Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.

The editors: James & Alex

Giant Triangle

Friday, 24th March 2006 by James

Here’s a mystery for a Friday morning - why is there a giant equilateral triangle in the desert near the city of Surprise, Arizona? And why does the city have such a silly name?

It looks to me like it could be an old airfield but it could, of course, be aliens!

Thanks: Craig Simpson

51 Responses to 'Giant Triangle'

Pages: [1] 2 »

  1. 1. Seth Johnson says:

    Each side is 3 or 400 feet thick — several houses end-to-end, if you look at the nearby one. It also looks like there are several perimeter fences. If I had to hazard a guess, this is a missile silo. Surprise! indeed.

  2. 2. muhammed says:

    weird… it clearly looks like someone has been driving in it… there are small roads leading up to it… and what is this??
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  3. 3. Seth Johnson says:

    Haha, no, just kidding. But I doubt it’s an airport either.

  4. 4. muhammed says:

    hmmm… i searched on google and found this:
    http://localphototours.metroshot.com/usa/arizona/wittmann/wittmann-2.html
    looks at the 4th picture… thats how the ground looks… the area is obviously called wittman… i reaturn when i have more information… stay tuned!

  5. 5. Alame says:

    maybe some sort of race track…as there is what appears to be a speedway to the left.

  6. 6. muhammed says:

    ok, i found out what this is!
    its some kind of old “satellite airfield”, and was built during ww2…
    http://members.tripod.com/airfields_freeman/AZ/LukeAux4_AZ_97.jpg
    http://members.tripod.com/airfields_freeman/AZ/Airfields_AZ_Phoenix_NW.htm
    scroll to the bottom.

  7. 7. PRIS says:

    Airport or parking for planes

  8. 8. muhammed says:

    http://members.tripod.com/airfields_freeman/AZ/Airfields_AZ_Phoenix_NW.htm#lukeaux4

  9. 9. muhammed says:

    here some others:
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  10. 10. Derek says:

    An airfield would make sense. That’s what all of the airfields and enemy fighters looked like when I played F-15 Strike Eagle

  11. 11. Mark says:

    Actually, if you zoom out a little, there’s loads of geometric shapes. Maybe they were experimenting with different shapes, given the lovely curves of the nearby town? Seems to me they settled on the best option, those circles are almost hypnotic.

  12. 12. muhammed says:

    did any of you actually read my posts?

  13. 13. Russ K says:

    Leave my home town alone. I kinda like the name “Surprise”. You will be hearing more about it as the town is over 100,000 population and host the Rangers and Royals for Cactus League baseball.

    It is the old Luke AFB aux. field, some local maps actually mark it that way.

  14. 14. Eppz says:

    It’s definately an airfield.

    Look at this similar one to the east. The triangle is the same size, but this one has been modified.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  15. 15. muhammed says:

    it might be some kind of hovercraft…

  16. 16. Gregg says:

    WWII airfield would almost certainly be correct. We have one just like that in our city, though it is still in use and one runway has been extended to handle modern jumbo jets. They were used for training pilots, and the reason for the three runways in a perfect triangle is that older planes were not as able as today’s planes to handle crosswinds, especially with a rookie pilot at the stick. Since you can land in either direction, there is in fact 6 runways. Dividing 360 degrees by 6 gives you a total range of 60 degrees per runway, or 30 degrees to either side of a runway. What that all means is that no matter which way the wind is blowing, a plane can land here with at the maximum a 30 degree crosswind.

    My city’s similar airport is at Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth
    Sorry, it’s low res :(

  17. 17. just viewing says:

    Take a look little bit west in Google Earth, there is “town”. You can see straight roads but there is no houses! There is also some kind of oval shape racing track. Weird are americans..

  18. 18. Babaganoosh says:

    Good lookin muhammed. Thanks for the links :-)

  19. 19. Timhogs says:

    The first thing I though of when I saw this post was “a giant traffic warning triangle. Maybe Earth really is just a broken-down truck on the galactic highway…”

  20. 20. Slugs On Toast says:

    Vogons. Definitely the work of Vogons.

  21. 21. Chris W says:

    OK, next mystery: What are these black rectangles just to the southeast of the triangular air force base?

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  22. 22. Chris W says:

    Did anyone else notice that the town nearby has many golf-courses intertwined with the subdivisions. Maybe this is normal out in Arizona, but it looks odd to me.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  23. 23. Tim says:

    Oh hey - “Keeping up with the Joneses 3″! You outght to submit that!

    On to the rectangles– my first thought was solar panels but a moment’s inspection discounts that theory. Taking into account the trucks, I thought: Coal?
    There does seem to be a small strip mine over to the left, and just to the right there’s a slightly bigger black rectangle which appears to be in a pit. But why the strange loading strategy? Any other ideas?

  24. 24. Josh says:

    here’s another one
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  25. 25. Gabe says:

    It looks to me that the black rectangles are part of photo and map alignment. They are translucent.

  26. 26. Gabe says:

    See, Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  27. 27. Babaganoosh says:

    I don’t think that the black rectangles are part of the photo alignment.
    Judging by the way these trucks are positioned
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth
    You can also see what looks to be front end loader shovel marks in some of the rectangles, and what looks to be a front end loader in the top right of that frame. Plus the vehicle tracks in between the rectangles suggest this must be piles of coal.
    The “loading strategy” is definitely peculiar though.

  28. 28. Peter says:

    Goodyear airfield, not far away, is a “graveyard” for disused commercial airliners awaiting the scrapper:
    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  29. 29. Bill Shirley says:

    Black Rectangles = Solid Waste Landfill

    19401 W Deer Valley Rd, Surprise AZ
    http://www.azdeq.gov/environ/waste/solid/download/active.pdf

    ¿likely organized in the rectangles for easy access?

  30. 30. cookie monster says:

    At the Goodyear airfield - i know its a plane ‘graveyard but ghost planes?
    Ahhhhhhhhhh!
    Get Scooby Doo on the case.

    Placemark: Google Maps / Google Earth

  31. 31. Rob says:

    The original triangle on Topozone: http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?z=12&n=3735303.00004362&e=348101.999995456&datum=nad83

    And more clearly on the smaller scale map, strangely - http://www.topozone.com/map.asp?z=12&n=3735303.00004362&e=348101.999995456&datum=nad83

  32. 32. MAIcrosoft says:

    ZOMG Its teh Triforce Piece ~ ___~);;’ Wat out there! cause Ganon’s prolly after it p:

  33. 33. Cheryl says:

    I’m going out that way tomorrow for an excercise, I’ll let you know if I see anything weird! No wonder we have so many UFO sightings!

    On one of my maps it shows it as a Luke AFB Auxillary Airfield (Closed to the Public).

    The oval shape track is the Chrysler Proving Ground where they test cars. It is closing down soon.

    Landfill for the small black rectangles is correct.

  34. 34. ArmySFCRet says:

    The oval track to the west is an automobile test track. May belong to Chrysler. Low res to prevent anyone from checking out the latest prototypes I guess. Very highly protected and guarded, much like a military base.

  35. 35. dominic says:

    Regarding the loading strategy, it must be to avoid major fires if one of those piles lit up. You see a similar strategy for tire dumps.

Pages: [1] 2 »

Leave a Reply

This form will auto-link URLs or you can use simple HTML, <a href="http://googlesightseeing.com">Like this</a>.

Link to specific places either as a Google Maps page or a decimal latitude and longitude written like this: lat/lng:55.949400,-3.200000.

If you've found an unrelated sight that you think should be posted in its own entry then use the suggestion form!