Mount Baldy (sand dune)

Mount Baldy

View of the dune
Map showing the location of 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; -86.9281Coordinates: 41°42′32″N 86°55′41″W / 41.7089°N 86.9281°W / 41.7089; -86.9281
Range 41°42'33"N 86°55'47"W
Elevation 126 feet (38 m)
Age Holocene

Mount Baldy is a sand dune located in the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore. 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."

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, on a clear day one could see Chicago's skyline from its top. North of Mount Baldy is a swimmable beach which is also part of the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore.

Erosion

Due to its popularity with visitors the marram grass which had stabilized the dune was largely destroyed, and the dune has begun advanced southwards, threatening to overrun its parking lot. Accordingly, the National Park Service has rerouted trails and planted grass in hopes of slowing the dune. In 2013, strange sinkholes began appearing in the sand, one of which swallowed a small 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 sinkholes is under study, but appears to be related to the burial and decomposition of fungus-ridden black oak trees.[1] The dune remains closed to visitors.

References

  1. Wei-Haas, Maya. "New Insights Behind the Sand Dunes That Swallowed a Boy". Smithsonian.com. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 6 November 2015.


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