Sinkhole
swallows California pond overnight
21 March, 2013
Overnight, a sinkhole swallowed a pond on Mark Korb's property in Newcastle, Calif.
Overnight, a sinkhole swallowed a pond on Mark Korb's property in Newcastle, Calif.
When
he went to bed Saturday night, the pond was there. On Sunday, March
17 it was gone.
How
does that happen?
While
northern California is no where near as prone to sinkholes as Florida
(see USGS sinkhole map), one clue might be the fact that the pond was
man-made.
While
sinkholes don't need a human trigger, changes in drainage due to
construction or agricultural irrigation have been known to activate
mass outbreaks of sinkholes in Florida and other parts of the
country. As The Christian Science Monitor reported earlier this month
after a Florida man was swallowed in his bed by a sinkhole, "Drought
followed by heavy rains can also instigate sinkholes as heavy,
water-logged earth presses down on limestone caves suddenly devoid of
buoyant water. The two previous deaths attributed to sinkholes both
involved professional well drillers whose activities cracked the top
of limestone caverns, causing collapse."
"Humans
can [destabilize karst landscapes] by drawing down water tables or
irrigate too much, increasing the weight of the mass of materials
that sits on top of the void," says Jonathan Martin, a geologist
at the University of Florida, in Gainesville. "Humans can modify
the environment" enough to cause sinkholes.
The
US Geological Society echoes this idea:
"Sinkholes
can also form when natural water-drainage patterns are changed and
new water-diversion systems are developed. Some sinkholes form when
the land surface is changed, such as when industrial and
runoff-storage ponds are created. The substantial weight of the new
material can trigger an underground collapse of supporting material,
thus causing a sinkhole."
So,
it's possible that when Korb built his pond, he may have disturbed
the local geology.
Another
theory for the swallowing of Korb's pond was put forward by Sierra
College Professor of Geology Alex Amigo. He also points to a human
cause: gold mining.
This
part of California is dubbed "Gold Country," for its long
history of mining. "There was such a lot of mining activity
going on in this area in the past, that we never know when there was
a man-made cavity underground," Amigo told KCRA-TV.
Korb
is now looking into how to deal with the sinkhole and doing research
on the history of his property to see if there has been any gold
mining on or near the property in the past.
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