Gypsum and limestone cliffs sometimes form patterns of long, parallel grooves known as rillenkarren. Recent research shows that these patterns form when a thin layer of water flows over a dissolvable surface. As the running water picks up solute, its concentration increases, causing changes in the local hydrodynamics. What begins as a small perturbation in an otherwise flat surface grows into a groove with walls that eventually rise out of the water layer. At that point, the growth mechanism shifts because the flow is restricted to channels in the rock. (Image credit: Ymaup/Wikimedia Commons; research credit: A. Guérin et al.; via APS Physics; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)
Celebrating the physics of all that flows