inbluevt | Date: Thursday, 2013/08/08, 8:18 PM | Message # 1 | DMCA |
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While this is a very dramatic and does have some causal issues with the unique geology of the are, it is not all that unusual for other the parts of the country (and world) to be experiencing either their own sinkholes, or more likely subsidence from draining aquafers. Some neighborhoods in Mexico City, for example, have sunk up to 42 feet. I will attach the link to that story below. In the meantime, here is the nightmare of one small town in Louisiana.
From Truthout:
The view from Mike Schaff's small airplane is startling. Bayous snake through pastures and swamp forest of Assumption Parish in rural Louisiana. Small residential neighborhoods and gangly networks of petrochemical pipelines, storage tanks and wastewater impounds dot the landscape. In the middle of it all is what looks like a small lake that has spilled into the swamp forest and left patches of cypress trees dead and gray. But the body of dark liquid is not a lake, and it's not supposed to be there.
We're flying over Bayou Corne on the one-year anniversary of an unprecedented environmental disaster. The trouble started last May, when small earthquakes rumbled through the area, and fisherman observed the bayous boiling like crawfish pots in certain spots. Then, on August 3, 2012, an underground salt brine cavern collapsed beneath Bayou Corne, and a massive sinkhole opened up on the surface, replacing swamp forest with an expanding slurry pit of oil and salty water from deep underground. Since Truthout first reported on the disaster in December, the sinkhole has grown from eight acres to 24 acres across.
Observers point out that there is at least some good news. While the sinkhole continues to expand, it appears to be growing away from the neighborhood of 150 homes that has been under a continuous evacuation order for the past year.
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Mexico City story
Message edited by inbluevt - Thursday, 2013/08/08, 8:20 PM |
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