Posted on 07/23/2010 6:14:16 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
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Gods |
Thanks Daffynition! To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. |
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It’s gnomes. Definitely gnomes.
One of my favorite strange spots on the planet ping!
I think this is wrong. I think the racetrack is one of the features on the floor of Death Valley.
So put some GPS units on the rocks and have them send hourly data to the satellite. Shouldn’t take too long to figure this out.
I’ve never heard of this. I skimmed the article and studied the pictures for 5 minutes. I’m pretty sure I know the only possible explanation.
vibration.
There are only two sources for vibration. Earth and sky. Earth vibration would be earthquakes, or maybe not quite so extreme as that, maybe just a slight standing wave set up in the rock itself and not in the ground beneath it.
Sky vibration would be air or electricity. That means wind ocillations or lighting. static electricity creates lightning and just before a lighting strike, rocks will vibrate like a tuning fork or a church bell that has just been rung. Wind vibration might possibly be created by unusual geometry of a depression or bowl. I’ve experienced it in a sports arena/bowl before. It would be like blowing over the end of a tube or water glass to produce a tone. Death valley is a bowl if Im not mistaken.
Ever seen a stationary object on a flat surface run like a cockroach when there is vibration? This is what is moving these rocks.
Now, where is my reward?
I think this is wrong. I think the racetrack is one of the features on the floor of Death Valley.
It is wrong. The USGS says the racetrack is 3,714 feet above sea level.
It is part of Death Valley National Park, not part of Death Valley.
I’ll send you my old electric football game. Some of the players are severely injured, but it still runs the flying wedge pretty good.
Hip Hop Gnome
He be a playa.
Lol. I’ve often wondered about this phenomenon.
Love the bling! LOL!
I have been to the Race Track many times. It is located on the far west side of the Death Valley NP. All down hill to the Park HQ’s on the valley floor.
I wonder if you can place bets on which ones are moving the fastest.
“So put some GPS units on the rocks and have them send hourly data to the satellite. Shouldnt take too long to figure this out.”
Either that or just set up some video cams that have night vision (with batteries that can be recharged by the Sun) and set it up like you do for any time lapse photography. Don’t forget to set up a weather station to record changes in weather minute by minute.
You could find out if it is wind just by putting a dome over a few of the rocks and watching those close up.
It really should not be that difficult to find out, right? Or do the gnomes move the rocks when no one is looking?
I’m sure a Las Vegas will be able to set up some sort of program to accomplish your request.
I personally believe that ice sheet, high winds, and the wet clay of the lake bed cause the rocks to move.
I you want to see “remote” the Race Track will fulfill that desire to the 10th degree!
Why?
Come on, these are pet rocks that have been released into the wild. Mystery solved.
Anyone who has played with cornstarch paste knows how weirdly a solid/liquid suspension can behave. I have no problem at all believing that the proper combination of normal weather phenomenon, and mud, could cause the rocks to slide all over the place.
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