Judge C.R. Magney State Park, near Grand Marais, Minnesota
I'm just glad they finally figured out where the water in the "kettle" goes. It just filters back up through the riverbed underneath which makes it difficult to use tracing dye.
I gave Jennifer’s Body another re-watch recently. Not a perfect film but I really like the concept. Anyways, I really liked the “Devil’s Kettle Waterfall” location so I looked it up. IMDB says that the waterfall scenes were filmed at the real Devil’s Kettle in Minnesota, but looking into it, that’s incorrect.
Here’s the real Devil’s Kettle
And here’s a shot of the “Devil’s Kettle” from the film
Doesn’t match up. Jennifer’s Body was filmed in Vancouver, BC, so I googled around for waterfalls in British Columbia and found the real location!
This is the beautiful Cascade Falls, in Cascade Falls Regional Park. You can see that the waterfall feeds into a little pool, I think in the film that the pool was CGI’ed into a whirlpool. If you look closely at the screencap you can see part of the rock doesn’t match up with the rest.
I would love to visit this location someday, the park looks gorgeous. Hope this was useful for any Jennifer’s Body fans who are looking to visit some film locations!
As it is Halloween here’s a still unsolved natural mystery.
Located in Judge C.R. Magney State Park, Minnesota, there is an unsolved geological mystery nicknamed The Devil’s Kettle. Mid way along the Brule River that runs through the Park the river splits in two to go around an outcrop of rhyolite. Here’s where it gets interesting, the split flows produce 2 waterfalls along side each other. The eastern flow drops around 15m (50ft) into a pool and continues off down stream. The western flow however drops 3m (10ft) into a pothole disappearing underground. Researchers have tried to track the waters movement using bright coloured dyes, ping pong balls and other objects without success. Suggestions include it rejoins the main eastern flow down river or creates a separate outlet into Lake Superior, both have yet to be found. What makes it even stranger is that geologists are also stumped. Some think that there could be a large fault, which the water follows and comes out under Lake Superior, but the type of rock it flows through makes it almost impossible to have such a long distance continuous opening and there is no evidence for a fault even existing. Another idea is it could drop down and enter into a large lava tube orientated towards the lake however rhyolites never form lava tubes and the basalts appear to be flood basalts formed laterally not down slopes of volcanoes. On top of that no lava tubes have been found in the hundreds of basalts in the surrounding area.
So far away
Might as well be the moon
I wanna love you but I'm done too
We reconcile only to be brought back to square one
And the miles and miles of distance
Are making me regret we happened
It's terrible I know but I promised I'd be honest with it
Wonderful Places that Scientifically impossible but exist, in this wonderful nature, we have beautiful and dangerous places like the Grand Canyon and Niagara Falls are some of the most famous and wonders their unique nature fact. The planet we have been living in is filled with mystery and even some marvel places that science cannot explain yet.
No matter how much you believe it or not, In this miracle world, there are some rarity places exists, we might never hear before.
We will show some places which fill your heart full of anticipation and curiosity that scientifically impossible however that exist.
Wonderful Places that Scientifically impossible but exist, we have beautiful and dangerous places like Grand Canyon & Niagara Falls
1. A Mysterious Devil’s Kettle
Devil’s kettle is located on the north shore of Lake Superior in Minnesota a midwestern state in the US. The real name of this park lies Judge C.R. Magney State Park, however, it is well known by the name of Devil’s Kettle.
The peculiar waterfall divided into two parts due to the rock, therefore, one part of waterfall falls into the Brule River and the other one disappears into a pothole. You can see 10 feet heights of the waterfall before it disappears into the underground.