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The Namibia desert is decorated by thousands of mysterious circles

bbc.com

158 points by fromdoon 11 years ago · 46 comments

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prawn 11 years ago

Not sure if it's just my browser that was missing them, but the article could've really used some images.

You can see the fairy circles in this Wikipedia page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_circle_(Africa)

Or this Google Images link: https://www.google.com.au/search?q=namibia+fairy+circle&safe...

rogerallen 11 years ago

Sure looks like Turing patterns that you get with Reaction-Diffusion simulations.

See http://pmneila.github.io/jsexp/grayscott/ and select "holes"

jjallen 11 years ago

To the man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail:

"Some theories are still holding strong though, and Cowan jokes that each scientist sees the solution in terms of their own particular area of expertise: the insect biologists think the circles are created by ants or termites, the plant physiologists think it’s grasses, and the chemists think it’s gases. Cowan, a microbial ecologist, proves no exception."

Indomitable_PHP 11 years ago

Namibian here. Can confirm, this got more international press attention than national press.

matt_morgan 11 years ago

It doesn't say anything about watching these over time. Do the rings move? Do they fill in after a year and new ones form? It's not like all the grass is in rings.

Jun8 11 years ago

“There is a tremendous sense of excitement that there is something really interesting going on and we want to know what that is,” says Professor Don Cowan, director of the Centre for Microbial Ecology and Genomics at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. “It is a desire to understand the system. What is going there? What is happening?”

Can't think of a better summary of science!

  • tjradcliffe 11 years ago

    How about this: "Science is the discipline of publicly testing ideas using systematic observation, controlled experiment, and Bayesian inference" :-)

    The notion that these circles are the result of large-scale self-organization on the part of the grasses (and maybe other creatures) is an intriguing one. I have a very speculative novel that plays around with the idea of evolution operating on all scales: http://www.amazon.com/Darwins-Theorem-TJ-Radcliffe-ebook/dp/...

    While Newtonian physics was the go-to explanatory metaphor for several centuries, it's plausible that in the 21st century we'll start to see metaphorical evolutionary explanations become more common. If we can encourage that habit in ourselves and others it may help us see more creative, non-linear solutions to our problems, rather than the simple Newtonian action/reaction, force/motion model.

lake99 11 years ago

If you're lazy, click here to see it on Google Maps: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Namibia/@-24.9646371,15.93...

You'll have to switch to satellite-view yourself.

readerrrr 11 years ago

The termite theory makes a lot of sense.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_circle_%28Africa%29#Forma...

jrapdx3 11 years ago

When I read the article few minutes ago the there were several interesting images of the "fairy circles".

Their origin is still a mystery. In a way that's comforting, that nature often doesn't yield secrets so easily and we can be astounded and fascinated by the beauty of the things we discover.

The recent idea that the circles are the result of grass growth limitations due to water and nutrient availability, it still doesn't account for the circular voids. Similar conditions exist in S. Arizona where I grew up. Plants were sparse in the desert, there were native grasses too, but no fairy circles.

Maybe there's something about the root system of the grass that makes them chained together, but such regular circles at regular intervals wouldn't be explained by this mechanism. I wonder if the circles move, that might tell something. Maybe the circles are too small to track by satellite, or too remote to warrant keeping track from space.

Well many have speculated about the phenomenon, tests have been done and theories discarded, and all we have to show for it is more speculation. The mystery will be revealed some day...

john2x 11 years ago

Reminds me of the tiny dots/circles that form on the surface after my rice finishes cooking. Can't find a photo of what I mean online though.

zimpenfish 11 years ago

Someone should analyse the distribution for how close it is to a Poisson Disc / blue noise. Looks pretty good from the satellite images.

guelo 11 years ago

Really don't see any patterns in this image, there's also overlapping and merging going on: http://lh6.ggpht.com/-4Dqlhnj1wkM/UV1et2rxyTI/AAAAAAAAm5Q/P-...

kogus 11 years ago

These remind me of the "Devils Stomping Ground" circle in NC. http://www.hauntspot.com/haunt/usa/north-carolina/devils-sto...

jackgavigan 11 years ago

Maybe it's the Magarathean equivalent of the EURion constellation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EURion_constellation

  • Terr_ 11 years ago

    I'm imagining a less-professional version, where underneath the polar ice is emblazoned: "This planet is original content and property of Yahweh, DO NOT STEAL"

charlesbronson 11 years ago

The circles remind me of antibiotic restistance tests: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_lawn#mediaviewer/File...

sopooneo 11 years ago

Have they had some grad student just go and camp in an area like this for a full year? I would think that would help you get some insights and plausible hypothesis.

It seems the rocks-sliding-across-the-desert mystery could have been solved the same way many years ago.

kalops 11 years ago

BBC themselves previously reported termites being responsible for this:

http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-21970408

  • HappyTheHacker 11 years ago

    The new article says:

    Tschinkel dug for termites in one or two circles and returned in 2007 to investigate, and hopefully prove, his hypothesis. “It took us about three days to establish, without a doubt, that termites were absolutely nothing to do with this,” Tschinkel says.

tantalor 11 years ago

Reminds me of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mima_mounds

kazinator 11 years ago

They are clearly giant ejection pin marks from when the Earth was popped out of its mould.

lucozade 11 years ago

Tell me about it. Those Namibian desert fairies play havoc with your herbaceous borders.

nakedrobot2 11 years ago

This is caused by fungus. Have any scientists established this as the cause? That is my best guess.

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