N
NeandertalMan
Guest
Posted by Fulvio Feb. 26, 2007
A couple of days ago we received news of a problem in Guatamala City in Central America where there had been a huge, deep sinkhole in the middle of a town seen in the photo above. Even I was stupefied to see the size of the gigantic crater. Our original article posted yesterday noted that the sinkhole was absolutely enormous, 30 meters in diameter and 100 meters deep and that it pulled in two, possibly three people, killing them and a number of houses and buildings were lost. The local authorities attributed the cave-in to a collapse in their sewer mains, noting the powerful smell of sewer gas that issued from the enormous cavity. So, if this, is indeed the fact, we have to ask several questions. First, given the dimensions of this cave-in and the volume of earth that was eroded and carried away, easily more than 70,000 cubic meters of soil and rock based just upon the cylindrical size of the hole, and noting that the hole was actually larger as the washout deepened, we have to ask if the sewer line was large enough to also carry off that volume of material.
The second question deals with the fact that the hole was at least 100 meters deep. So if this is the case, then we ask how deep beneath the surface the sewer line that is said to have caused the huge washout was located. If it was located closer to the surface than 100 meters, and in my opinion it probably surely was, then the sewer line could not have been the sole cause of the enormous size of the cave-in because the washout would have been only a few meters in size given the rate of liquid flowing in a sewer main.
So, it seems that the sewer line rupture may have been the cause of the initial erosion, but that alone wouldn't account for the size of the gigantic hole that resulted. The big question that remains is, "Where did all that earth and rock go? "
Here in Naples, in the past, we have verified many such events like this also caused by broken sewer lines and water mains but the resulting washouts and cave-ins have been in proportion to the size and flow in the mains themselves. But if the washout reached huge proportions in both diameter and depth, we have always found that there was a pre-existing cavern beneath the surface that allowed the formation of the extreme sinkhole or cave-in allowing the eroded earth to continue to wash out and flow into the cavern below.
The photos from the Guatamala City cave-in are startlingly like those we have taken of similar gigantic cave-in's and sinkholes here in Naples. Like many of you already know, Naples sits above a honeycomb of quarried cavities, ancient aqueducts, passageways and other voids that have been down there for centuries. A conservative estimate is more than 1,000,000 cubic meters of artificial cavities runs beneath the city. These cavities have ceilings of yellow tuff sandstone and the surface level has a varying strata of volcanic pozzolane. Once erosion begins to wash out this material following a sewer or water main rupture the washout doesn't progress much beyond 10 meters or so in ordinary circumstances. However if the ceiling of one of the artificial cavities washed through then we see photos exactly like those in the Guatemala disaster. Compare the picture of the Guatemala sinkhole with those photos taken by our friend Enzo di Luzio here in Naples. These are huge washout sinkholes that have resulted from erosion into the roof of gigantic cavities beneath the city . . . then draw your own conclusions!
Translated by Larry Ray
by Napoli Underground
A couple of days ago we received news of a problem in Guatamala City in Central America where there had been a huge, deep sinkhole in the middle of a town seen in the photo above. Even I was stupefied to see the size of the gigantic crater. Our original article posted yesterday noted that the sinkhole was absolutely enormous, 30 meters in diameter and 100 meters deep and that it pulled in two, possibly three people, killing them and a number of houses and buildings were lost. The local authorities attributed the cave-in to a collapse in their sewer mains, noting the powerful smell of sewer gas that issued from the enormous cavity. So, if this, is indeed the fact, we have to ask several questions. First, given the dimensions of this cave-in and the volume of earth that was eroded and carried away, easily more than 70,000 cubic meters of soil and rock based just upon the cylindrical size of the hole, and noting that the hole was actually larger as the washout deepened, we have to ask if the sewer line was large enough to also carry off that volume of material.
The second question deals with the fact that the hole was at least 100 meters deep. So if this is the case, then we ask how deep beneath the surface the sewer line that is said to have caused the huge washout was located. If it was located closer to the surface than 100 meters, and in my opinion it probably surely was, then the sewer line could not have been the sole cause of the enormous size of the cave-in because the washout would have been only a few meters in size given the rate of liquid flowing in a sewer main.
So, it seems that the sewer line rupture may have been the cause of the initial erosion, but that alone wouldn't account for the size of the gigantic hole that resulted. The big question that remains is, "Where did all that earth and rock go? "
Here in Naples, in the past, we have verified many such events like this also caused by broken sewer lines and water mains but the resulting washouts and cave-ins have been in proportion to the size and flow in the mains themselves. But if the washout reached huge proportions in both diameter and depth, we have always found that there was a pre-existing cavern beneath the surface that allowed the formation of the extreme sinkhole or cave-in allowing the eroded earth to continue to wash out and flow into the cavern below.
The photos from the Guatamala City cave-in are startlingly like those we have taken of similar gigantic cave-in's and sinkholes here in Naples. Like many of you already know, Naples sits above a honeycomb of quarried cavities, ancient aqueducts, passageways and other voids that have been down there for centuries. A conservative estimate is more than 1,000,000 cubic meters of artificial cavities runs beneath the city. These cavities have ceilings of yellow tuff sandstone and the surface level has a varying strata of volcanic pozzolane. Once erosion begins to wash out this material following a sewer or water main rupture the washout doesn't progress much beyond 10 meters or so in ordinary circumstances. However if the ceiling of one of the artificial cavities washed through then we see photos exactly like those in the Guatemala disaster. Compare the picture of the Guatemala sinkhole with those photos taken by our friend Enzo di Luzio here in Naples. These are huge washout sinkholes that have resulted from erosion into the roof of gigantic cavities beneath the city . . . then draw your own conclusions!
Translated by Larry Ray
by Napoli Underground