El Esfinge (The Sphinx) is a natural geological formation in Ischigualasto Provincial Park in Argentina. These wind-sculpted formations are also known as yardangs or mud lions.

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El Esfinge (The Sphinx) is a natural geological formation in Ischigualasto Provincial Park in Argentina. These wind-sculpted formations are also known as yardangs or mud lions.
Wind erosion A really cool find in the deserts of Northern Africa. Wind is a major erosive force, capable of picking up and carrying sand grains, but the wind is limited. Most winds are easily able to pick up sand, but pebbles are usually too big for the wind to move. This photo is about 4 cm across. There are small pebbles sitting on top of sand; the wind can move the sand but not the pebbles. The pebbles have protected the sand grains below them, creating pillars of sand beneath the pebbles. These would be called deflation features; remnants of sand being removed by the wind. -JBB Image credit: https://www.flickr.com/photos/banco_imagenes_geologicas/8558090382
Windblown rock formations in Dunhuang Yardang National Park, in Gansu
Wind, ice and sand
Wandering along the beaches of an icy Lake Michigan, the photographer spotted these foot high baby yardangs (aka hoodoos) on the normally sandy beach. Dozens of these towers were rising up over what had been a flat expanse of sand, and the life cycle of this phenomenon reveals in a few days or weeks erosional processes that take many millennia or more in rocks. The beach was frozen in the winter cold, solidifying. The ice (which is also a mineral) cemented the grains into a temporary, temperature mediated sandstone, in much the same way as calcite or silica from the waters that percolate the depths of the Earth do to sediments during their transformation into rock (a complex set of processes known as diagenesis). The howling winter winds then eroded the beach in the same way that they would a sandstone, but much faster than usual since ice is a lot softer than the usual mineral cements found in sedimentary rocks.
A couple of days later (these were taken on Valentine's day), he returned to check on them, but a rise in temperature had dissolved them all, melting their icy cement.
Geological processes are fractalic as I keep on emphasising, recurring across scales from the tiny to the huge (see http://on.fb.me/1L72vp3). Yardangs many tens of metres tall exist, as do these beautiful tiddlers. This process reveals another fractalic dimension, that of motion through time. The same processes took place over a couple of days, rather than the usual millions of years.
Loz
Image credit: Joshua Novicki. http://joshuanowicki.smugmug.com/ http://earthsky.org/todays-image/wind-sculpted-this-frozen-sand-in-michigan http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2015/02/ice-sand-scultpures-lake-michigan/
Amazing wind
These wind-erosion features in Egypt's White Desert are some of the most amazing erosional features on Earth.
These pillars are formed by a sequence of water erosion followed by wind erosion. To form these, first the sedimentary layers had to be deposited and lithified by some sort of cement. Those rocks then were uplifted out of the water, making it so that erosion could take hold. There had to be a role for water in creating channels or some other topography that penetrated the top layer, allowing wind to get through, as water is a much more powerful erosive agent. Water started eroding through the layers, breaking through the more resistant upper layers in places. At some point, wind took over. Wind erodes by picking up sand grains and sandblasting anything it runs into. Sand grains move via saltation, they bounce along the ground and usually don’t get more than a meter or so off the ground. Sand erosion therefore eats away at any rocks that are about a meter or less above the ground, leaving the slender pillars that hold up the larger rocks in this part of Egypt’s White Desert.
Other terms for these could include mushrooms, yardangs, or ventifacts.
-JBB
Image credit: https://flic.kr/p/e3ae5g
Read more: http://hte.si.edu/erosionmore.html http://bit.ly/1xuAobD
Stunning Hoodoo These features are also known as yardangs, and are formed by wind erosion in arid deserts. The wind carries grains of sediment, that essentially sandblast the rocks, and areas that were a little tougher than their surrounds survived to become yardangs. Here two layers of rock were eroded, with the upper one being more resistant, leaving behind this intriguing mushroom shape. Loz Image credit: Wolfgang Staudt
Original caption:
During our two months travelling in South America, we came across to some breathtaking weather conditions. This is a Timelapse collection of the most stunning storms and clouds around Atacama desert in Chile, Lake Titicaca and Uyuni in Bolivia.
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Bolivia and Peru traveling with really neat editing. Original caption:
“Feb 2018 Salar de Uyuni, Cementerio de trenes, Iglesia San Cristobal Lipez, Géiseres, Laguna Colorada y Flamencos, Arbol de Piedra, Isla de la Luna, Teleférico La Paz, Puno Islas flotantes y Ciudad del Cusco
Photo Gallery https://adrianrivera.myportfolio.com/
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vimeo.com/263614404″