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Can anyone explain this?

6,725,974 views • 2 years ago •via X (Twitter)

9 Comments

alienzzzzz's profile picture
alienzzzzz2 years ago

Likely it's a sedimentary rock that formed while it was under the ocean and then uplifted but it had a layer of another type of rock between it and the other sediments so if formed a ball and as it uplifted and wrote it away the other softer sediment washed out leaving this spherical shape That's just my guess

Zatoichi42🌊's profile picture
Zatoichi42🌊2 years ago

Moeraki boulders. Here are some pictures I took in NZ. Huge (up to 10ft), perfectly spherical calcite and clay buried boulders exposed by erosion to roll into the ocean from the hills nearby. Just breath taking stuff.

Bagas Prakoso's profile picture
Bagas Prakoso2 years ago

Saiyans spaceship

The Rational Anarchist's profile picture
The Rational Anarchist2 years ago

Not enough fiber.

6.283's profile picture
6.2832 years ago

It's called a concretion. They form naturally when calcite, iron oxide, silica and other materials form around a nucleus, such as a fossil or mineral crystal. They've been well understood for many years, and often a source of fossils.

Ruby Tumbleweeds Badger's profile picture
Ruby Tumbleweeds Badger2 years ago

yes....it is called Concretion

Paul54's profile picture
Paul542 years ago

Zeus Threw that Ball at Hercules when he was mad at him, that is where it landed, Don't piss off the Gods.

🗝's profile picture
🗝2 years ago

Simple. It's a cannonball from a pirate spaceship. The ship utilizes materials from the environment it's occupying to craft ammo. By doing this: One- reduces weightload of the ship. Two- never run out of ammo. Three- more rum can be stashed aboard.

Chris Martenson's profile picture
Chris Martenson2 years ago

Marine sandstones often form ball shapes when there's something in the center that can leach out causing a spherical hardening pattern. Check the center for a gigantic crab!

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