Massive sinkhole that swallowed 215 million gallons of radioactive water drained into the aquifer system which supplies drinking water to millions of Americans
Photo
AP
A
sinkhole in Florida has swallowed 215 million gallons of radioactive
water, leaving residents fearing to shower.
The
sinkhole is now in the process of getting filled in.
A
massive sinkhole at a Florida fertilizer plant that swallowed more
than 200 million gallons of radioactive water is now in the process
of being filled.
The
toxic sinkhole that opened up at the Mosaic's New Wales plant in
Mulberry, Florida, is being sealed by a concrete mixture.
Photo
The Weather Channel
Video
taken from WFTS-TV's helicopter last week showed a built-up ring
around the hole as crews have begun pumping the mixture inside.
The
sinkhole, which measures 45 feet in diameter and is 300 feet deep,
opened up beneath a pile of waste material at Mosaic, the world's
largest supplier of phosphate.
The
Daily Mail reported a storage pond containing 215 million gallons of
radioactive water sat atop the waste mineral pile and drained into
the aquifer system, which supplies drinking water to millions of
residents.
Aquifers
are vast, underground systems of porous rocks that hold water and
allow it to move through the holes within the rock.
Since
then, workers and contractors have been trying to figure out the
best way to stabilize and fill the hole.
The
Floridian aquifer, one of the highest producing in the world, is the
principal source of groundwater for most of the state, and extends
into southern Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina.
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