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Miqel
Comment:The Cookie-Cutter seems to be the ultimate
Fortean Anomaly, it cries out for some kind of
simple, rational explanation, but on further consideration
it's baffling in a very thorough way.
ANOTHER "COOKIE CUTTER" HOLE
Back in 1984, the American press had fun with
the "cookie cutter" hole found in Washington state.
A good-sized chunk of earth or "divot" had been
neatly excised intact from the ground and deposited
some 73 feet away. One would think that nature
would play only one such bizarre prank, but a
remarkably similar occurrence also took place
in 1887.
A third example of this most curious phenomenon
has been resurrected from one of the Middle Ages
chronicles: "822 A.D.: 'In the land of the Thuringians,
near a river, a block of earth 50 ft. long, 14
ft. wide, and 1 ft. thick, was cut out, mysteriously
lifted, and shifted 25 ft. from its original location.'
Royal Frankish Annals." (Carolingian Chronicles.
W. Scholz, translator, Ann Arbor, 1972. Cr. E.
Murphy) Reference.
THE COOKIE CUTTER STRIKES AGAIN -- FOUR TIMES
- IN NORWAY
The divot from an Andøva moor Yes, the cookie-cutter
phenomenon has left its mark again: more mysterious
divots and holes in the ground. T. Jo nassen has
sent us a study of the phenomenon published in
Ottar, a publication of the Tromse Museum, in
Norway. Even better, he has provided a translation,
from which we quote a few paragraphs: "About 1
km SE of Skogvollvatnet (a lake), at Skogvollmyra
(a moor), a slab of turf 5.2 m long and 1.8 m
wide, has, in an apparently inexplicable manner,
torn itself loose from its 'mother turf' and placed
itself 4-5 m away. The slab of turf is completely
undamaged and is placed with the right side up.
The piece of turf has rotated 20-30 degrees compared
to the original hole. The hole in the moor is
absolutely even at the bottom, and the angle between
the bottom and its walls is 90 degrees. The hole
is 30-35 cm deep, and its edges are nicely cut.
"From the hole there is a crack running westwards
for about 6 m. Close to the hole this crack is
somewhat widened, and one side of the crack twists
itself 25-30 cm above the other. This twisting
decreases as one gets further from the hole. The
crack gradually subsides, and it is hard to tell
exactly where it ends. "About 12 m NW of the hole
there is an arched crack of about 15 m lying with
its concave side towards the hole. It is plainest
in the middle. Here the side closest to the hole
has been twisted upwards about 15 cm. Here also
the crack gradually disappears at both ends. There
is an open hollow beneath the part which has been
twisted upwards, about 30 cm below the surface.
One theory has lightning creating a steam explosion
from underground water. If this were the case,
one would expect to find some fusion of the earth
and more havoc wrought to the divot. "The slab
of turf has an area of about 5 m2 and this should
give a weight of between 1500-1700 kg."
The article concludes with a brief description
of three similar occurrences of the phenomenon
in Norway.
Two articles on the Washington state 1984 event
Strange Happening - Scientists are baffled
by big 'mystery hole'
St. Petersburg Times
November 25, 1984
Associated Press Grand Coulee, Wash.
No one can figure out how, but a chunk of earth
weighing tons was plucked out of a wheat field,
as though someone used "a giant cookie cutter,"
and put down, right side up, 73 feet away. "All
we know for sure is that this puzzle piece of
earth is 73 feet away from the hole it came out
of," said Greg W. Behrens, a geologist with the
Bureau of Reclamation at Grand Coulee Dam. The
displaced slab, mostly soil held together by roots,
is about 10 feet long and 7 feet wide. Its thickness
varies from 2 feet at one end to about 18 inches
at the other. The shape and thickness of the piece
exactly match the hole that was left behind, just
like a piece in a jigsaw puzzle, though it was
rotated about 20 degrees. There are no marks to
indicate machines were used, the Seattle Times
reported Friday, and the land is fairly flat.
"You'd think that, whatever the cause, the chunk
would have traveled in a straight line," said
Don Aubertin, director of mining for the Colville
Indians, whose reservation is near the site. However,
a scientist "found where pieces had dribbled from
the chunk as it moved. The dribblings traced an
arc from the hole to where the chunk was found."
The site is on a farm in north-central Washington
operated by Fred Timm and his sons. Two of the
sons, Rick and Pete, discovered the displaced
earth Oct. 18 while rounding up cattle in an area
known as "haystack rocks," where huge boulders
were left by a glacier that covered the area thousands
of years ago. The Timms believe the chunk was
moved sometime after mid-September, when they
harvested wheat in that field. There was a small
earthquake in the area during that one-month period,
at 8:24 p.m. Oct. 9. It measured 3.0 on the Richter
scale of ground movement, and its epicenter was
about 20 miles southwest of the displaced earth.
However, University of Washington scientists ruled
out the possibility that the quake somehow could
have moved the chunk. The work of a meteorite
also has been ruled out. "There was no sign of
impact," Aubertin said. "The hole was not a crater.
It had vertical walls and a fairly flat bottom.
It was almost as if it had been cut out with a
giant cookie cutter." But even that couldn't have
left such a hole, he added, because roots from
plants in the piece that was moved still dangled
from the walls of the hole, indicating they were
torn apart rather than cut. Behrens wondered if
bedrock could have focused the earthquake's seismic
waves on the displaced chunk.Focusing can occur,
said UW geologist Stephen Malone, but it could
not provide enough energy.
End of article
Washington State's Mystery Hole by Greg
Long
February 15, 1996 Located on the internet: http://www.sokolblosser.com/nwmyst/nwmyst-othermyst-0001.html
Fred Timm owns a farm on the Colville Indian Reservation
in northeastern Washington. Nothing notable had
happened on the farm for a month during the wheat
harvest which had begun in mid-September of 1984.
However, a small earthquake, 3.0 on the Richter
scale did occur on October 9, 1984, at 8:24 p.m.
But that event was far away, 20 miles to the southwest
of the Timm farm.
So what was the explanation for the mysterious
hole that Fred Timm's sons, Rick and Pete, found
on October 18, 1984? Rick and Pete were on horseback
that day rounding up cattle for their father.
They were next to a wheat field on the Colville
Indian Reservation north of the Columbia River
when they spotted something. Approaching closer,
they saw a hole in the ground. The hole was 10
feet long and 7 feet wide and roughly pear-shaped.
The north end of the hole was about one-and-a-half
feet deep; the south end was two feet deep. Curious,
the men dismounted and studied the hole and then
looked around on foot. Seventy-three feet northwest
of the hole was a huge chunk of earth shaped like
the hole. The chunk of earth had been deposited
largely intact with a counterclockwise rotation
of about 20 degrees in relation to the hole. There
was a scattering of fingernail-size soil particles,
like "dribblings," occasionally found on the ground
across the 73-foot distance.
The Timm family contacted Don Aubertin, director
of mining for the Colville Indian Tribe. Aubertin,
thinking the hole had been caused by a meteorite
strike, contacted Bill Utterbach. A geologist
retained by the Colville Indians, Utterbach examined
the area and said about the hole: "It had vertical
walls and a fairly flat bottom. It was almost
as though it had been cut out with a giant cookie
cutter." The estimated weight of the chunk of
topsoil was 3 tons! But the massive "divot" of
soil did not appear to have been cut out of the
ground. There was no sign of shearing of the soil.
Dangling from the walls of the cavity were roots
of vegetation, not cut, but torn. The block of
earth did not appear to have been dragged or rolled.
Something manmade would have been needed to lift
the chunk and transport it, but there were no
machinery marks on the ground. Greg Behrens stepped
forward. A geologist with the United States Bureau
of Reclamation at Grand Coulee Dam, he examined
the block of earth and the local geology. He noted
that the site of the hole was over a glacial basin
about 100 feet by 150 feet formed by strata that
had sagged during the melting of an ancient ice
pack.
Behrens wondered if the earthquake of October
9 had triggered concentric surface waves, which
converging, could have ejected the soil. Stephen
Malone of the University of Washington, chuckled.
The 3.0 quake, 20 miles southwest of the hole,
had been four miles below the surface of the earth.
Malone said that if the quake displaced the earth,
" it would be the most dramatic and obvious thing
ever reported that I'm aware of." It was "very,
very unlikely" that an earthquake was the culprit.
Behrens admitted that his idea was stretching
it. Although focusing of seismic waves does occur,
"nothing this large has been documented." He felt
most geophysicists would reject his idea. So he
looked for other explanations: A freak tornado
ripping out the block. No, no swirling of vegetation
evident. A complex freezing action causing the
block to be lifted up and moved by strong winds.
No, the temperature was warm at the time. A gas
explosion, like methane. No, no methane in the
area. A meteorite ripping the block out. No, the
hole did not resemble a crater, and the block
was not shattered. Clever people using a large
crane excavating the block out; or people freezing
the ground, excavating the block out, and sliding
it 73 feet; or a helicopter to lift the mass out.
H'hhmm; no, extremely expensive with no profits.
As Behrens said, "Mr. Timm is quite reserved and
wishes no notoriety from all of this. The area
is so remote that it would never become a tourist
trap."
Perhaps not unexpected was the UFO theory. Behrens
came across stories of UFO sightings from local
residents. One person talked of a farmer who found
a circular burned area, 30 feet in diameter, near
his combine as if something had set down and scorched
the ground. The Aerial Phenomena Research Organization
had a report of "a meteor" in the vicinity of
the hole on October 13. Local residents told Behrens
that at the time of the earthquake they had felt
an extreme air shock with it, much more than a
sonic blast. The residents had felt ground motion
after the air blast. A roar described as an approaching
freight train preceded the blast with the doppler
effect afterwards. Curiously, in 1979 Bruce Kaliser,
Utah state engineering geologist, while doing
a routine field check following a 3.5 earthquake
near the Utah-Idaho border, was alerted by farmers
to a mysterious hole outside Portage, Idaho. The
hole was shaped like a cross and entirely undisturbed.
It was about 14 feet in diameter. Each arm had
two furrows, and each arm had cracks parallel
to the furrows, radiating out from the center
of the cross. The Idaho slab, unlike the Washington
slab, was broken into pieces. To date, no one
has explained the "mystery hole" of Washington.
Some type of rare earthquake-related phenomenon,
or ?
End of article (Dybwik, Dagfinn, and Møller, Jakob
J.; "Phenomenon in an Andøya Moor - An Insoluble
Mystery?" Ottar, no. 5, p. 15, 1988. Cr. T. Jonassen)
Comment. One could easily dismiss (with a knowing
smile) a single occurrence of the cookie-cutter
phenomenon - but now we have a total of seven!
The situation becomes more serious. Reference.
Similar "holes" and other topographic anomalies
are to be found in our catalog: Carolina Bays,
Mima Mounds. This book is described at: http://www.knowledge.co.uk/xxx/cat/sourcebook/
From Science Frontiers #62, MAR-APR 1989. © 1997
William R. Corliss
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