It looks like a weathering pattern on the granite preserved from a time a river passed over it, if you look at "the slab" in llano county texas you can see a modern day example of a river creating a very similar pattern on the granite domes of the town mountain granite.
A massive flow of water over some extended period or periods of time carved that granite rock surface. Most likely from the melting of the glaciers that covered much of the northern latitudes of North America. This is my educated guess having studied geology in college.
Water small pebbles/sandy material moving across it's surface,but also could be caused by microbes trapped under wet moss that create an acidic environment weaking the granite over a very long time of thousands of years.
From the Cambrian to Devonian, A sea covered all of Oklahoma during this time. I’m not a geologist either, but I’ve seen what moving water, can do when it’s mixed with lots of sediment and time. I highly doubt that your answer is not going to involve Water, but it’d be great to know.
In Australia , the Aboriginals lay claim that " their " ancestors carved them out in the granite , by hand , with other small rocks ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿ The Australian Aboriginal people must have live here as well 👈.
Miles of Ice, water with heavy currents add pebbles, rocks and even boulders! The bowls were caused those 10 - 12 thousand years ago after the last ice age. Just my 2 cents!
Was caused by water ages ago when that part of North America was under water (after the ice melted). Those depressions were probably there before the human race existed.
ive seen something like this on another video.... i think it might have something to do with the moss or some sort of microbial life in those bowls that cause it to erode faster.. i forget the explanation in the other video i saw, its been a while
Maybe: A unique combination of level surface and porous material? So no channels ever develop and each pattern of erosion is only a couple feet across.
It used to be under a river. There's no water running across today.
It looks like a weathering pattern on the granite preserved from a time a river passed over it, if you look at "the slab" in llano county texas you can see a modern day example of a river creating a very similar pattern on the granite domes of the town mountain granite.
That's an old river bed. Those are swirl holes created by rocks and pebbles. The same can be seen in the Chattooga river in Georgia.
A massive flow of water over some extended period or periods of time carved that granite rock surface. Most likely from the melting of the glaciers that covered much of the northern latitudes of North America.
This is my educated guess having studied geology in college.
Water small pebbles/sandy material moving across it's surface,but also could be caused by microbes trapped under wet moss that create an acidic environment weaking the granite over a very long time of thousands of years.
There used to be a lot of water there. No big mystery.
From the Cambrian to Devonian, A sea covered all of Oklahoma during this time. I’m not a geologist either, but I’ve seen what moving water, can do when it’s mixed with lots of sediment and time. I highly doubt that your answer is not going to involve Water, but it’d be great to know.
Land rises and falls over geological timescales. What is now high elevations, may have formally been below a sea.
In Australia , the Aboriginals lay claim that " their " ancestors carved them out in the granite , by hand , with other small rocks ¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿¿
The Australian Aboriginal people must have live here as well 👈.
Miles of Ice, water with heavy currents add pebbles, rocks and even boulders! The bowls were caused those 10 - 12 thousand years ago after the last ice age. Just my 2 cents!
ice sheets didnt come down that far down... but floods perhaps.
Was caused by water ages ago when that part of North America was under water (after the ice melted). Those depressions were probably there before the human race existed.
Water.
Glacial movement
ive seen something like this on another video.... i think it might have something to do with the moss or some sort of microbial life in those bowls that cause it to erode faster.. i forget the explanation in the other video i saw, its been a while
Maybe: A unique combination of level surface and porous material? So no channels ever develop and each pattern of erosion is only a couple feet across.
I know volcanos that erupt next to large sources of water create a pooling effect leaves a similar shape. Would have to research the area