Disaster Sinkhole swallows soccer field in Illinois in shocking video

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Sinkhole swallows soccer field in Illinois in shocking video

A massive sink hole stretching 100 feet opened up in an Illinois park on Wednesday, swallowing a light pole in the middle of recreational fields and leaving a gaping, deep hole in its wake.

The terrifying moment was caught on a nearby surveillance camera Wednesday morning, showing an area between two soccer and football fields open up around a light pole, sending it tumbling down in and releasing plumes of smoke at Gordon Moore Park in the city of Alton, located about 18 miles north of St. Louis, Missouri.

The hole, which opened up at 9:18 a.m., is approximately 100 feet wide and 30 feet deep, Alton Parks and Recreation Director Michael Haynes told NBC News.

Haynes said the sinkhole emerged due to “a mine collapse deep underground,” adding, “New Frontier Materials is responsible.”
Luckily, no one was on the field at the time and no one was hurt, he noted.

“It looks like something out of a movie, right? It looks like a bomb went off,” Haynes told NBC affiliate KSDK of St. Louis.

A spokesperson for New Frontier Materials, which owns an underground mine, told KSDK: “The impacted area has been secured and will remain off limits for the foreseeable future while inspectors and experts examine the mine and conduct repairs.”

“No one was injured in the incident, which has been reported to officials at the Mine Safety Health Administration (MSHA) in accordance with applicable regulations. Safety is our top priority. We will work with the city to remediate this issue as quickly and safely as possible to ensure minimal impact on the community.”

NBC News has reached out to New Frontier Materials for further comment.

Gordon Moore Park is temporarily closed “while the sinkhole investigation is being completed,” Alton Parks and Recreation shared on social media.

Sinkholes occur naturally when groundwater circulates underground and dissolves the rock beneath the surface, according to the United States Geological Survey. They’re fairly common in Florida as the state largely has limestone under the land’s surface.

However, they can also occur as a result of mining, leaky utility lines or from the decay of buried material, according to Penn State Extension, which focuses agronomy and horticulture education.

Last year, a 40-foot-wide sinkhole opened near Knoxville, Iowa, and was later determined to have likely been caused by a collapsed limestone mine, the Des Moines Register reported.

 
Still nothing compared to that time a gas mining operation drilling in the middle of an upstate NY lake, over a huge salt mine, got the calculation wrong (fucked one of the three ref points) and drilled into a mine tunnel more than a mile underground. The pressure of the water falling that far caused water to eventually shoot out of the mine entrance at an angle, yet still hitting an arc with heights of thousands of feet in the air and going like a mile.

It was a huge multilevel mine with tens of miles of tunnels. Since it was a salt mine, once the water started draining it dissolved most of the salt and dirt under it and created a huge hole almost a mile wide and thousands of feet deep. Swallowed the drilling rig completely too. It was a lake that drained into a river that went directly to the ocean. It actually caused the river to reverse course and start filling the lake hole with salt water. At one point it was the largest waterfall in the western hemisphere. It eventually filled the mine, hole and lake. Leaving a salt water lake. (went from a major fresh water fishing spot to a salt water one lol) It also caused major damage to the land around it. Whole sections of woods and land raised up, went down or got sucked closer to or in the lake. One whole patch of woods sank into the new even larger lake.
 
Yooooo there was one in Florida and there's like audio. This poor guy was in bed in his house and all of a sudden the ground just opened and down he went. You could hear his cries. He died. They couldn't save him. That's terrifying.
I was terrified to sleep for a few days when I read that one a decade ago. Sinkholes are terrifying.
 
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