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Nov 11, 2010

The Power of an Earthquake Turns Train Tracks to Spaghetti

 
This past September, a quake rocked Canterbury, New Zealand. But rather than scenes of destruction and rubble, the tremors left behind some bizarre scenes—like these warped tracks atop pristine countryside.

Dave Petley, blogging at the American Geophysical Union, isn't exactly sure what caused the strange deformations, but speculates that "The compression on the very strong railway line was accommodated when a weak point was found, leading to a comparatively rapid deformation to form the main buckle on the left. This then concentrated stress on both sides of the buckle, allowing the other (right side) bends to form." Hm! Either way, it is a reminder of just how incredibly powerful the physical forces underneath our shoes are.

28 comments:

  1. I really want to say that it's photoshopped. XD

    At the same time, I want to see a train go over those tracks.

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  2. It's like a scene from Fringe....only with Train tracks. BTW...your blog really kicks it old and new school!!!

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  3. That is an earthshaking revelation. =P

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  4. This is a bad photoshop. There could not be that much slack in the rails for that to be possible. If so the entire track would have moved or it would have broken.

    Always a follower, thanks!

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  5. omg lol, looks wierd...imagine you would go over this with this hand pushed wagon that you see in western movies :D

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  6. impressive what an earthquake can do

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  7. Crazy ass train tracks.

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  8. Wow that's insane. It does look shopped, but I've seen stranger shit happen in real life

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  9. When I first saw this picture I thought it was a joke. Holly crap.

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  10. Perfect picture! The visual effect is amazing. I would like to see a train pass there (without derailing) "Hold on falks, we are passing the zig zag now! Please keep seated!"

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  11. thats crazy looking, you would think the track would split first

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  12. this looks shopped somehow :D
    wouldn't the tracks brake when such a great amount of force is against them ?
    keep up the good work

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  13. its amazing how metal can bend and not break when heated by friction.

    either way check me out sometime, im interesting.

    http://bigpoppasinterestingthings.blogspot.com/

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  14. Good pic! Never knew this could happen.

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