If "Frozen" traded ice for sand, the result would look a lot like White Sands National Park in New Mexico—cool, white dunes that deceive the eye at first glance. It became a national monument on this day in 1933, established to protect a rare geological phenomenon: the world"s largest gypsum dunefield. These dunes were formed from gypsum crystals that broke down over thousands of years, creating bright waves that stay cool even in summer.
White Sands National Park, New Mexico
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Yabba-Dabba-Doo!
-
Night view of the RMS Queen Mary, Long Beach, California
-
Classical music takes center stage
-
Lavender field, Hertfordshire, England
-
A glittering diamond in the rough
-
National Bison Day
-
Coral Reef Awareness Week
-
Assembling the Smithsonian
-
Burns Night
-
A splash by the sea
-
Darwin s Arch
-
Frost-covered dunes on Mars
-
Tree of many colors
-
Cypress trees in George L. Smith State Park, Georgia
-
Star Wars Day
-
Koala in the Great Otway National Park, Australia
-
A stroll above the stratosphere
-
The cycle begins anew
-
World Teachers Day
-
The Elbe in Dresden, Germany
-
Satellite image of sand and seaweed in the Bahamas
-
National Library Week
-
What’s blooming in New Zealand?
-
Pearl of the Adriatic
-
A medieval Moorish gem
-
Oxbow Bend on the Snake River, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
-
In the Supertree Grove
-
Corona Arch near Moab, Utah
-
Group of giant cuttlefish, Whyalla, South Australia
-
Have you turned off your electronic device?
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

