Collections of these dome-like hills are common in landscapes throughout the United States. Depending on your region, you might know them as Mima mounds, hogwallow mounds, or even pimple mounds–and their origin isn’t always clear. Theories range from seismic activity to gophers—and even just an accumulation of sediment. The prairie mounds on our homepage today are part of Oregon’s Zumwalt Prairie, a protected grassland area in northeast Oregon. Encompassing some 330,000 acres, it’s of one of the largest remaining tracts of bunchgrass prairie in North America. Once part of an extensive grassland in the region, this portion has remained preserved due to its high elevation, which made farming difficult.
Mysterious prairie mounds abound
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Park of the Monsters, Bomarzo, Italy
-
Salmon migration in full swing
-
Paper lanterns on the longest night
-
Heceta Head Light, Florence, Oregon
-
Waiānapanapa State Park, Maui, Hawaii
-
Bardenas Reales Biosphere Reserve and Natural Park, Spain
-
Frog Month
-
The meeting point of the winds
-
Belted Galloway cows
-
Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
-
A keel-billed toucan in Costa Rica
-
Congratulations, 2019 Nobel Prize laureates!
-
Summer’s in home stretch
-
Provence blooms with lavender at Sénanque Abbey
-
Nothing plain about it
-
Yosemite National Park, California
-
Green fields of grain
-
Ljubljana, Slovenia
-
World Olive Tree Day
-
Happy Juneteenth!
-
Celebrating freedom
-
A delta in the Venetian Lagoon, Italy
-
World Population Day
-
Of moles and liquid nitrogen
-
Let s celebrate cephalopods
-
Hawai i Volcanoes National Park at 106
-
Autumn comes to Old Town
-
A little bit of Wonderland in New York City
-
To the 155th on the 155th
-
Protecting wildlife today and tomorrow
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

