Moeraki Boulders
New Zealand is the place that has huge round boulders along the beach. These boulders are called the Moeraki Boulders.
Moeraki
There are none! The Moeraki Boulders were formed by geological processes (they are septarian concretions), lifted above sea level by further geological processes (the Kaikoura Orogeny) and then eroded from the mudstone cliffs primarily by coastal processes (wave action).
Moeraki, north of Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand.
You are possibly thinking of the Moeraki Boulders, on the coast about 50km north of Dunedin. These are spherical concretions up to 1.5m diameter, naturally growing in clays derived from volcanic ash. Still quietly emerging as the coast erodes. In the mountains, giant boulders are frequently found, and some are huge. The biv rock in the Upper Arawhata is several tens of metres lin each dimension. In the Troyte, a small valley off the Karangarua, (Westland) the boulders may even be seen in satellite photos! These are all ex-glacial erratics.
Moeraki
There are two syllables in the word boulders.(Boul - ders).
you have to get fifty flags apparently to remove all the boulders.
boulders
The boulders fell from the mountains with a crash! The big boulders hit are car in Indiana.
Boulders that have been carried by a glacier have a couple names, but most commonly they are referred to as glacial boulders or erratics. If you're interested in learning more about glacial boulders, the Iowa Department of Natural Resources has a pretty good article about them; as Iowa and most of the American Midwest were covered by glaciers during the last Ice Age, glacial boulders are fairly common there. http://www.igsb.uiowa.edu/browse/boulders/boulders.htm