The World's Most Mysterious Places!
Nature never stops to amaze us with its magnificent phenomenon just like these inexplicable holes in the ground. These holes make an excellent tourist attraction. Check out these unreal photographs and location descriptions of 9 of world's most famous pits and sinkholes. (Courtesy of National Geographic)
1. Lisbon, Portugal, Sinkhole

A parked bus was the unfortunate "meal" of a sinkhole that opened up in the streets of Lisbon, Portugal, in 2003.
"Anything
that increases the flow of water into subsurface soil can speed up the
formation of sinkholes'" ,Missouri State's Gouzie said. In many cities,
utility infrastructure such as sewer lines and fiber optic cables are
buried in troughs filled with loose material, which can wash away over
time. In some cases, a stretch of road can essentially become a concrete
bridge over mostly empty space.
2. Guatemala Sinkhole


Heavy
rains from tropical storm Agatha likely triggered the collapse of a
huge sinkhole in Guatemala on Sunday, seen above a few days afterward.
In
the strictly geologic use of the word, a sinkhole happens when water
erodes solid bedrock, carving an underground cavity that can then
collapse. Many parts of the United States are at risk for that type of
event.
The
Guatemala sinkhole fits into a broader use of the term, which refers to
any sudden slump of the ground's surface. Instead of solid bedrock,
much of Guatemala City rests atop a layer of loose, gravelly volcanic
pumice that is hundreds of feet thick. And at least one geologist says
leaking pipes—not nature—created the recent sinkhole.
Overall, the risk for repeat sinkholes in Guatemala City is high—but highly unpredictable.
3. Winter Park, Florida, Sinkhole

he
sinkhole in Winter Park, Florida (map), opened up in 1981 underneath
the city's public swimming pool, Missouri State's Gouzie said.
"I've
never seen a final report as to whether the pool was leaking," he said,
adding that water can flow into the underlying soil through tiny cracks
in the bottom of a pool. Even watering plants at the pool's perimeter
could have sent enough runoff through Florida's sandy soil to erode the
solid limestone underneath.
Gouzie
said the U.S. Geological Survey has mapped the types of bedrock that
exist across the country. But studies of the underground cracks and
fissures—and the way water travels through them—are still needed to
predict where sinkholes could occur.
4. Mulberry, Florida, Sinkhole
This
185-foot-deep (56-meter-deep) sinkhole appeared in 1994 in Mulberry,
Florida (map), in a pile of waste material dumped by mining company
IMC-Agrico. The company was mining rock to extract phosphate, a main
ingredient in fertilizers and a chemical used to produce phosphoric
acid, added to enhance the taste of soda and various food items.
After
phosphate was extracted from the rocks, the gypsum-based waste product
was dumped as a slurry. As layer after layer of the stuff dried, it
formed cracks, like those that appear in dried mud. Water later made its
way through the cracks and carried away subsurface material, setting
the stage for a sinkhole.
5. Blue Hole, Belize

Sinkholes
can happen anywhere water can erode a vertical channel that connects to
a horizontal drain, a situation that allows a column of solid material
to wash away, Missouri State's Gouzie explained.
If
the sinkhole is near the sea—or in the sea, as with the famous Blue
Hole in Lighthouse Reef off the coast of Belize—seawater can quickly
seep in after a collapse, forming a deep pool.
6. Picher, Oklahoma, Sinkhole

Years
of mining for zinc and lead has left Picher, Oklahoma, near the border
with Kansas, literally full of holes—including this sinkhole seen in
2008. Some mines were dug too close to the surface, and the roofs were
unable to support the weight of earth on top, leading to collapses.
"It
has happened in Missouri and in western Pennsylvania from coal mining,"
Missouri State's Gouzie said. "We've gotten better with buidlng mines
so the roofs can support the weight over top of them."
7. Iceland Sinkhole

Adventure
kayaker Mick Coyne lowers himself down the wall of a sinkhole toward
the headwaters of the Jokulsa, Iceland's second longest river. Though
the river is fed by melt from a glacier, this 150-foot (45-meter),
inverted funnel-shaped hole was blasted into being by rising steam from
geothermal vents below.
8. Ik-Kil Cenote, Mexico

Swimmers
float in the saphirre waters of the Ik-Kil cenote, near the Maya site
of Chichén Itzá in Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula. Cenote means "natural
well" in Spanish. Sinkholes occurring at sea level will fill up as high
as the water table, creating the famous clear blue pools, used by the
Maya royalty for both relaxation and ritual sacrifices.
9. Neversink Pit, Alabama

Neversink Pit,
a wet limestone sinkhole in Alabama seen above in 1998, is about 50
feet (15 meters) deep and houses a rare species of fern. The sinkhole
was bought in the 1990s by a group of cavers to preserve it for future
generations.
Karst is
the geologic term for landscapes formed mainly by the dissolving of
limestone or dolomite bedrock. In the United States, karst underlies
parts of Missouri, Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, northern Alabama,
Texas, and most of Florida. Such areas are marked by sinking streams,
subterranean drainage, large springs, caves—and, of course, sinkholes.






1 comments:
beautiful mann!
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