[meteorite-list] Guatemala City Sinkhole was "OT- Non Meteorite Crater Photo"
From: Paul H. <oxytropidoceras_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 1 Jun 2010 7:07:29 -0500 Message-ID: <20100601080729.G0KDS.578536.imail_at_eastrmwml28> Ryan wrote: ?Sinkholes are usually formed by the collapse of a void underground. Typically this happens in limestone/marble/ carbonate rocks (where caves are normally formed) because rainwater + CO2 (dissolved in H20) creates a weak (carbonic) acid that eats at the CaCO3 of the carbonate rocks (as it seeps down cracks), and begins creating a gap. As the gap gets larger, more water flows in, accelerating the process, until, eventually, a cavity too large to support itself is created an collapses, thus creating a sink hole.? After finally finding a geologic map, I found that Guatemala City is underlain by limestone, which perfectly explains the sinkhole. Still, this is a classic example of a sinkhole and the hazards that they pose to people and structures in urban areas., Some of the largest examples of sinkholes are in China where entire cave systems have collapsed producing sinkholes that are called ?tiankengs?. These sinkholes are 100s of meters in diameters in diameter and deep. For example: Tiankengs in the karst of China by Zhu Xuewen and Chen Weihai in Speleogenesis and Evolution of Karst Aquifers at: http://www.speleogenesis.info/pdf/SG9/SG9_artId3290.pdf Tiankengs of the world, outside China by Tony Waltham Speleogenesis and Evolution of Karst Aquifers http://www.speleogenesis.info/pdf/SG9/SG9_artId3291.pdf Introduction to Karst Tiankeng in China http://theculturedtraveler.com/Archives/Nov2005/Karst_Tiankeng.htm Yours, Paul H. Received on Tue 01 Jun 2010 08:07:29 AM PDT |
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