Audio

Access Wayside: Secrets of the Sand

Acadia National Park

Transcript

In an overlook at the head of the stairway leading down to Sand Beach, a wayside exhibit entitled "Secrets of the Sand" features an informational panel angled atop a rectangular stone base.

The exhibit's title appears over a blue sky dotted with white clouds. Crouching in the wet sand, two boys explore the beach. Behind them, a few people wade in the shallows.

Text reads: "Discover a complex mix of marine life - and former lives - revealed in each handful of sand. As much as 70 percent of the sand consists of broken shells of mussels, sea urchins, barnacles, and periwinkles - signs of an unusual abundance of calcareous organisms in such a cold climate. Crushed by waves and changing tides, the bits of shells beneath your feet create a kaleidoscope of colors."

A quote: "The sand beneath your toes is alive. The miniature neighborhood of spaces among individual sand grains is populated by tiny creatures." - Catherine Schmitt, "A Coastal Companion: A Year in the Gulf of Maine, from Cape Cod to Canada."

Text reads: "Scoop up a handful of sand and search for these signs of sea life."

A photograph shows a magnified pile of sand containing evidence of sea life - a barnacle, periwinkle, sea urchin, and mussel.

More photographs profile life on the beach:

-A Herring gull spreading its wings.

-A spherical sea urchin skeleton.

-A clump of green seaweed called Bladderwrack.

-A flat, round sand dollar.

Description

An audio description provided for "Secrets of the Sand," an interpretive wayside at Acadia National Park.

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