Well, there is no point for me to keep it secret anymore. Ardvan was close. Ruth was essentially right in both cases. And John G won the jackpot!
But this is not the end of the puzzle. The intriguing, not yet finished story behind the singing dunes will be the subject of a separate SOTT article tomorrow.
In the meantime, if you would like to see the original article that triggered my first puzzle - it is here:
But this is not the end of the puzzle. The intriguing, not yet finished story behind the singing dunes will be the subject of a separate SOTT article tomorrow.
In the meantime, if you would like to see the original article that triggered my first puzzle - it is here:
And here is the original photograph.Written in the sand
06 January 2007
From New Scientist
Can anybody help us explain what caused the phenomenon in this photograph (above)? It was taken on the Sands of Forvie nature reserve in north-east Scotland. The weather was dry, though there had been rain the day before. The photograph shows the lip and face of a small mobile sand dune. The slope of the dune face was approximately 45 degrees and the sand was dry at the time the photograph was taken. The image shows a section about 1 metre wide. The whole pattern extended about 20 metres.
Martyn and Margaret Gorman, Newburgh, Fife, UK