Fractals on the Earth

February 7, 2009 by FractalMan  
Filed under Fractals in Nature

Our planet is full of fractals. Mountain ranges are a beautiful example of fractals. You can find these kinds of patterns in the Rockies, the Andes, the Alps and the Himalayas.
Canadian Rockies

You can discover these countless examples of these patterns yourself with the amazing and free program Google Earth.

Sabinoso canyons of New Mexico

Sabinoso canyons of New Mexico

River networks - or watersheds - form fractal canyons, built by the repeated erosion from countless rainstorms over eons.

Coastline of Chile

Coastline of Chile

Coastlines are another common fractal on the Earth. More details emerge the closer you examine a coastline. The whole field of fractal geometry began by asking the question “How long is the coast of Britain?” The answer is that it depends on how closely you measure it, and when you examine the coastline with a finer and finer ruler, its length approaches infinity.

Lakes/ponds/puddles on the north slope of Alaska.

Lakes/ponds/puddles on the north slope of Alaska. Scale???

Bodies of water can be fractals too, as we observe in many flat, wet places. The same shapes occur over a wide range of scales, the hallmark of a fractal.

Comments

One Response to “Fractals on the Earth”
  1. FractalMan says:

    I’m working on a package of natural fractal destinations you can travel to in Google Earth. The problem is, I keep finding more great places to share, it’s hard to stop! But I will post a KML file of my favorite spots soon…

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