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HUGE Louisiana sinkhole!!!!
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In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:Anonymous Coward 21644574:MV8xOTUxNjAzXzMyNzI5MDA4XzMyN0JBMUMz] [quote:Anonymous Coward 21633663:MV8xOTUxNjAzXzMyNzI0NjA5X0IzOUIzNTNB] This is to huge to be buried. Is Mother Earth getting ready to kick our a$$es for all the harm we have caused. What I find interesting is the people allegedly from the area that have come on this topic. The "locals" don't seemed to be worried and are even offensive that we are caring about the situation. I am not gloom & doom, I want to approach this realistically. This situation is huge and only we can keep it from being buried. [/quote] not quite, I am a local and I am worried, there is one arsehole on here though that states he is from the area and leaving negative comments but but but he or she dont live here anymore.... figures! ffckin rat. this is something very big brewing up and the ones that come on here and think it is nothing are shills/trolls wankers.... I am going to take a drive in a few days after the storms pass this weekend and take a look around the area. [/quote]
Original Message
The initially estimated 200 by 200 feet sinkhole that developed late last week, swallowing ancient cypress trees 100 feet tall near Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou communities in south Louisiana, is now reported to be 380 feet deep with a diameter of 372 feet, filled mainly with salt water with traces of diesel fuel, and only 1,500 feet from a cavern filled with butane, according to Tuesday morning news. Analysts' reports further hint that Texas Brine Company's cavern failed, but the butane cavern failing is today's worst-case scenario.
If a nearby butane-filled cavern fails, as it appears the brine cavern did,
"it could cause an explosion felt up to two miles away."
[
link to www.examiner.com
]
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