Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Why is the Devil's Tower in Wyoming a supernatural phenomenon? Do aliens really land here?

Why is the Devil's Tower in Wyoming a supernatural phenomenon? Do aliens really land here?

The Devil's Tower in Wyoming seems to be a supernatural phenomenon. Locals believe that aliens fell here in 1977. Although scientists are not sure how this monster came into being, they think that this rock did not come from another planet, and no aliens landed here.

The Devil's Tower is a giant, standing on the plains of Wyoming, USA. It is the highest point within dozens of miles of Fiona Fang, Fiona Fang. When the weather is clear, people can see it from 160 kilometers away. Although Bibel Fuhui River is 369 meters high, the Devil's Tower is 264 meters high and 305 meters in diameter from the base, and gradually narrows from bottom to top, with the top diameter of 84 meters. The Devil Tower is 386 meters high and 1, 558 meters above sea level. The top is 330 meters in diameter and covers an area of more than 6000 square meters. It is the highest point within dozens of kilometers of Fiona Fang, Fiona Fang. It is said that people can see it from 160 kilometers away when the weather is clear.

Fifty or sixty million years ago, the magma in the center of the earth rushed to the surface, but it didn't gush out, and it cooled down and became hard igneous rock. After millions of years of wind and rain, numerous stratigraphic changes and magma pushing, the surrounding soft sedimentary rocks were eroded by weathering rain and gradually disappeared, leaving only hard igneous rocks as the devil's tower. On the other hand, due to the cracks left by magma contraction, many small prisms are formed. At the same time, water seeps into the gaps between columns, expands and contracts with the change of temperature, causing some columns to collapse from the main body of the rock and overflow the tower foundation, forming a rock slope.

Before the arrival of white people, this huge stone, which stands on the Song-Lin Huang and grasslands in the United States, was a sacred stone worshipped by many native American tribes. The magic tower is like an indomitable pillar on the grassland, with a moving momentum. According to Indian legend, the Devil Pagoda is the "home of bears" and Montenegro has always been the home of Indians. Among American Indian tribes, including Alabama, Cheyenne, Crow, Chiowa and Sioux, they have their own legends about this wonder.