Massive
sinkhole in China swallows building
According
to Shanghaiist, the sinkhole is about 3,230 square feet and plenty
deep. A video shows a crowd milling about the sinkhole before it
expanded, causing a building to crumble as if it were detonated.
Look
out, below. A massive sinkhole in Guangzhou, China, swallowed up
buildings and knocked out power to thousands of residents.
29 January, 2013
Neighboring
buildings were evacuated and streets were blocked by police. "Gas
could be smelt from over 30 metres away, and deafening noises could
be heard as the land continued to crack and sink," the
Shanghaiist reports.
Sinkholes
are, unfortunately, nothing new. According to the U.S. Geological
Survey, some sinkholes are human-induced. "New sinkholes have
been correlated to land-use practices, especially from groundwater
pumping and from construction and development practices." They
also occur in areas where the rock beneath the land surface can be
easily dissolved by groundwater.
Human-induced
or not, sinkholes are getting a lot of press these days. In China's
Guangxi province last year, a sinkhole formed after a local school
dug a well to ease its water shortage. Business Insider reports that
in Beijing, massive bomb shelters, "constructed amid fears of an
impending nuclear attack during the height of Chinese-Soviet
tensions," may be contributing to the problem.
But
they certainly aren't limited to China. In 2011, a Florida sinkhole
gobbled up "a garbage bin, an oak tree, the back wall of the
building housing a salon and racks of supplies." A woman in
Guatemala City discovered a 3-feet-wide, 40-feet-deep sinkhole
beneath her bed. And in Ohio, a massive sinkhole caused part of a
state highway to collapse.
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