photo sharing and upload picture albums photo forums search pictures popular photos photography help login
Jeff B. | profile | all galleries >> Northwest Bucket List >> Washington >> Mima Mounds tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

Mima Mounds

Olympia, WA

Mima mounds /ˈmaɪmə/ are low, flattened, circular to oval, domelike, natural mounds that are composed of loose, unstratified, often gravelly sediment that is an overthickened A horizon. These mounds range in diameter from 3 to more than 50 m; in height 30 cm to greater than 2 m; and in density from several to greater than 50 mounds per hectare, at times forming conspicuous natural patterns. Mima mounds can be seen at the Mima Mounds Natural Area Preserve in Washington State.

"Mima" is a name derived from a Native American language meaning "a little further along" or "downstream".

Theories for the origin of Mima mounds include burrowing by pocket gophers; accumulation of wind-blown (aeolian) sediments around vegetation to form coppice dunes or nebkhas; seismic ground shaking by major earthquakes, though none have been observed to form Mima mounds; and shrinking and swelling of clays in hog-wallow or gilgai landforms.
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds
Mima Mounds