Richard and Jim Norris, and co-author Jib Ray of Interwoof started
studying the Racetrack’s moving rocks to solve the “public mystery” and
set up the “Slithering Stones Research Initiative” to engage a wide
circle of friends in the effort. They needed the help of volunteers who
repeatedly visited the remote dry lake, quarried the rocks that were
fitted with GPS, and maintained custom-made instruments. Lorenz and
Brian Jackson of the Department of Physics at Boise State University
started working on the phenomenon for their own reasons: They wanted to
study dust devils and other desert weather features that might have
analogs to processes happening on other planets.
“What is striking about prior research on the Racetrack is that
almost everybody was doing the work not to gain fame or fortune, but
because it is such a neat problem,” said Jim Norris.
So is the mystery of the sliding rocks finally solved?
“We documented five movement events in the two and a half months the
pond existed and some involved hundreds of rocks”, says Richard Norris,
“So we have seen that even in Death Valley, famous for its heat,
floating ice is a powerful force in rock motion. But we have not seen
the really big boys move out there….Does that work the same way?”
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