File:St. Anthony Sand Dunes, Idaho.jpg
Dunes form only when sand encounters a soft surface or obstacle that prevents it from blowing away. The St. Anthony Dunes began to form when the sand reached the weathered mass of the Juniper Buttes, extinct volcanoes. Each individual dune forms a curve, with ends pointing north-east in the direction of the wind. This type of dune is a barchan dune, Arabic for ram’s horn.
East of the volcanoes, the sand encountered another obstacle that kept it in place: more dunes. These older dunes, longitudinal dunes, are plant-covered sand dunes that formed in a previous, more arid climate, says Idaho State University geologist Paul Link. The longitudinal dunes formed on top of an old flood plain, from a branch of the Snake River, probably from sand blown from the river’s bank. The longitudinal dunes are long, dark stripes under the newer brilliant white dunes—layers of climate history visible at a glance.