WoGE #337
Florian Jenn's
WoGE#336 was a view of the typical "Reffen und Reigen" coastal landforms of the Darss-Zingst peninsula on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. Now, for the next puzzle we go elsewhere, for something quite different. I usually keep several WoGE-worthy wild-card pictures in my sleeve, you know, just in case I'm out of ideas. But then, while browsing through GE, I sometimes stumble upon new things that look too good to be stacked with the others; I can't wait to play them as soon as I can. And this is what happened now, once again: there is this cool comet-ish something, which, I believe, deserves to get played right away. There are at least two-three geological aspects worth an explanation here. For example, what is the broader geological context of the round-ish thing? What is its white-ish content? And how did the comet-ish tail form? To earn the honor of posting the next WoGE challenge, one should be the first to locate this spot (give lat/long) and answer obvious first-order geological questions such like the ones above. I see several clues in the picture that may help to narrow down to this area quickly, but won't invoke the Schott rule. Let's see who'll be the first to provide a decent explanation of what's shown here.
WoGE #337
Florian Jenn's WoGE#336 was a view of the typical "Reffen und Reigen" coastal landforms of the Darss-Zingst peninsula on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. Now, for the next puzzle we go elsewhere, for something quite different. I usually keep several WoGE-worthy wild-card pictures in my sleeve, you know, just in case I'm out of ideas. But then, while browsing through GE, I sometimes stumble upon new things that look too good to be stacked with the others; I can't wait to play them as soon as I can. And this is what happened now, once again: there is this cool comet-ish something, which, I believe, deserves to get played right away. There are at least two-three geological aspects worth an explanation here. For example, what is the broader geological context of the round-ish thing? What is its white-ish content? And how did the comet-ish tail form? To earn the honor of posting the next WoGE challenge, one should be the first to locate this spot (give lat/long) and answer obvious first-order geological questions such like the ones above. I see several clues in the picture that may help to narrow down to this area quickly, but won't invoke the Schott rule. Let's see who'll be the first to provide a decent explanation of what's shown here." href="javascript:openLB(1758426515,'',XLarge,'',1024,612);">

WoGE #337
Florian Jenn's
WoGE#336 was a view of the typical "Reffen und Reigen" coastal landforms of the Darss-Zingst peninsula on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. Now, for the next puzzle we go elsewhere, for something quite different. I usually keep several WoGE-worthy wild-card pictures in my sleeve, you know, just in case I'm out of ideas. But then, while browsing through GE, I sometimes stumble upon new things that look too good to be stacked with the others; I can't wait to play them as soon as I can. And this is what happened now, once again: there is this cool comet-ish something, which, I believe, deserves to get played right away. There are at least two-three geological aspects worth an explanation here. For example, what is the broader geological context of the round-ish thing? What is its white-ish content? And how did the comet-ish tail form? To earn the honor of posting the next WoGE challenge, one should be the first to locate this spot (give lat/long) and answer obvious first-order geological questions such like the ones above. I see several clues in the picture that may help to narrow down to this area quickly, but won't invoke the Schott rule. Let's see who'll be the first to provide a decent explanation of what's shown here.