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Sinkhole
One May evening in 1981, a resident of Winter Park, Florida (USA) noticed a nearby sycamore tree suddenly disappear from sight. The tree had fallen into a newly created hole that rapidly expanded until, within the day, it had swalled homes, shops, automobiles, a pool, and a grove of trees. The final hole was 350 feet wide, 125 feet deep, and it had consumed 160,000 cubic yards of ground.

The Winter Park sinkhole was a large example of a sinkhole, a collapse of earth that occurs in places where groundwater has dissolved limestone bedrock and filled it with cavities into which the soil falls.

Sinkholes generally occur during dry periods, when the natural water levels in the limestone bedrock lower. The water moves downward into the cavities, carrying along the layers of clay and sand that support topsoil, which then collapses.

Sinkholes are often found in Florida, Alabama, Pennsylvania, and others. In Kentucky, they have created a large area of rolling terrain. In New Mexico, numerous sinkholes are connected by natural trenches, forming a line that stretches across the plains. In China, South Africa, and the Caribbean islands, millions of sinkholes have created basins and pits more than 1,000 feet deep.

Geologists can easily identify areas in danger of sinkhole collapses, and they estimate that 15 percent of the earth’s surface rests on such territory. Researchers are still working on how to prevent such an event.


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