5 million (2009) with millions more living in newly developed suburban areas.

(images via: DailyMail/AP)

The city’s port is one of China’s busiest and the beaches that run along the Shandong Peninsula’s south-facing shore are hugely popular with vacationers from across northeastern China. Unfortunately, Qingdao’s economic success is negatively impacting its appeal as an unspoiled getaway.

(images via: Qingdao(nese) and ChinaBuzz)

As the city grew, its infrastructure was hard-pressed to keep up. As well, agricultural activity on the peninsula resulted in nitrogen-rich runoff being swept into the bay and ocean. The combination of organic effluent from fertilizer and sewage with warm marine temperatures acted to produce algal blooms of ever-increasing size.

(images via: YachtPals)

The problem gained worldwide attention in 2007 and 2008 when wall-to-wall algae blooms threatened to inundate training and competitive facilities for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics.

(images via: Sochina.net and Telegraph UK)

Thousands of fishermen, students and “sea police” were dragooned into clearing the algae from the shoreline and over 100,000 tons of noisome seagrass were removed, allowing the Games to go on.

(images via: Sulekha, Boston.com and Mirror UK)

Even the army was drafted (so to speak) into what became an all-out, epic effort to save the sailing venue – and save face for China in the bargain. Join the army and see the world? I’m guessing a lot of the PLA’s raw recruits figured they had a better chance of invading beaches than cleaning them up.

A Blooming Shame

(images via: China Daily, CRI and Global Times)

Just what is this algae, seagrass or seaweed? Enteromorpha Proliferaso is a form of algae that grows to resemble seaweed. Its long branches and kelp-like fronds help it clump together into huge, floating rafts of vegetation that casts a dark shadow on the sea life below.

(images via: Yahoo News)

As the algae dies and sinks to the seafloor it can spark creation of vast “dead zones” as the bacteria digesting the dead algae suck the oxygen out of the seawater.

(images via: ChinaBuzz and China Daily)

Found on seashores all over the world, Enteromorpha Proliferaso known in Hawaii as Limu ‘ele‘ele and is said to be edible… though considering the nutrients it grows on might cause one to lose their appetite. Unlike the algae in Red Tides, Enteromorpha Proliferaso isn’t toxic… just messy, smelly, annoying… and very, very green.

(images via: DailyMail UK, Charlottesville Greenstone Blog and The Dirt)

Slime and stink notwithstanding, thousands of Chinese vacationers weren’t about to let a little (or a lot) of seaweed deprive them of their cherished dip in the ocean. You know, the ocean… that cool, clear, liquid underneath the rippling carpet of green slime?

(images via: IB Times and National Geographic)

Some beachgoers appear to be somewhat acclimated to the algal overgrowth, with one child enthusing “It is like the green grass. It feels so soft.”

(images via: Scott Brauer)

Meanwhile, local authorities seem to be in denial regarding the problem. “We don’t know where it originated and why it’s suddenly growing so rapidly,” said Professor Bao Xianwen from the Qingdao-based Ocean University of China. “It must have something to do with the change in the environment,” Bao speculated. Gee, ya think?


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This Plastic World: Recycled Island Made of Old Bottles

A huge “island” of plastic garbage is already floating in the Pacific. Why not turn it into the habitable, self-sustaining island city of the future?
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Jewel of Japan: Gorgeous Sand Dunes Like Japanese Desert

July 20, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Delana in Geography & Travel & History & Trivia & Nature & Ecosystems. ]

Japan boasts countless attractions to delight and entertain tourists, but there might not be any that are more unexpected than the Tottori Sand Dunes. The dunes, in Tottori Prefecture near Tottori City, are unlike anything else in all of Japan – and the area is so impressive that it would be easy to mistake it for a previously-unknown desert.

(all images via: Oddity Central)

The Tottori Sand Dunes have existed for approximately 100,000 years. They were formed by sediment from the Sea of Japan washing up onto shore and being blown into the dunes. Strong winds constantly rearrange the sand deposits, creating incredible desert-like formations that can reach heights of 90 meters. The unusual dunes draw an estimated two million visitors each year.

The weather at the dunes can be strange and unpleasant: the sand reaches temperatures of 65 degrees Celcius (nearly 150 degrees Fahrenheit) in the summer, making it impractical to walk around barefoot like one would at the beach. It also rains quite often, which can shatter the illusion of being in a desert but brings out adventurous sand-boarders and creates interesting patterns in the sand.

Although the dunes bring in plenty of tourists, they are in constant danger of disappearing. Human interventions like reforestation and protective concrete barriers have prevented new sand from being deposited in the dunes, causing them to shrink significantly. If you are planning a trip to Japan, be sure to stop by this incredible location before it is gone forever.


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Glass Beach: Radical Example of Natural Recycling

Glass Beach in Fort Bragg, California, used to be a dump - literally. Now it’s one of the most unique and beautiful beaches on the planet.
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Rock Star: Trekking To California’s Vasquez Rocks Park

June 7, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in Geography & Travel & History & Trivia & Uncategorized. ]


That tilted rock formation… now where have I seen that before? On TV and in the movies, most likely. Vasquez Rocks Park, just north of Los Angeles, California, has been a favorite “otherworldly” film location for many decades. This slightly slanted look at Vasquez Rocks promises, as the Gorn from Star Trek’s “Arena” episode once did, to be merciful and quick.

Bandito’s Bolthole

(image via: TrekEarth)

Heading out along the Antelope Valley Freeway north of Los Angeles, motorists can be forgiven for letting their eyes wander off the road if only for a moment. A moment is really all one needs for the distinctive sharp angles and eroded striations of Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park to trigger a flood of movie and TV memories.

(images via: Urban Overgrowth and DukeWayne.com)

Located near Agua Dulce between the Antelope and Santa Clarita valleys, Vasquez Rocks Natural Area Park (to give it its official name) sprawls over 3 square kilometers (905 acres) of rugged – some might even say “tortured” – hardscrabble rocky land that looks to be the ideal hideout for a rustler on the lam or a Mexican bandito pursued by state-commissioned posses.

(images via: Photoacumen, John Kenneth Muir and UpTake)

The latter is true, actually – one Tiburcio Vásquez (for whom the rocks were named) used the jagged formations as one of his many boltholes. Vásquez, who was considered to be California’s most notorious bandit of the late nineteenth century, went on a 20-year-long reign of terror that featured horse rustling, prison breaks, robberies and burglaries.

(images via: Forest Theater Guild and Fanatique.net)

Vásquez was finally caught in 1874 and was executed by hanging early the next year. To the very end he proclaimed his innocence and constant desire to stand up for the rights of Hispanic Californians. Some say Tiburcio Vásquez was the inspiration for the fictional literary and cinema swordsman Zorro. Besides Vasquez Rocks, his name graces the Tiburcio Vasquez Health Center with 6 locations from Union City north to Hayward, CA.

Fault-y Towers

(images via: Eleven Shadows and MSSL)

Tiburcio Vásquez’ reign of terror shook the lives of southern Californians, so it’s an appropriate coincidence that Vasquez Rocks are a byproduct of a much older life-shaker, the San Andreas Fault.

(image via: HeroComm)

The inexorable grinding action along the faultline over countless thousands of years has resulted in slabs of 25-million year old striated sedimentary layers at Vasquez Rocks being shifted away from horizontal, in some cases at acute angles.

(image via: Stephen Ponting)

Erosion has been minimal in the region’s arid climate and, if anything, weathering has narrowed the upper reaches of the rock formations making them appear even sharper. Today some of the slabs are inclined at up to 50 degrees and their summits jut more than 150 feet (45 m) high.

Rock & Roll ‘Em!

(images via: Mysterious Island Design, Eleven Shadows and The World of Ward)

Have Vasquez Rocks gone Hollywood? Well yes, yes they have! The timeless, otherworldly landscape of Vasquez Rocks – not to mention their convenient nearness – immediately attracted Hollywood’s budding film industry who saw the distinctive terrain as being the perfect stand-in for the surfaces of other planets. Click here to view an exhaustive listing of the many productions that have featured Vasquez Rocks.

(images via: Bonanza Boomers and UpTake)

Classic Western TV shows like Bonanza would occasionally put Vasquez Rocks at center stage. In one memorable episode from late 1964 titled “Between Heaven and Earth”, Little Joe Cartwright (above) loses his rifle while climbing “Eagles Peak” and finds he has a fear of heights.

(images via: John Kenneth Muir, Kirk’s Homepage and Eleven Shadows)

Sci-fi films and television shows of the Fifties and Sixties glommed onto Vasquez Rocks like a mongoose on a rattler… or like a Gorn on a certain Federation Starship Captain who does not need to be named. Aw heck, it’s James Tiberius Kirk of course, an actor so intimately associated with Vasquez Rocks the penultimate peak has been dubbed “Kirk’s Rock” in his honor.

(images via: WN.com and The World of Ward)

Star Trek: The Original Series’ producers may have had their tongues in their cheeks regarding the use – some say, overuse – of Vasquez Rocks as a locale. Maybe they were just trying to stay within budget. In any case, Vasquez Rocks’ unmistakable profile figured prominently in both the “WN.com”>Arena” episode and the Futurama parody of it around 30 years later.

Here’s a video immortalizing what might be the Worst. Fight Scene. EVAR… starring William Shatner, the Gorn, Vasquez Rocks and a large papier-mâché boulder:

Worst Fight Scene Ever, via Yaemes

(images via: Eleven Shadows, Down In Front and T Hoffarth)

When it came time for director J.J. Abrams and production designer Scott Chambliss to select locations for 2009′s prequel film Star Trek, Vasquez Rocks wasn’t forgotten. Far from it, in fact, as the formation is used (albeit CGI-enhanced) in a number of scenes meant to depict sites on Spock’s home world, the planet Vulcan.

(image via: Laurie’s Wild West)

Among many, many other productions of note, 1974′s Blazing Saddles included scenes shot at or near Vasquez Rocks – the 2D fake town of Rock Ridge was built in the valley just below the rock formation.

Art Rock

(image via: Mysterious Island Design)

The repeated incidental injection of Vasquez Rocks into pop culture has endowed the formation with a unique cachet. By virtue of widespread recognition on screens both large and small, Vasquez Rocks seems to have acquired a larger than life prominence.

(images via: Eleven Shadows and CalArts)

Much like the actors featured in innumerable scenes with the iconic tilted rock formation, Vasquez Rocks’ familiarity allows the location to be used, reused and reused yet again while “playing” the part of any location the production crew desires. If some day an inanimate object is granted a star on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame, by all rights the honor should go to Vasquez Rocks.


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23 Bizarre Animal-Shaped Rocks Sculpted By Nature

The world is full of bizarrely shaped boulders and other natural rock formations that we see as familiar objects. Here are 23 bizarre animal-shaped rock formations.
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Anatomical Drawings Bring Mythical Monsters to Life

[ By Delana in Animals & Habitats & Art & Design & History & Trivia. ]

It is a question that has plagued mankind for centuries yet has been solved with no credible answers: how do mermaids…you know…mate? Artist Walmor Corrêa wondered about this and other questions of mythical creature anatomy, so he set out to create a series of anatomical drawings exploring the bodies of the mermaid and several other famous mythical beings.

(all images via: Flavorwire)

Corrêa has always been a fan of Leonardo da Vinci’s incredible anatomical drawings as well as Brazilian folklore. He found a stunning way to combine them in these beautiful charts detailing the inner workings of monsters and myths. These fascinating drawings are so visually striking that it is hard to look away – even from the slightly more grotesque images.

The suite of drawings is also serving to familiarize the rest of the world with Brazilian folklore. Many of these monsters are unknown to people in North America. The Capelobo, above, is a foul-smelling man/ape monster that roams the woods and feasts on newborn kittens and puppies.

The ipupiara is somewhat similar to a mermaid, having a human head and the body of a water creature. Legend has it that both male and female ipupiara fed on unsuspecting sailors and beach-goers by smothering them with an embrace and then eating their most tender body parts.

Curupira is a protector of the forest whose most startling physical characteristic is his backward-facing feet. He is said to lead destructive sport-hunter humans into traps that will have them wandering the forest forever with no hope of escaping.

Wealthy people who ridicule priests or other holy people fear being turned into the cachorra da palmeira, a dog-like beast that was doomed to run eternally or be confined to a cage for life as punishment for the unkindness.


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Cool Cryptids: 14 Amazing Animals of Myth & Legend

From a bizarre giant worm that spits lightening out of its anus to the notorious goat-sucking ‘Chupacabra’, these mythical beasts have never been confirmed.
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Sole Survivor: How 1 Japanese Town Resisted the Tsunami

May 27, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Geography & Travel & History & Trivia & News & Politics. ]

It’s ugly. It’s huge. It cost $30 million. But the 51-foot-tall floodgate that was long considered a “mayor’s folly” saved the village of Fudai, Japan from destruction on March 11th 2011, the day an earthquake and tsunami destroyed much of the nation and left 25,000 people missing or dead. All but one resident of the town survived thanks to this unattractive hunk of 1970′s architecture.

Fudai is a mountainous community located in the hard-hit Iwate Prefecture. While other towns in the prefecture, like Rikuzentakata, below, were practically wiped off the map by the nearly 80-foot-high waves that came barreling in from the ocean, Fudai was mostly untouched. Today, it looks much the same as it did on March 10th, a sharp contrast to the hellish scenes that surround it. If it weren’t for a stubborn mayor haunted by the scenes of death he had witnessed decades before, the outcome for Fudai would have been very different.

(image via: ehnmark)

Kotaku Wamura, who served 10 terms starting just after World War II, had pushed for the floodgate project in fear of a repeat of the 1933 tsunami that killed 439 of the town’s residents and destroyed hundreds of homes. After building a 51-foot seawall to protect homes behind the fishing port, he wanted a floodgate just as tall for the cove where the Fudai River empties into the sea, where most of the community was located. Construction began in 1972 despite the misgivings of city council members, who were concerned about its behemoth size.

(top and above image via: seattle pi)

Wamura died in 1997, but since the tsunami, villagers have been visiting his grave in tribute. His words to village employees at the time of his retirement in 1987 have now taken on a new meaning: “”Even if you encounter opposition, have conviction and finish what you start. In the end, people will understand.”


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From Ghost Town to Green Town: Rebirth Of Greensburg, Kansas

When a massive tornado leveled the small town of Greensburg KS, no one knew how the town would recover - until residents decided to go completely green.
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Grimsvotn: Iceland’s Most Active Volcano Wakes With a Roar

[ By Steve in Geography & Travel & History & Trivia & Nature & Ecosystems. ]


Grimsvotn, Iceland’s most active volcano, is up to its old tricks but unlike the ashy eruption of Eyjafjallajökull in 2010, air traffic is not expected to be affected. This will make it easier for photographers to travel to Iceland, where they can add to their already considerable portfolio of spectacularly smokey images of one of Earth’s most awe-inspiring geological events.

Land of Ice and Fire

(images via: Huffington Post, USGS and Reface.me)

Iceland is home to approximately 130 volcanoes, which over the past 500 years have pumped out about one third of the total global output of lava. Not bad for a country slightly smaller than Kentucky and about half the size of Great Britain… well, actually it IS bad, especially if you live there.

(images via: Real Science and WIRED)

Since settlers first arrived in Iceland back in 874 AD, these hardy Vikings and their descendants have had to endure repeated and regular eruptions from 18 different volcanoes. Arguably the worst of these began in 1783 and continued for roughly 8 months; the so-called Skaftáreldar (fires of Skaftá) event centered on the Lakagígar (craters of Laki) in central Iceland.

(images via: OLe Neilsen, Iceland in Pictures and Snorri Gunnarsson)

It’s estimated that up to a quarter of Iceland’s population (and up to 6 million worldwide!) died from direct and indirect effects of the eruption and thousands more perished in Europe, which was subsumed by noxious clouds of ash and acidic vapor for months on end. Weather patterns around the globe were disrupted leading to crop failures, water shortages and famine as far away as Japan.

(image via: Vulkaner.no)

Rated by the total volume (an estimated 14 km3 or 3.4 cubic miles) of lava expelled, the eruption of Laki tops the list of the largest single volcanic eruptions in historic times. Ominously, the central volcano in the Laki group is Grimsvotn. Though the Laki craters appear lush with verdant vegetation today, one never can tell if the area will erupt again in the future. Grimsvotn, on the other hand, is very predictable due to the frequency of its eruptions.

What Lies Beneath

(images via: MSNBC, The Drawn Cutlass and Bold Corsican Flame)

Grimsvotn erupted in 1922, 1933, 1934, 1938, 1945, 1954, 1983, 1998 and most recently in 2004… and those were just the MAJOR eruptions. The current phase is reckoned to be the most powerful since 1873. here’s a video of the 2011 eruption on its first day, taken from the air:

Video of Iceland volcano eruption, giant ash clouds from Grimsvotn

You’d think with so many eruptions, Grimsvotn would have built up a typical cone-shaped volcano profile by now but Grimsvotn, like many of Iceland’s volcanoes, is anything but typical.

(images via: Fred Kamphues, Fire Earth and EuropaPlus.tv)

Thanks to its far-northern latitude, Iceland really is an “icy land” – I guess Erik the Red could only get away with that “Green Land” shtick once. It’s also one of the most volcanic places on the planet, and one of the only places where a mid-ocean ridge is diverging above sea level.

(image via: Tushar Gupta)

This constant “pulling apart” results in a series of rift valleys being formed from which most of Iceland’s volcanic eruptions occur. Contrast this with volcanic zones in Japan, the South American Andes and along North America’s west coast where one tectonic plate is subducting beneath another, producing familiar volcanic cones and peaks.

(images via: Matthew J. Roberts, Global Volcanism Program)

Grimsvotn enjoys a double-whammy of being located in a rift valley that itself is covered by Iceland’s largest glacier: Vatnajökull. Can you imagine what happens when an erupting volcano meets a glacier? Here’s a hint – the volcano wins. Though blanketed by ice 150 to 200 m (490 to 655 ft) thick, it only took about an hour for Grimsvotn’s eruption to melt its way to the surface.

(images via: Icelandic Met Office)

Icelanders have learned to note certain signs that indicate Grimsvotn is heating up. Chief among them is the Jökulhlaup (glacial outburst flood) that emerges from the edge of the Skeiðarárjökull outlet glacier. The images above show the Jökulhlaup of October 2010. While in this instance the flood wasn’t immediately followed by an eruption, it broadly hinted at the one to come some 7 months later.

Computing the Cloud

(image via: Xinhuanet)

With the 2010 Eyjafjallajokull eruption’s widespread disruption of air traffic still in the minds of air travelers and airlines, word that Grimsvotn had erupted violently on May 21sst of 2011 immediately sparked worry that a similar situation would occur. Photos of Grimsvotn’s towering ash cloud – estimated to have reached a height of 20 km (12 miles) – graphically illustrated these fears.

(images via: Daily Mail UK)

Though the world may be thinking global, Grimsvotn acts local. According to Open University Volcano Dynamics Group expert David Rothery, “There is no reason to expect Grimsvotn’s current eruption to produce the volume of finely fragmented ash that caused such disruption during last year’s Eyjafjallajokull eruption.”

(images via: Daily Mail UK)

Rothery issued his statement on May 22nd; by the next morning it was being predicted the ash cloud from Grimsvotn could reach Scotland by the evening of May 23rd. Sure enough, by May 24th approximately 500 flights to Scotland, Northern Ireland land parts of Scandinavia had been cancelled as the ash cloud loomed ever closer, swept by strong prevailing winds.

(images via: Xinhuanet and Daily Mail UK)

Authorities base their predictions regarding the May 2011 ash cloud on several factors relating to time and type: Grimsvotn’s eruptions are usually short in duration and the particles it spews out are heavier than those expelled by Eyjafjallajokull. Thus, there’s less ash overall and it falls to earth faster & closer to the point of origin. Not good news if you’re flying in or out of Iceland… and driving’s no picnic either. Which reminds me: cancel that picnic!

Pardon the Int-Eruption

(images via: Xinhuanet, Int’l Business Times and WorldNomads)

Grimsvotn’s current eruption may pale in significance with those of Eyjafjallajokull and other historic volcanic events in Iceland but don’t dismiss it too quickly. Check out the immense ash cloud produced on the eruption’s first day… it bears an uncanny resemblance to a thunderstorm’s supercell.

(images via: Freysteinn Sigmundsson)

Like thunderstorms, Grimsvotn’s clouds are both short in duration and at least somewhat predictable in nature. Photographers have taken advantage of these characteristics and it seems with every eruption a flood of high quality images are captured and released. The set above, by native Icelander Freysteinn Sigmundsson, beautifully documents Grimsvotn’s December 1998 eruption.

(image via: Mamatus)

Predictability is fine, but don’t take it as gospel even in Grimsvotn’s case. While we appreciate the magnificent photos intrepid cameramen (and camerawomen) have given us, flying a plane anywhere near any erupting volcano is like rolling the dice with Thor. Much better to be the photographer on the airplane who’s photographing the photographer on the plane that’s circling alarmingly close to Grimsvotn’s ash plume… you can say that again!


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A Striking Beauty: 7 Shocking Scenes Of Volcano Lightning

Add volcanic lightning to nature’s igneous arsenal. Advances in high-speed photography show off the beauty of volcanic lightning in all its ex-static glory.
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Bark At The Moon: A History Of Soviet Space Dogs

[ By Steve in Animals & Habitats & History & Trivia & Science & Research. ]


Among the many noteworthy achievements of the Soviet Union’s space program was the first launch of an animal – a dog named Laika – into earth orbit on the world’s second successful satellite. “Muttnik” wasn’t the only dog star: over 50 canine cosmonauts helped set the stage for the USSR‘s side of the great Space Race. This is their story.

Cold War, Hot Dogs

(image via: Telstar Logistics)

World War II had ended and the Cold War had just begun – and both the United States and the Soviet Union worked feverishly to establish viable ballistic missile and manned space programs with the help of captured German rocket scientists. While the Americans used captured V2 rockets to launch fruit flies, a monkey and a mouse into suborbital space between 1947 and the summer of 1950, the USSR decided dogs would be the ideal space-pioneering animals.

(images via: Spacebooks, Wikipedia, All Experts and Want It All)

Dogs could be trained to deal with long periods of inactivity required in preparation for a launch and would also tolerate wearing a cumbersome space suit in a small confined space. As well, stray dogs were chosen for their perceived hardiness and females were preferred due to simpler sanitation solutions.

(images via: Alaxanda Hulme and Russian Wikipedia)

In early 1951, two dogs named Tsygan (above, top) and Dezik rode a Soviet-built copy of the V2 rocket 110 km (68.35 miles) into space. The pressurized capsule containing the dogs parachuted back to Earth and both Dezik and Tsygan were none the worse for wear. At least, for the moment: Dezik did not survive his next mission later that year. Both dogs can be seen today, stuffed and mounted, at the Cosmonaut Memorial Museum in Moscow.

Giant Leaps For Mankind

(images via: Aerospace Medical Association and Cali1Socal)

The officially recognized border between the Earth’s atmosphere and outer space is 100 km, or about 62 miles, and between 1951 and 1956 the Soviet Union conducted 15 launches with 9 different dogs to at least that altitude. Another 11 launches to 200 km (124 miles) took place between 1957 and 1960. In 1958, three intrepid dog-monauts soared to 450 km (280 miles). Not all the canine crewmen survived these suborbital flights but the vast majority did, paving the way for the manned missions of the 1960s.

(images via: TIME, JWZ and Soviet Space Dogs)

Not only did Soviet space dogs succeed superbly in pushing the envelope of early space exploration by making suborbital space flights in the 1950s, many of them ascended in pairs such as Lisa and Ryzhik, Smelaya and Malyshka, and Bolik and ZIB. That odd last name is an acronym for “Zamena ischeznuvshemu Boliku” or “Substitute for Missing Bolik.” It seems the real Bolik ran away just days before his scheduled flight and a local stray was drafted as an instant replacement.

(image via: Realmagick)

Nearly 30 missions over a 10-year period may seem a lot for the Soviets, whose reputation for risk-taking and less than thorough testing is perhaps overstated. Consider that the United States launched a chimpanzee named Ham into space on January 31, 1961. Ham’s mission was followed a mere 3 months later by the first launch of an American astronaut, Alan Shepard, and both missions were suborbital.

Laika Rock(et)

(images via: NLM, Novareinna and The Siren Sound)

The October 1957 launch into orbit of Sputnik 1 shocked the world in general and the United States in particular – the Space Race was on! It wouldn’t be until January 31 of 1958 that the USA was able to place their first satellite, Explorer 1, into Earth orbit. The success of Explorer 1 was somewhat overshadowed by the startling success of the Soviet Union’s Sputnik 2 which launched on November 3, 1957. Not only did the rather large satellite achieve orbit, it carried a passenger: Laika (Russian for “Barker”), a 6 kg (13 lb) female stray with distinctive floppy ears.

(images via: Niki McCretton Presents, Niqqi’s Blog, First Second Books and Libraridan)

The American press had a field day with Laika’s successful launch, dubbing both the dog and capsule “Muttnik”. The embarrassing first attempt by the USA to launch a satellite – the televised launch pad explosion of Vanguard TV3 in December of 1957 – was ridiculed as Flopnik, Oopsnik and Kaputnik to name a few.

(images via: Aaron George Bailey and The Student Room)

Laika’s mission was intended to last 10 days but unfortunately, the heat shielding on Sputnik 2′s exterior was damaged during the launch phase and temperatures inside the capsule soared to 40 °C (104 °F). Though telemetry received at mission control indicated that Laika had calmed down somewhat from the stress of the launch and was eating food, by 5 to 7 hours into the flight life signs were no longer being received.

(images via: Tedstrong, Manoakua and ICA)

Laika’s fate was not fully disclosed until October of 2002, almost 45 years after the mission and over a decade after the USSR itself ceased to exist. At the time, fledgling animal rights groups protested the concept of sending a dog into space with no thought of retrieval. It seems even the scientists who planned Laika’s mission had qualms over it. In 1998 one of these scientists, Oleg Gazenko, expressed his regret by stating “Work with animals is a source of suffering to all of us. We treat them like babies who cannot speak. The more time passes, the more I’m sorry about it. We shouldn’t have done it… We did not learn enough from this mission to justify the death of the dog.” Today, Laika’s heroic yet tragic life has made her both a symbol of courage and a figure of sadness.

Dog Stars

(images via: EnglishRussia and Nuclear_Art)

Belka (“Squirrel”) and Strelka (“Arrow”) have also made the leap to pop culture, though their tail, er, tale lacks the tragic component of Laika’s short but vivid life. Belka and Strelka’s adventure began on August 19, 1960, securely seated inside Sputnik 5) along with 1 rabbit, 2 rats, 42 mice, an unknown number of flies, plus some plants and fungi.

(image via: Blog Serius)

The launch was uneventful and the capsule orbited the Earth for one day before safely parachuting down to the welcoming steppes of Soviet Central Asia. Belka, Strelka, and their fellow biota were the first creatures to orbit the Earth and return alive. Preserved for prosperity in Russia are the taxidermised Belka and Strelka along with their dented but undaunted space capsule.

(images via: Foxunk, WN.com and The Beet Goes On)

Belka and Strelka star in not one, but TWO animated feature films. One is titled “The Real Adventures of Belka and Strelka”, a portion of which can be seen here:

The Real Adventures of Belka and Strelka, part1, via Belkaistrelkacom

The other boasts a higher caliber of animation (think Rango) and the wonders of 3D. Touted as “an epic space adventure across the third dimension”, Space Dogs 3D was released in 2010. You can check out the trailer here:

Space Dogs 3D – Movie Trailer, via Epicpicturesgroup

The Ruff Stuff

(images via: KenhSinh Vien and Visualrian)

Though Laika may be the best known of the nearly 60 Soviet space dogs and Belka & Strelka have been immortalized in film, others have also achieved a measure of fame. Last (literally) but certainly not least, are Veterok and Ugolyok. Launched on February 22, 1966, the pair spent 22 days orbiting the Earth orbit before landing safely on March 16: their endurance record would not be surpassed until June of 1973, by human astronauts aboard Skylab 2. Veterok and Ugolyok would be the last of a long line of Soviet space dogs going back over 16 years.

(image via: SFF Audio)

The USSR may have lost the Space Race but it was the fault of their hardware, not their “software”: loyal, hardworking cosmonauts both canine and human. Through their – dare I say it – dogged determination, the Soviet space dogs helped make the airless void above a safer place for their best friends… us.


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Fall of the Century: Stunning Pics of Dry Niagara Falls

January 26, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Delana in History & Trivia, Nature & Ecosystems, Science & Research. ]

With almost 30 million visitors each year, Niagara Falls is a wildly popular tourist destination. People make their way to the Falls – both the American and the Canadian sides – to marvel at the spectacular natural beauty of the waterfalls. But there was a brief time – less than a lifetime ago – when the Falls were completely dry.

In 1965, it was discovered that the American side of Niagara Falls would eventually dry up unless a large amount of fallen rocks were cleared from the base. The job of fixing the massive landmark fell to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; in 1969, they built a 600-foot dam across the Niagara River and diverted the huge amount of water away from Niagara Falls and to the Canadian Horseshoe Falls.

Niagara Falls is the most powerful waterfall in North America, with 4-6 million cubic feet of water falling over the crest every minute. The Falls had been flowing continuously for around 12,000 years, but on June 12, 1969 the flow came to a complete halt. The falls were entirely dry until November 25th of that year, when the dam was destroyed and the water was turned back on.

During the time that the water was stopped, the Corps of Engineers performed some geological maintenance on the American side of the Falls to delay the erosion of the landmark. In the six months that the water was being diverted, visitors flocked to the site to witness the once-in-a-lifetime view of the “dewatered” falls.

(all images via: R.B. Glasson)

These pictures of the dry American Falls were recently found in a garage in Connecticut. Russ Glasson discovered them in 2009, 40 years after his parents-in-law snapped them at Niagara Falls. Perhaps thanks to other events going on at the time of the de-watering (the Moon landing springs to mind), the even has largely faded from the public memory. Thanks to the photos unearthed by Mr. Glasson, we can all re-live the day the water ran dry.


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(image via: Wikipedia)

While we may think that we understand how life on Earth works, there are still many mysteries out there to make us question everything. Blood Falls is a waterfall in …
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Rock Steady: The World’s 10 Most Amazing Balanced Stones

December 14, 2010 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

[ By Steve in 7 Wonders Series, Geography & Travel, History & Trivia. ]


Earth may be one of the most geologically active planets in the solar system, but don’t tell that to these 10 brazenly oblivious balanced stones. Poised between inertial stability and the relentless force of gravity, these rock-steady rocks maintain a precarious balance between soil and sky.

Balanced Rock, Colorado, USA

(images via: Suhafuha, World Is Round, Bagel! and Transformations and Whispers)

The huge balanced rock known as, er, Balanced Rock can be found in the Garden of the Gods, a Registered National Natural Landmark located near Pike’s Peak in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The rock looms over a paved access road that provides an excellent view – hopefully, not the last view an unlucky driver ever sees.

(image via: BamaWester)

The photo above highlights the layers of sandstone that make up Balanced Rock while accentuating the narrow base that has weathered away over the eons, partially freeing the boulder of harder red sandstone from its imprisoning matrix of softer stone.

Balancing Rock, Digby, Nova Scotia, Canada

(images via: Joanpopular, Nova Scotia Blogs and Welcome To Nova Scotia)

Balancing Rock in Digby, Nova Scotia, is a 30-odd foot high spire of columnar basalt that has gradually eroded out from the cliff face over countless years. The town of Digby has lately built an infrastructure of railings and walkways so that access to this striking phenomenon of nature is now much safer – both for tourists and for the rock itself.

(image via: Archer10)

According to Wally Hayes, a first-time visitor to Balancing Rock, “I was even more awestruck when I approached for a closer view and could look under the rock through a narrow horizontal crack and see the ocean beyond. The rock column didn’t appear to have much attachment to base rock on which it stood. Not only that, part of the base protruded out from the supporting rock. It looked like a pencil standing upright, half on and half off the edge of a table top. But this was not pencil, rather many tons of solid rock.”

Idol Rock, Brimham Moor, North Yorkshire, UK

(images via: Armchair Travelogue, Tj.Blackwell and The Pilgrim Club)

A number of oddly shaped and curiously balanced rocks dot a 50-acre expanse of Brimham Moor in North Yorkshire, England. One of the most outstanding – from a balanced rock point of view – is the so-called Idol Rock. Estimated to weight around 200 tons, Idol Rock balances its enormous weight atop a comparatively tiny, pyramidal stone upon which frighteningly high pressures are being expended.

(image via: Deputy Dog)

Idol Rock and its companion Brimham Rocks, which include The Sphinx, The Watchdog, The Camel, The Turtle, and The Dancing Bear, can be viewed at the Nidderdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The UK’s National Trust oversees the area and admittance is free.

El Torcal de Antequera, Andalucia, Spain

(images via: Pixelhut, Spain Online and Fotonatura.org)

El Torcal Nature Reserve, situated in the mountains south of Antequera, Spain, features a plethora of karst limestone rock formations that typically feature tall, tapering spires of rock combined with horizontal weathering patterns. The result of this combination is often expressed in huge “flapjack stacks” that are actually more stable than they appear.

(image via: Graphix 1)

The karst stone towers of El Torcal de Antequera have evolved terraces of limestone over which tourists can ascend like stairs in order to get up close & personal with the rocks. Climbing further is NOT recommended, however – Darwin has provided enough examples in the reserve without your becoming another one!

Kjeragbolten, Norway

(images via: Armchair Travelogue, TheStar.com and Diamir8000)

Kjeragbolten is a 5 square meter (roughly 15 sq ft) rock that his wedged itself in a crevasse between two gigantic rocks on Kjerag mountain, Norway. It’s not your typical, top-heavy balanced rock by any means but that’s not to say that Kjeragbolten is at perfect rest – just ask Aron Ralston, whose arm was trapped by a similarly wedged boulder in Utah’s Blue John Canyon, requiring him to take desperate measures to free himself.

(image via: Vacation Ideas)

Unlike Ralston’s nemesis in an underground canyon, Kjeragbolten is lodged high up on Kjerag. How high? Those who are brave enough to walk across the boulder (and yes, this is allowed) can easily view the valley floor about 1,000 meters (over 3,000 feet) below. For sheepish hikers especially, the admonition “don’t look down” was never so appropriate.

Peyro Clabado, Sidobre, France

(images via: Notes From A Broad, L’Ardoise Magique de Christineee and Hiramabi)

Peyro Clabado (Nailed Rock) is perhaps the most famous of the many enormous, eroded granite boulders and rock formations that make up the Sidobre in Languedoc, France. The rocks are all that remain of a 300 million year old mountain range that loomed over what was to become western Europe. Today, isolated outcrops loom over intrepid visitors who have hopefully updated their wills before visiting.

(image via: TechniPIERRE)

As hard and dense as granite may be, given enough time even the hardest specimens will be reduced to sand and sediment. Peyro Clabado is on its way to that fate, but for a brief moment in geological time we’re privileged to observe this 780-ton rock perform an exquisitely delicate balancing act.

Mushroom Rocks, Kansas, USA

(images via: All The Pages Are My Days, Space Weather and Sarah/RoadTrip2007)

Mushroom Rock State Park, located in the Smoky Hills region of Kansas, may only be 5 acres in size but it holds some of the oddest balancing rocks on Earth… and yes, a couple of them do indeed resemble mushrooms. Very, very large mushrooms – one might expect to see the hookah-smoking caterpillar from Alice In Wonderland relaxing on top of one.

(image via: Susan Ward Aber)

The Kansas Mushroom Rocks are a work in progress, and unfortunately the end of the job means the end of the rock formation. Although weathering by wind and water is a slow process, it’s remarkably effective over long stretches of time. In the Mushroom Rocks, one can easily see how the harder, darker Dakota Sandstone cap rock protects (to some degree) the softer, lighter colored stone that forms its pedestal. Even more remarkable is the fact that the narrow pedestal was once part of a distinct layer of rock, the vast majority of which has eroded away.

Chiremba Balancing Rocks, Epworth, Zimbabwe

(images via: Gerald Zinnecker and Deeping Blogorama)

The Chiremba Balancing Rocks are little known outside of Zimbabwe but the locals certainly appreciate their majesty: one impressive grouping is featured on the country’s banknotes. Like the balancing rocks of the Sidobre in France, these weathered boulders are made of ancient granite and it’s taken millions of years for them to settle into their outwardly precarious positions.

(image via: TravelJournals/TheGoose)

Epworth is located a few miles southeast of Zimbabwe’s capitol, Harare, and the Chiremba Balancing Rocks are just a short taxi ride away. They were declared a national monument in 1994 and admission to the park is approximately 3 dollars.

Mexican Hat Rock, Utah, USA

Mexican Hat Rock is located just outside Monument Valley in south-central San Juan County, Utah. The 60-foot (18 m) wide by 12-foot (3.7 m) thick red sandstone rock outcropping is the only one of its kind in the area and can be seen for miles around.

(image via: Bridgepix)

There are two designated climbing routes laid out for those who wish to make the strenuous hike to the base of Mexican Hat Rock’s sombrero-shaped cap. Though not a “balanced rock” in the pure sense of the term, the cap rock is attached to its base by a very narrow neck which will inevitably snap sooner or later… keep that in mind, hikers.

The Steady Hand Of Man

(images via: Rock On, Rock ON!, Squarewithin and Cheerful Monk)

The frozen tranquility of natural balanced rocks has inspired artists to try and replicate their beauty – not an easy proposition considering naturally balanced rocks have settled into their positions while creating such a tableau means working backwards, so to speak. Even so, the art of balancing rocks has gained a surprisingly large and talented following.

(image via: Rock On, Rock ON!)

Daliel Leite is one of these artists and his creations approach – and on occasion even match – the suspended splendor of nature’s best balanced rocks. The precisely oriented chunk of petrified wood above is one of Leite’s best known efforts. Is the rock still standing on its minuscule base, or did it tumble seconds after being photographed? Leite isn’t saying – and thanks to the marvel of photography, it really doesn’t matter.


(image via: Life Without Limits)

Those of a certain age will be very familiar with the concept of balanced rocks – and the consequences of their sudden unbalancing – shown time after time in the 48 classic Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons first broadcast in 1949. The 2D desert landscape in which Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner conducted their many epic encounters was a virtual minefield of balanced rocks which suddenly, catastrophically, became unbalanced when in close proximity to poor Wile E.’s noggin. Luckily, reality is kinder to both coyotes and balanced rocks – there are still plenty of both to go around!


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Good Day At Black Rock: 10 Cool Columnar Basalt Formations

December 7, 2010 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steve in Geography & Travel, History & Trivia, Nature & Ecosystems. ]


Columnar basalt formations like Devils Tower and the Giant’s Causeway have amazed and mystified humans from time immemorial. We now know that these spectacular geological wonders formed when extruded molten lava cooled, crystallized and cracked along precise angles. When exposed en masse, these magnificent symmetrical pillars look anything but natural… but they are: SUPER natural!

Devils Tower, Wyoming, USA

(images via: PlanetWare and Brian Davis)

Devils Tower, located in northeastern Wyoming, was designated America’s first national monument by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906. Geologists are not completely sure how the 1,267 ft (386 m) tall tower came to be, with most theories centering on it being the core, or plug, of an ancient volcano whose outer layers have eroded away. Though the columnar basalt on the formation’s exterior is eroding, so is the softer sandstone surrounding its base.

Here’s an amateur video taken at Devils Tower during a rainstorm, with a bonus double rainbow. What does it mean??

A STORMY ENCOUNTER AT DEVILS TOWER!, via Loakjoe

(images via: ZME Travel)

Devils Tower was known of and venerated by several Native American tribes. One legend concerning the formation involves 7 young girls pursued by a bear. When the ground rose, carrying them upward and out of the creature’s reach, the bear frantically scratched and clawed at the rock until it died of exhaustion. Devils Tower burst into modern pop culture consciousness with the release of the 1977 film Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The Tower first appears as a kitchen construction made of mashed potatoes and then, later on, as the contact point between humans and a more-advanced alien race.

Hexagon Pools, Golan Heights, Israel/Syria

(images via: Don Schwager and Stephen Coster)

The Hexagon Pools and their related watercourses are fed by cold, clear water draining off the nearby hills of the Golan Heights. Surprisingly to many who expect the region to have a classic Middle eastern desert environment, the area is well-watered and the rocks are mainly of volcanic origin.

(image via: Ilan_Gad)

Sheets of columnar basalt tinted a burnished gray hue hang alongside the Hexagon Pools – it’s the polygonal sections of rock that give the pools their name. The rock formations have been acted on by shifting subterranean fault lines over a very long time, which accounts for their unusual twisted appearance.

Cyclopean Isles, Italy

(images via: Gnuckx)

Located off the southeastern coast of Sicily in the Mediterranean Sea, the Cyclopean Isles are a small group of volcanic islands associated with nearby Mount Etna. The islands are mainly made up of black basalt that, under the influence of water and weathering, has evolved into a wide variety of otherworldly formations including vertical columns and horizontal polygonal mosaics.

(image via: Carlos Parada and Maicar Förlag)

The Cyclopean Isles feature prominently in The Odyssey, the ancient Greek poet Homer’s tale of the warrior king Odysseus (Ulysses) and his lyric journey home from the city of Troy. Odysseus and his crew were captured and imprisoned by a monstrous, one-eyed Cyclops when they landed on one of the islands, only escaping when Odysseus blinded the Cyclops while he slept. In his rage, the pain-crazed cyclops wildly threw huge boulders in the direction of Odysseus’s sailing ship.

Jusangjeolli, Jeju Island, South Korea

(images via: KTO, Rachello and The Adventures of a Nomad!)

Jusangjeolli is a huge formation of columnar basalt extending along a 3.5km () stretch of the Jungmun and Daepo seashore in Seogwipo, Jeju Island.” In some places, sheer cliffs made up of vertical basalt columns rise up to 20m (60 ft) above the beach. Often compared to the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland, Jusangjeolli also juts out into the ocean and owes its unique character to age-old forces acting at the interface between sea and land.

(image via: Travel Webshots)

Exposure to the elements over untold millions of years has left its mark on the once sharply delineated columns. In some areas the columns have partially separated into individual spires; closer to the shore crashing waves have softened and rounded their contours to the point where they resemble man-made walls similar to those constructed by the Incas.

Fingal’s Cave, Staffa, Scotland

(images via: PDN and Southern Hebrides)

Fingal’s Cave is an enormous sea grotto located on the rugged coast of Staffa, Scotland. The island is uninhabited and is graced with a host of natural geologic wonders formed from the same eruption of black basalt that composes the Giant’s Causeway. Show Caves of the World notes the dimensions of Fingal’s Cave as being 85 m (279 ft) deep and 23 m (75 ft) high.

This remarkable video puts you among a group of visitors touring Staffa and Fingal’s Cave on a magnificent sunny day. Note the varying types of columnar basalt – long straight “organ pipes” below and shorter, jumbled “hair” above:

Staffa & Fingals cave june 09, via Floydog1

(image via: Last Refuge Ltd.)

Described by visitors as a “truly natural cathedral complete with basaltic organ pipes”, Fingal’s Cave is endowed with unusual acoustic properties that distort and magnify the sounds of crashing waves. Scottish novelist Sir Walter Scott visited Fingal’s Cave and described it as “one of the most extraordinary places I ever beheld. It exceeded, in my mind, every description I had heard of it… eternally swept by a deep and swelling sea, and paved, as it were, with ruddy marble, it baffles all description.”

Garni Gorge, Armenia

(image via: Krikor Tersakian)

Garni Gorge is located 23 km (14.3 miles) east of Yerevan, the capitol of the country of Armenia. Due to the fact that it’s an inland canyon and not a seaside cliff formation, Garni Gorge offers a rare opportunity to view vast expanses of well-preserved columnar basalt on both sides of the onlooker. A notable landmark dating far back into prehistory, visitors to Garni Gorge can visit a restored 1st century AD Hellenistic temple situated on a promontory overlooking the canyon’s depths.

(image via: Damn Cool Pics)

Garni Gorge’s most famous feature is the “Symphony of the Stones”, a frozen cascade of basaltic “organ pipes” likened to a hanging garden due to erosion and undercutting of the valley floor. It’s a brave tourist who attempts to take photos or film video from beneath thousands of tons of suspended stone!

Gilbert Hill, Mumbai, India

(images via: IITB and Trivial Matters)

Gilbert Hill is a 197 ft (60 m) tall monolithic black basalt extrusion located in the outskirts of Mumbai in India’s state of Maharashtra. With its sheer vertical face and precisely etched vertical rock columns, the 65 million year old formation is said by some to resemble a much smaller version of Devils Tower.

(image via: YessAarKay)

Unlike most other famous large formations of columnar basalt, Gilbert Hill finds itself located in an urban setting as the city of Mumbai (formerly Bombay) has expanded around it. Though its summit provides a remarkable view over the densely packed roofs of Mumbai, years of quarrying around the formation’s base has both degraded the Gilbert Hill’s original, natural appearance and has created an increasingly dangerous hazard as the basalt columns lose their ground-level support.

Devils Postpile, California, USA

(images via: Travel and Tourism Info and Kevin Gong)

Devils Postpile is located near Mammoth Mountain in eastern California near the border with Nevada. Along with 101-ft high Rainbow Falls, this unusually symmetrical formation of columnar basalt is included in Devils Postpile National Monument, established in 1911 by a presidential proclamation. The order to create the park was in response to a dam-building proposal that would have seen Devils Postpile blasted into oblivion. The basalt formation offers visitors easy access to both the face and the top – the latter looking much like a man-made parquet floor.

Here’s a short video highlighting Devils Postpile, courtesy of an appreciative visitor:

Devils Post Pile, via 01djdave

(image via: T.Linn)

The lava flow that created Devils Postpile is relatively young, geologically speaking, being between 100,000 and 700,000 years old. Surface topography at the time of the eruption prevented the lava from spreading out and as a consequence, the original 400-ft (122 m) thick layer of basalt cooled slowly and evenly. It’s thought that this slow cooling allowed the basalt to form very long and uniform columns, most of which are six-sided in cross section.

Svartifoss, Skaftafell National Park, Iceland

(images via: Academic.ru, TrekEarth, Linternaute and Routard)

Svartifoss (“Black Falls”, in Icelandic) is located in Iceland’s Skaftafell National Park. This rare and striking example of a columnar basalt formation combined with a 12 meter (39 ft) high waterfall can be appreciated in all 4 seasons. The undercut structure of the columns accentuates their visual similarity to traditional church organ pipes.

Click HERE to view a spectacular 360-degree panorama of Svartifoss that can’t be beat except by actually going there:

(image via: Perfect Planet)

The basalt columns that make up the escarpment over which the falls flows are virtually unweathered and display straight, sharp edges that advertise their crystalline structure. This is due to the more rapid erosion caused by the constant, fast-flowing falls combined with Iceland’s perpetual freeze-thaw cycle.

Giant’s Causeway, County Antrim, Northern Ireland

The Giant’s Causeway (Clochán an Aifir, or Clochán na bhFómharach in Gaelic) is a spectacular assemblage of around 40,000 black basalt columns, weathered and eroded to varying degrees by the harsh seaside environment of County Antrim in Northern Ireland. The columns are up to 60 million years old, and the passage of time has acted to form a series of terraces leading down – and into – the frigid North Channel of the Irish Sea.

Check out this video from National Geographic showing the Giant’s Causeway in all its multi-faceted glory:

Giant’s Causeway, via NationalGeographic

(image via: Krikor Tersakian)

The Giant’s Causeway has another claim to fame, one which has contributed to the site being declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO (1986) and a National Nature Reserve (1987) by the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland. It seems that the Girona, a straggler ship of the Spanish Armada was shipwrecked just offshore of the Giant’s Causeway in late October of 1588. The ship was carrying over 1,000 sailors from other sunk or shipwrecked Spanish ships, along with their valuables, in addition to her own crew of about 300 – it’s estimated less than 10 survived.

(images via: TrekEarth and David Doyle)

It’s somewhat surprising that the Giant’s Causeway was little known in learned geological circles until the last years of the 17th century. Part of this ignorance has to do with the formation’s isolated location, and anecdotal accounts of the features size and grandeur were deemed too grandiose to be true. Thanks to the wonders of modern photographic technology, the world can see that reports of the Giant’s Causeway were anything BUT an exaggeration!

(images via: Ian Burt, National Geographic and Science Daily)

The otherworldly beauty of columnar basalt formations like the Giant’s Causeway lends itself to most any artistic endeavor, including music. Those familiar with Led Zeppelin’s fifth album Houses of the Holy, released in March of 1973, may have wondered where on Earth the bizarre landscape on the album cover was located. Well, now you know… Rock On!!


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