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Mount Baldy (sand dune)

Coordinates: 41°42′32″N 86°55′41″W / 41.7089°N 86.9281°W / 41.7089; -86.9281
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Mount Baldy
View of the dune
View of the dune
Mount Baldy is located in Indiana
Mount Baldy
Mount Baldy
Location of Mount Baldy in Indiana
Coordinates: 41°42′32″N 86°55′41″W / 41.7089°N 86.9281°W / 41.7089; -86.9281
Range41°42'33"N 86°55'47"W
AgeHolocene
Elevation38 m (126 ft)

Mount Baldy is a sand dune located in Indiana Dunes National Park. It is on the southern shore of Lake Michigan and is 126 feet tall. It is a wandering dune that moves or shifts every year, and is called a "living dune."

A large blue lake is seen beyond sand dunes with beach grass.
A view of Lake Michigan from Mount Baldy.

Mount Baldy is accessible from U.S. Route 12 (also known as Dunes Highway) between the town of Pines and the western border of Michigan City, Indiana. It is a tourist attraction locally and regionally, drawing weekend and summer visitors from Chicago. Prior to the dune's closure, one could ascend its 302 steps and see Chicago's skyline. North of Mount Baldy is a swimmable beach which is also part of Indiana Dunes National Park.

Erosion

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A metal fence is shown in front of a massive dune which is overtaking the road.

Due to the popularity with visitors climbing up the dune, the marram grass which had stabilized it was largely destroyed, and the dune has begun advancing southwards, threatening to overrun its parking lot. Accordingly, the National Park Service has rerouted trails and planted grass in hopes of slowing the dune. Visitors are no longer allowed to climb up the southern side of the dune.

The piers from nearby Michigan City, Indiana intensify erosion by blocking the natural sediment flow produced by longshore drift in Lake Michigan.

Decomposition chimney

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In 2013, a void space anomaly in the dune led to a small child falling into a cylindrical shaft that collapsed and buried the child. It took three hours for the boy to be rescued from the 11-foot (3.4 m) pit. The geological process that is producing the never before studied anomalies appears to be related to the burial and decomposition of fungus-ridden black oak trees.[1] In 2016, scientists concluded that such anomalies in the moving or living dune are caused by the burial of trees that eventually decay leaving a hollowed out shaft beneath unsteady ground, named a "dune decomposition chimney."[2] The majority of the dune remains closed to visitors except on ranger-led tours;[3] however, the beach reopened in the summer of 2017.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Wei-Haas, Maya. "New Insights Behind the Sand Dunes That Swallowed a Boy". Smithsonian.com. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  2. ^ Lavalley, Amy (July 3, 2016). "Mount Baldy remains closed; researchers closer to finding sand answers". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  3. ^ Schulte, Laura (June 9, 2015). "Mount Baldy open for ranger-led tours this summer". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 30, 2019.
  4. ^ Lavalley, Amy (May 6, 2017). "Mount Baldy beach will reopen, but dune where boy was buried will not". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 30, 2019.