this post was submitted on 11 Jan 2024
53 points (90.8% liked)
Creepy Wikipedia
3946 readers
2 users here now
A fediverse community for curating Wikipedia articles that are oddly fascinating, eerily unsettling, or make you shiver with fear and disgust
Guidelines:
-
Follow the Code of Conduct
-
Do NOT report posts YOU don't consider creepy
-
Strictly Wikipedia submissions only
-
Please follow the post naming convention: Wikipedia Article Title - Short Synopsis
-
Tick the NSFW box for submissions with inappropriate thumbnails.
-
Please refrain from any offensive language/profanities in the posts titles, unless necessary (e.g. it's in the original article's title).
Mandatory:
If you didn't find an article "creepy," you must announce it in the thread so everyone will know that you didn't find it creepy
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
From the article:
A few points in your comment just didn't make sense to me, so I read through the article for clarification.
My first bit of confusion was that I'd hardly expect an ephemeral pond to rise to the level of halfway up these rocks on a wide flat expanse like this in a desert. That's a lot of water. Death Valley gets much less than 3 inches a year. Maybe it's possible, but the article makes no such claims.
Also, the idea that these rocks float seems at best dubious. Moreover if they did float, I find it hard to believe they would leave such prominent tracks in the clay. But they don't need to float. All you need is wet clay to reduce friction and a large ice sail; now you have movement exactly as the article described.