Storyteller, Author, Publisher, Photographer, Human Rights Activist, Social Justice Campaigner and sometime poet
'Pa Joe's Place' Reviews
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14 December 2018 - Massive Guatemalan Sinkhole
Massive
Guatemalan
Sinkhole
G'day folks,
Guatemala City has had experience with sinkholes before: In
2007, three people and a dozen homes here suddenly disappeared into the earth.
But no one was prepared for anything like this.
On Sunday, May
30, 2010, an enormous hole, 60 feet wide and 30 stories deep, opened up in the
middle of Guatemala City, swallowing a three-story building, a home, and local
reports claimed that one man was killed when the building was swallowed.
Generally,
sinkholes are caused by underground rivers or stores of water which erode
bedrock and cause the ground above to collapse. Guatemala City is largely built
on weak materials such as volcano pumice, however, and as such its sinkholes
open extraordinarily quickly, leaving little time for escape.
Most geologists are chalking the new sinkhole’s
opening up to Tropical Storm Agatha. At least one specialist thinks the
sinkhole may have been caused by broken underground pipes gushing water
underneath the building, and Guatemalan officials are rushing to find the pipe,
stop the leak, and fill in the hole, or else risk the hole widening. But
getting construction crews to fill in a hole this large could take years,
especially in the slums of Guatemala, where transportation is slow at best.
With the risk
of other sinkholes opening in the city “high,” according to National
Geographic, Mayor Álvaro Arzú may have his hands (if not his sinkholes) full
for awhile.
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