How
sinkholes are swallowing streets around the world - in pictures
15
August, 2013
It
seems like stuff of Hollywood films – the ground opens up and
swallows whole buildings, cars, roads and even people. But that is
exactly what happened on Monday when a sinkhole 100ft wide opened up
in Florida, causing the Summer Bay Resort ay Clermont, near Disney
World, to collapse into the pit.
A
sinkhole typically occurs naturally in the Earth’s surface. In
Florida, much of the land straddles limestone caverns that are
weakened by water erosion, sometimes causing them to cave in. The
phenomenon is not uncommon, as this worldwide selection shows. For
example, in 2007, a sinkhole 150m deep and 20m wide swallowed 20
homes in Guatemala City. In 2011, a huge sinkhole appeared overnight
on a road in Beijing, swallowing a truck just after its driver and
passenger escaped – though that was believed to have been caused by
the digging of a tunnel for an underground railway.
But
natural sinkholes are particularly common in Florida, where insurance
claims for sinkhole damages submitted between 2006 and 2010 totalled
$1.4bn (£900m). Florida and Tennessee are the only two US states
which offer insurance to protect and cover home owners for sinkholes.
Despite being very destructive, sinkholes rarely kill.
A car after being sucked into a sinkhole in Toledo, Ohio, in July
The
huge crater at the collapsed Pinheiros subway station in Sao Paulo,
Brazil,
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