Like a giant block of Swiss cheese, Mexico"s Yucatán Peninsula is riddled with holes called cenotes. Cenotes form when subterranean limestone dissolves, allowing underground water to penetrate. The rock above may cave in, forming a sinkhole that reveals the cool, often crystal-clear water. Other cenotes may remain below the surface, hidden and often unexplored. Cenotes vary in size from very small to several dozen yards across, and recent discoveries have shown that some cenotes lead to a series of underground cave systems that can span several miles in length.
Cenote near Puerto Aventuras, Mexico
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Humpbacks return to the Inside Passage
-
Young black caiman, Tambopata National Reserve, Peru
-
Remembering Jimmy Carter
-
Protect your neck
-
Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge
-
Seitan Limania Beach, Crete
-
National Park Service Founders Day
-
Frankenstein Friday
-
There’s treasure in them thar hills
-
National Frog Month
-
50 years of Earth Day
-
Room at the top?
-
Great Salt Lake Shorelands Preserve in Layton, Utah
-
Light show at the skatepark
-
Formal garden at Château de Villandry, Loire Valley, France
-
Corjuem Fort in Goa, India
-
Peach trees in Cieza, Murcia, Spain
-
Bonsai Rock, Lake Tahoe, Nevada
-
1, 1, 2, 3: It s Fibonacci Day!
-
Corona Arch near Moab, Utah
-
Lake Magadi, Kenya
-
The globe skimmers return
-
Cross this bridge if you dare
-
Chaco Culture National Historical Park, New Mexico
-
In celebration of America’s national bird
-
Work out on your way to work
-
Protecting Alaska
-
Enter the magical world of Livraria Lello
-
Make your way up a picturesque passageway of Chefchaouen
-
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

