Friday, May 22, 2020

WHITE SANDS, NEW MEXICO

White Sands is in southern New Mexico, 16 mi west of the town of Alamogordo. White Sands, which covers 275 square miles, was established as a National Monument in 1933. It recently became a National Park. The elevation of the park is 4,235 feet.


White Sands is geologically situated between the San Andres Mountains to the west and the Sacramento Mountains, just east of Alamogordo, to the east. [Google Earth photo, 2018].


Aerial view, looking northwest. White Sands is in the distance, below a cloud layer on the horizon and "between" the two 
pointed-metal objects on the airplane wing.


White Sands consists of white gypsum sand dunes, the largest of their kind on Earth. 

During the Late Permian Period, about 250 million years ago, shallow seas covered the area. Evaporating seas left behind deposits of white gypsum crystals, consisting of hydrous calcium sulfate. Gypsum is very soft: 2 on the Moh's Hardness Scale. Fingernails can scratch gypsum. See my previous post on "Some Varieties of Gypsum" (Sept. 30, 2017).

Subsequent tectonism uplifted the San Andreas and Sacramento Mountains, and, over time, rain dissolved the gypsum deposits, and rivers transported the dissolved material to the nearby Tularosa Basin, which had no outlet the sea. The trapped water evaporated and gypsum was deposited (once again). Over time, weathering and erosion broke down the gypsum crystals into sand-size grains. In the last million years or so, prevailing winds from the southwest transported these crystals and dunes formed. There are transverse, parabolic, and barchan dunes present. 

It is quite a wonderful experience to visit White Sands. You can walk barefoot and not get burned by the sand, and you can roll around in the gypsum sands without getting abraded, like you would if the dunes were made of quartz grains (hardness 7).

Photography is a challenge because of the glare. It is like photographing a snow field.


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