seen from Sweden
seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from China
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Belarus

seen from T1

seen from United States
Surise over the California Desert
shainblumphotography
After 3 years of hardwork. My Timelapse Masterclass is finally LIVE! Learn how I create my timelapses from planning to the final exports. You will learn how to create all the shots in this video and many more. Some of the topics covered are day-to-night, startraillapses, cityscapes, LRtimelapse, motion control, gear, scouting and much more. LlNKlNBlO to check it out!
Mudcracks
Have you ever seen mud crack? A lot of rocks in Glacier National Park feature ancient mudcracks. This simple sedimentary structure is a clue to understanding what the area that is now Glacier National Park looked like in the past. At the end of the Precambrian, this area was covered in a vast, shallow body of water called the Belt Sea. Tidal flats located near the Belt Sea were intermittently covered in water. As the water receded, the mud would dry out and mudcracks would form. NPS Photo [A close up view of red rock with cracks running across the surface.]
Fossil mudcracks
These rocks come from the Belt Supergroup in Montana, a sequence deposited in the late Precambrian when a large sedimentary basin opened.
Probably a large majority of our readers have seen mudcracks when they’re fresh. Mudcracks form when fine-grained sediment undergoes cycles of wetting and drying. Fine-grained clays will expand and swell when they get wet, locking the water into their chemical structure. The wet clay will form layers that are damp but sticky; wet clay will stick to almost anything that touches it, especially your boots.
When the water dries up, those clays contract. Solids don’t contract easily; they have a habit of cracking and breaking. Drying out a layer of mud leads to the formation of mudcracks. If those cracks are later buried by more sediment, they can be preserved in the geologic record, preserving a record of the environment hundreds of millions of years ago.
This rock formed in an area that was undergoing cycles of wetting and drying. There weren’t strong currents that would bring coarse-grained sediment into the area, just piles of mud that went from wet to dry.
The cracks penetrate 2 different colors here. That hints to me that the color is not related to any original sedimentary bedding, but instead probably relates to processes that took place after the sediments were deposited. If there was a change in the abundance of oxygen across this unit that could cause a red color in a portion of a unit that ends at a line like we see here.
-JBB
Image credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/3150979627/
See more: http://gigapan.com/gigapans/146360 http://formontana.net/slabs.html
Mudcracks, Utah