Today is a day that puts time into perspective. Old Rock Day highlights the vast geological processes that have shaped our world since its earliest eras. In Arches National Park, Utah, United States, Turret Arch—seen through North Window—offers a striking reminder: landscapes can take hundreds of millions of years to assemble. The Entrada Sandstone that forms these arches began as shifting dunes and shallow seas long before erosion carved today"s shapes. Even so, these formations are relatively young. Most rocks on Earth disappear over time because plate tectonics, erosion and volcanism continually recycle the crust. Only the planet"s ancient continental shields preserve truly old material. Canada"s Acasta Gneiss, about 4 billion years old, is the oldest known rock still rooted where it formed.
Old Rock Day
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Keep practising, little guy
-
The bears and the bees…
-
Ljubljana, Slovenia
-
Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
-
The Wave, Vejle, Denmark
-
Warm light through an ancient forest
-
Lago Pehoé, Torres del Paine National Park, Chile
-
Wintry Swiss bliss
-
Friendship Day
-
Giving Tuesday
-
Staghorn coral in shallow ocean
-
Victoria Street in Edinburgh, Scotland
-
World Childrens Day
-
The mystery of Stonehenge
-
Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park, British Columbia, Canada
-
Starry, starry night
-
The Blue City of Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India
-
Martimoaapa Mire Reserve, Finland
-
Prasat Phanom Rung temple ruins, Thailand
-
Happy International Beaver Day!
-
50 years of the Endangered Species Act
-
Guild houses of Grand-Place, Brussels, Belgium
-
Strong sibling bonds
-
Blue walls of Chefchaouen, Morocco
-
Alstrom Point, Lake Powell, United States
-
Beauty beyond imagination
-
Baby giant panda in China
-
Aýna, Albacete, Spain
-
Sea Otter Awareness Week
-
World Space Week
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

