Racetrack Playa and the Moving Rocks

I have been posting photographs from my recent Death Valley trip here over the past week or so – and there are many more still to come. Many of the photographs were taken at the Racetrack Playa, the location of the famous “moving rocks.” Whenever I post photographs from the Racetrack, I get questions about this phenomenon. Rather than answering them individually, I’ve decided to post some information here.

RaceCrossTrack2007|04|02: Crossed Tracks, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park, California. April 4, 2007. © "Copyright G Dan Mitchell". ("sales")    keywords: crossed tracks moving rocks racetrack playa death valley national park california dusk color photograph

Crossed Tracks, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park, California. April 4, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

The Racetrack is a playa, a very flat surface, typically in a desert area, created when silt is suspended in runoff and carried down from surrounding hills where it collects in the bottom of a valley that does not have an outlet stream. Such playas are, I hear, the flattest surfaces on the planet.

The main unusual feature of this playa is the existence of rocks that appear to have moved across the surface of the playa. While many of the rocks are fairly small, some are television sized, so the sight of a very large heavy rock that has obviously travelled across the playa and left a very long track – sometimes hundreds of feet long – in its wake is quite striking. The largest collection of the rocks is found at the south end of the playa near a rocky peak which is apparently the source of the rocks.

RacetrackSource2007|04|03: Source of Racetrack Playa Rocks. Death Valley National Park, California. April 3, 2007. © "Copyright G Dan Mitchell". ("sales")    keywords: moving rocks source racetrack play death valley national park california black and white photograph

The Source. Death Valley National Park, California. April 3, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

I’m no expert on the geology of the place, but here’s what I have heard about how the rocks may move. One theory was that during a wet winter the rocks could be blown across the wet and slippery surface of the playa. However, I believe that someone calculated how strong the winds would have to be to move the largest rocks and when they came up with a figure of 800 mph it seemed that the answer was going to be a bit more complicated. The Racetrack is, indeed, a very windy place… but not that windy!

Some groups of rocks have curved and turned in a way that makes it seem that they were moving in lockstep. More recent speculation is that that during a very cold, wet winter the surface of the shallow water that can flood the playa might freeze around the rocks but not freeze all the way down to the silt surface of the playa itself. The rocks would be locked into the frozen surface and it is possible to imagine winds strong enough to move the entire frozen surface, dragging the rocks along with the ice.

Or maybe aliens did it.

CurvingTrack2007|04|03: Curving Track, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park, California. April 3, 2007. © "Copyright G Dan Mitchell". ("sales")    keywords: moving rocks curving track racetrack play death valley national park california black and white photograph

Curving Track, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park, California. April 3, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

The Racetrack Playa is is a fairly remote area of Death Valley National Park. It is a 50+ mile drive on a very rough gravel road that is badly washboarded in spots. The Park Service recommends that visitors be equipped for both the desert terrain and the road conditions – they suggest driving a high clearance all-wheel-drive vehicle. It takes me a bit more than two hours to drive the gravel section from Ubehebe Crater to the Racetrack.

I have seen quite a few people go to the trouble of traveling all the way to Death Valley National Park and then drive this very difficult road to the Playa just to see the rocks… in the middle of the day. Midday is not the most photogenic time in the desert, and the Racetrack is much more appealing – for viewing and for photography – in the late afternoon and at sunset, and again at sunrise and in the early morning. If you are going to put in the effort required to get to the Racetrack, I strongly recommend that you arrive in the mid-afternoon and stay overnight. It is OK to camp at Teakettle Junction, about six miles before the Racetrack, and there is a small camping area a few miles past the Playa. Some people simply sleep in their cars. There is no water and no other services there, so this is camping at its most primitive.

DawnRacetrackRocks2007|04|03: Dawn, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park. April 3, 2007. © "Copyright G Dan Mitchell". ("sales")    keywords: dawn racetrack playa death valley national park sunrise moving rocks california color photograph

Dawn, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park. April 3, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

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Sharpness and Aperture Selection on Full-Frame DSLRs

(Note: This article was originally posted in 2007 and I should probably update the test using newer gear – though the point of the test and the post remains.)

Last month I wrote about a set of tests (“Full Frame Lens Test“) that I conducted with my lenses and my Canon 5D body. My object was simply to better understand how the camera/lens combinations would behave so that I could make better decisions about appropriate lenses and apertures while making photographs.

One discovery was that, compared to using a crop sensor DSLR, I can get excellent results when I shoot at smaller apertures with good lenses on the full frame body. I tended to avoid apertures smaller than about f/8 on the crop sensor camera, but there seems to be little or no real liability in using f/11 or even f/16 on full frame.

To illustrate I put together the following composite image. (The image appears in reduced form on this page. Click the link to see the full size version.)

Diffraction Blur Test Image
A sequence of text photographs illustrating diffraction blur at several apertures on a full frame camera

The example includes five versions of a small section from near the center of a photograph taken with the Canon EOS 5D using the EF 24-105mm L IS lens at a 50mm focal length. The camera was on a tripod, MLU and a remote release were used, and the AF was turned off. The images are 100% crops – in other words, actual pixel size is displayed in these tiny excepts from the much larger original images. (You would virtually never view a print at this magnification. These are equivalent to tiny sections from a print that might be about 5 feet wide!) The images have been slightly sharpened in post-processing, but are otherwise unaltered.

I shot at apertures of f/4, f/5.6, f/8, f/11, and f/16. In terms of the sharpness of this portion of the image, I am quite certain that all five examples are plenty sharp for making prints. That said, there are some differences. To my eye:

  • The f/4 and, to some extent, the f/5.6 versions are slightly but noticeably softer at this magnification.
  • The f/8 and f/11 versions seem to me to have approximately equal sharpness. Some parts of the f/8 image seem slightly sharper, but other parts of the f/11 image seem sharper. In the end they are pretty darn equivalent, though I’d maybe give the f/11 a very slight edge overall.
  • The f/16 image may be slightly less sharp than the f/8 and f/11 versions, but the difference would not be noticeable in a print, even a rather large one. In any case, f/16 appears sharper than either f/4 or f/5.6.

After doing this test I no longer hesitate to shoot at f/11 or f/16. Not only does this give me the possibility of getting greater depth of field when I need it, but it also means that I can compensate for corner softness on some lenses (e.g. the 17-40mm) by using a smaller aperture without fear of losing center sharpness.

(Addition: 4/23/07 – Other Canon L lenses seem to give similar results, including my 17-40mm f/4 L and my 70-200mm f/4 L.)

Added 2/23/08:

In response to a question in a photo forum I put together a sample image showing corner sharpness from the same original images used in the example above. (The earlier example shows 100% crops from near the center of the frame.)

(image temporarily unavailable) Canon 24-105mm f/4 L IS lens corner sharpness test

Technical info: Shot using a Canon 5D with the Canon EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS lens at a 50mm focal length. In aperture priority mode, the aperture was changed manually between shots. Initial focus was with AF, which was then switched off before shooting the series. Camera was on a tripod and MLU and remote release were used. Shots were converted from RAW with ACR and no additional post-processing applied. Print made at this resolution would be approximately five feet wide. The crop is from the far lower left corner of the frame.

In addition to noting the softer image in the corner at f/4, also note that the image is a bit darker due to the expected increase in corner light fall-off (“vignetting”) at the largest aperture. Sharpest version in this series shot with a FF body seems to be at f/11 as in the center crop example above. But note that f/8, f/11, and f/16 are not very different in overall sharpness – and in the end any of these apertures would produce a very sharp print.

In response to another forum discussion, I have added another example, this time using the Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 lens and showing performance at f/5.6, f/8, f/11, and f/16. In other respects the test is the same as described already in this post. This image is seen to the right and below.

(image temporarily unavailable)

Conclusions: Based on this set of images and other taken with different lenses under similar conditions, I have come to some conclusions that work for me with my Canon lenses and full-frame Canon 5D body.

  • In general the sharpest whole aperture seems to be around f/11.
  • It is very difficult to distinguish any resolution differences at f/8 or f/16 – there are subtle differences when viewing the test images at 100% magnification on my monitor but these are essentially invisible in prints.
  • f/5.6 or f/22 will tend to be a bit less sharp, though perhaps not for the same reasons. At f/5.6 I begin to notice a bit more of the diminished sharpness as a lens is opened up – more on some lenses than on others. At f/22 the effects of diffraction become just a bit more noticeable. However, if the shot demands it I do not hesitate (much) to use either of these apertures as the very slight decrease in sharpness is quite tiny if visible at all in a print and both provide some other advantages in certain situations. (I’ll even use the largest f/4 aperture on the test lens when isolating the subject is important or when low light demands it – and the results will typically be just fine.)
  • At larger apertures the performance becomes more tied to the particular lens so it is more difficult to make any generalizations beyond the fact that vignetting increases and sharpness will be less optimal.
  • The smaller apertures decrease any corner light fall-off (“vignetting”) or softness, generally to a point where both are insignificant.
  • With all of this in mind, unless I have a reason to select some other aperture I typically use f/11 as my general starting point when shooting with my full-frame DSLR body.

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer whose subjects include the Pacific coast, redwood forests, central California oak/grasslands, the Sierra Nevada, California deserts, urban landscapes, night photography, and more.
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Text, photographs, and other media are © Copyright G Dan Mitchell (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Racetrack Playa, Moonlight

Moving Rock, Moonlight, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park

Moving Rocks, Moonlight, Racetrack Playa. Death Valley National Park, California. April 2, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell. (Sales)

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