Welcome to nature"s bowling alley. Bowling Ball Beach on the Mendocino Coast in California is named after the striking rock formations strewn across the shore. These sandstone balls—a phenomenon known as concretions—formed over millions of years as sedimentary layers built up around a central core of sand and stone held together by mineral cements. Erosion gradually wore away the outer layers to expose the spherical shapes we see today. This created a fascinating spectacle that only appears at low tide. Concretions are rare, and there has been plenty of wild speculation about where they come from, with some believing them to be extraterrestrial debris while others wondering if they are dinosaur fossils. The answer, however, is quite simple: it is the forces of nature at play.
Bowling Ball Beach, California, USA
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Meerkat family
-
Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska
-
World Oceans Day
-
Staying in the loop
-
Im ready for my close-up, Mr. DeSquirrel
-
Chisos Mountains, Big Bend National Park, Texas, United States
-
Church of Notre Dame de Bon-Port, Les Sables-dOlonne, France
-
Male hooded merganser, Oregon, United States
-
Indian Head Cove, Bruce Peninsula National Park, Canada
-
Paint the sky with colours
-
Swinging over Munich
-
Piecing together a better tomorrow
-
An apex predator
-
Spiegelgracht canal in Amsterdam, Netherlands
-
Ring of fire solar eclipse
-
Peggys Cove Lighthouse, Canada
-
Fibonacci Day
-
A sacred water tank in Hampi
-
Belém Tower, Lisbon, Portugal
-
Rising with the sun
-
Polar bear cubs
-
Endangered Species Day
-
A road not for the faint of heart
-
So close, yet so far
-
Take the trail more travelled by
-
Young black caiman, Tambopata National Reserve, Peru
-
The mystery of Stonehenge
-
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve, Alaska, United States
-
Fragrant fields as far as the eye can see
-
Fly me to the moon
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

