"Stretch zones primarily experience sinking ground, as the support in the rock strata is stretched thin. Thus, buildings implode and gas and water mains break."  ZetaTalk

 

 

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ZetaTalk

What happens to rock layers under a diagonal pull, or being pulled apart? As can be seen during recent years, this has resulted in derailing trains, sinkholes suddenly appearing, gas and water main breaks, torn roadways and separating bridges. Despite the effect on man, crawling about on the surface of what they assume to be terra firma, these changes are superficial. When the pulling starts, weak points break and thereafter the plumbing and roadways hold, giving the impression that the pulling has stopped, but this is misleading. The North American continent is giving evidence that its rock layers are separating from each other, and sliding sideways in a diagonal, thus exposing portions of these layers to vent into the air above. If rock is being stressed, then where are the earthquake predictors giving evidence of this, the frantic animals, the static on the radio, the earthquake swarms? Rock in the stretch zone, pulling apart rather than compressing, does not emit the particles flows that animals and radios sense, nor register on instruments are tension and release quakes.

 

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ZetaTalk

"We have repeatedly stated that the Earth changes will not diminish, but will increase going into the pole shift.

This is not a lineal matter, as the closer Planet X comes to Earth, an inevitable path, the more the torque effect and the polar wobble where the N Pole of Earth is pushed away violently on a daily basis, occur. The wobble will become more pronounced, more violent. The plates are tugged back West of the Atlantic, pulled forward East of the Atlantic, during the daily rotation of the Earth. The North American continent is allowed to roll East during rotation while the S Pole is pulled West, creating the diagonal pull likely to trigger the New Madrid fault line into an adjustment, and soon. The N Pole is pushed away and allowed to bounce back, daily, as the Earth rotates, a wobble that puts stress on all fault lines when the plates are suddenly in motion, and suddenly stopped!

"As there is no other explanation for the effect on the stretch zone, lacking any earthquakes to blame, and as these stretch zone accidents will continue to emerge, and with ferocity, this is a certain clue to those on the fence, that the influence of Planet X is the cause. Or is it Global Warming?" 

ZetaTalk Chat Q&A for April 13, 2013

"Sinkholes almost invariably form in areas subject to karst limestone cavern formation. Underground water flows eat away the limestone leaving vast caverns and caves, which often give scant indication above ground that a cavern lies below. Karst limestone rock formations have been mapped and are known, however, but since one never knows just where a cavern might have formed, this provides little help in predicting just where a sinkhole might form. Sinkholes open up when the rock is fractured due to stress from being in the stretch zone, from the bending of a plate, or due to torsion."

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Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 14, 2011 at 5:31pm

Sinkholes threat to houses in Gauteng

http://m.news24.com/news24/SouthAfrica/News/Gauteng-Between-a-rock-...

2011-10-05 22:07 Johannesburg - Gauteng authorities have warned of an increasing risk of dolomitic sinkholes opening up around Johannesburg, which has cost 38 lives in the last 50 years.

"The dolomitic situation is satanic," says Gauteng MEC for local government and housing, Humphrey Mmemezi.

"[Residents don't realise] it comes during the night... People can wake up and the section [of the township] is not there."

Greg Heath, an engineering geologist at the Council for Geoscience (CGS), says dolomite forms a loose belt around Johannesburg and makes up a quarter of the province. It stretches from Westonaria in the west to Centurion in the north and Thokoza in the east.

At least 2 600 sinkholes have been recorded.

"The damage they have caused to development and infrastructure is estimated at a very conservative R1.5bn.

Unstable land


"At least 38 people have died as a result of sinkholes and the number will increase if people do not move off unstable land," says Heath.

About 110 informal settlements exist on dolomitic land in Gauteng.

Heath says sinkholes are almost always man-induced and develop when communities move into an area with water-bearing services. In townships and informal settlements, leaking taps or burst pipes could trigger dolomitic erosion, which expands underground cavities.

In areas of mining or farming, dolomitic ground could become unstable through changes in the water table.

Two weeks ago, part of a street in Centurion collapsed as a sinkhole opened up. The 7m x 5m hole stretched over a lane of Jean Avenue, revealing water pipes and a dark depth below.

In Westonaria, an ever-growing sinkhole the size of a small dam and about 100m deep, lies a metre away from a tee-off at the local golf course.

Excuse


In Thembelihle, an informal settlement near Lenasia, protesting residents who want electricity infrastructure were told they need to relocate as the dolomitic land beneath their shacks is unstable.

Many residents are refusing to move, even though new housing developments are available for them at Lehae and Vlakfontein. They believe dolomite is being used as an excuse for removing informal settlements.

Heath says with an increasing population and a limited amount of land, the government will have to review dolomitic areas and assess the risk of erosion.

"We can't always avoid dangerous ground, but [the question is] how can we use it? People have gravitated towards Johannesburg [and surrounding areas]. We have to use what land we've got."

Unpredictable

Geologists can work out where "good" dolomite and "bad" dolomite lies.

"Good" dolomite is more stable and may allow development while "bad" dolomite is filled with voids and should be avoided.

Heath says dolomite is unpredictable over short distances and extensive surveys are needed to map it.

Engineering geologists and geotechnical engineers use a gravity surveying machine to determine the density of underground materials. A team then drills percussion boreholes at small intervals to survey what is up to 100m below.

The downside of this technology is that it is slow and expensive, costing about R250 per metre.

With few other options, the provincial government has mandated the CGS to help with surveys on populated dolomitic land.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 13, 2011 at 3:06pm

http://boston.cbslocal.com/2011/10/12/workers-begin-investigating-b...

Dig Sinkhole

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BOSTON (CBS) – Work to measure the scope of a growing sinkhole under the Big Dig began Wednesday.

Workers were setting up along side the Mass Pike Connector Tunnel at Fort Point Channel to begin a drilling operation that will measure and test the soil that is settling under the South Station railroad tracks.

Engineers always knew the soil that was flash frozen to stabilize it during construction would settle according to Transportation Secretary Richard Davey.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 13, 2011 at 3:01pm

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 9, 2011 at 5:33pm

http://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111006/NEW...

Sinkhole a money pit for Ross Township residents

Private road costs $75,000 to fix
Buy This Photo
Top Photo
Loralee Quinlan stands next to the sinkhole on Leisure Court in Ross Township on Wednesday afternoon, Oct. 5, 2011.Melissa Evanko/Pocono Record
Chad Smith

Several neighbors in Ross Township have a problem.

A very big problem.

 

The rain from two tropical storms caused a giant sinkhole to open up at the base of the only road that leads to their homes, which are at the top of a hill.

The road, Leisure Court, is private, which complicates matters because townships are not responsible for repairing private roads. Officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is offering aid to people who have property that was damaged in the tropical storms, recently inspected the sinkhole and said they'd probably be able to help pay for repairs. But the amount of cash that FEMA thinks it will be able to offer may only represent a fraction of what the entire project will cost.

And with winter coming, and no available road for the delivery of propane tanks, the neighbors are starting to get worried.

"We're at our wits' end. Someone's got to do something," said Loralee Quinlan, one of the six homeowners affected by the decimated road.

The sinkhole is about 15 feet deep and looks like a massive crater.

The neighbors think the street collapsed because water during Tropical Storm Irene was not

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 8, 2011 at 11:32pm

http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/easton/index.ssf/2011/10/omega_home...

Omega Homes begins filling Forks Township neighborhood's sinkholes

Published: Saturday, October 08, 2011
sinkhole.JPGView full sizeSinkholes have been plaguing homeowners in the Penn Ridge development in Forks Township.  

About a dozen sinkholes in Penn’s Ridge have been filled.

Peg Dissinger, of Allentown-based developer Omega Homes, said sinkholes remain on three properties. One homeowner refused to sign a waiver, one signed a waiver on Friday and a third had a power outage when crews arrived.

Homeowners last month crowded a supervisors meeting and asked for help with the sinkholes, some estimated at 23 feet deep. Dissinger said the developer was not legally responsible to fix the...

Supervisor C. David Howell said he’ll see if Forks Township could impose some type of safety regulations on the property owner who refused to sign the waiver.

"The hole does pose a risk or danger to neighbors or children playing in the general area," Howell said.

Dissinger believed a "perfect storm" this summer of a drought, earthquake, a hurricane and tropical storm opened the holes. She said the Lehigh Valley is prone to sinkholes due to an abundance of porous limestone.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 7, 2011 at 3:03pm

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/oct/06/large-sink-hole-clos...

Sinkhole closes road in University City

The sinkhole near the corner of Campus Point Court and Campus Point Drive. —

— A University City road near Genesee Avenue and Interstate 5 remained blocked off Thursday afternoon because of a large sinkhole, and authorities had no estimate on when it would reopen.

The collapsed roadway on Campus Point Drive at Campus Point Court was reported at 7:22 a.m., San Diego police said.


University City sinkhole


View

An underground sewer line running parallel to water and storm water pipelines was damaged and leaking, said Arian Collins, spokesman for the city water department.

Collins said it wasn’t clear if the sewer line cracked, swept away dirt and caused the sinkhole, or if the pavement and soil caved in first, damaging the sewer pipe.

The sinkhole near the corner of Campus Point Court and Campus Point Drive. —
The view of the sinkhole from the SAIC building on Campus Point Drive. Sasha E. Cordova

The roadway will be closed until further notice. City crews installed a six-inch pipe in order to pass sewage around the broken pipe, Collins said.

The water main serving 30 businesses was shut off as a precaution, in case further cave-ins or workers might damage the line, Collins said. He said temporary pipes are being installed above ground, and by later in the night, the businesses would have a water supply again.

“We’ll keep the temporary pipes in place until we can turn on the water main again,” Collins said.

He said a green dye was put into the sewer system to detect any leaks, and a little later, green water was found pooling inside the sinkhole.

The hole was 15 to 20 feet wide and about eight feet deep at first, police said. Later in the morning it appeared almost double in size.

The sinkhole near the corner of Campus Point Court and Campus Point Drive. —
This large hole opened up on Campus Point Drive Thursday morning. Shannon Rainey

Shannon Rainey, who works at Qualcomm on Campus Point Court, said that several people in the business district were 30 to 40 minutes late to work because of to the road closure. Traffic was diverted through an SAIC parking lot, Rainey said.

Water to the SAIC building on Campus Point Drive was shut off and the company was being evacuated in stages starting at about 1 p.m., SAIC employee Matthew Howe said.

Company officials said the situation was not an emergency, but it advised its employees to use caution.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 6, 2011 at 4:25pm

My Vauxhole!

LOOKS like the pot holes are getting a lot bigger these days — as a car is swallowed up in a gaping 5ft deep water-filled chasm by the side of the road.

It was formed after a large water pipe burst and caused the tarmac around it to collapse.

The driver had stopped after hearing a loud noise, got out and watched her Vauxhall Meriva fall into the hole close to the McLaren HQ near Woking, Surrey.

Gordon Foat, who lives nearby, said: "The road's had it." Now they'll just have to dig the hole lot up...

 

Men hole ... cops and workmen check car

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3855234/My-Vauxhole.html

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 6, 2011 at 4:04pm

http://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20111006/NEW...

Sinkhole a money pit for Ross Township residents

Private road costs $75,000 to fix
Buy This Photo
Top Photo
Loralee Quinlan stands next to the sinkhole on Leisure Court in Ross Township on Wednesday afternoon, Oct. 5, 2011

Chad Smith

Several neighbors in Ross Township, PA have a problem.

A very big problem.

 

The rain from two tropical storms caused a giant sinkhole to open up at the base of the only road that leads to their homes, which are at the top of a hill.

The road, Leisure Court, is private, which complicates matters because townships are not responsible for repairing private roads. Officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is offering aid to people who have property that was damaged in the tropical storms, recently inspected the sinkhole and said they'd probably be able to help pay for repairs. But the amount of cash that FEMA thinks it will be able to offer may only represent a fraction of what the entire project will cost.

And with winter coming, and no available road for the delivery of propane tanks, the neighbors are starting to get worried.

"We're at our wits' end. Someone's got to do something," said Loralee Quinlan, one of the six homeowners affected by the decimated road.

The sinkhole is about 15 feet deep and looks like a massive crater.

The neighbors think the street collapsed

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 5, 2011 at 5:13pm

That sinking feeling: Car left stranded in giant pothole after burst water main causes road to collapse

Many motorists have had their tyres and wheels damaged by a pothole.

But one driver got more than she bargained for when the road gave way beneath her and swallowed up her entire car.

The incident took place this morning after a water main burst on the A320 between Woking and Chertsey in Surrey. The large pipe erupted at about 5am, flooding the busy road.

Hard to swallow: A silver hatchback fell into a huge pothole on the A320 between Woking and Chertsey in Surrey this morning

Hard to swallow: A silver hatchback fell into a huge pothole on the A320 between Woking and Chertsey in Surrey this morning

The giant hole in the road was caused by a burst water main. The car's female driver had stopped after hearing a noise when the road gave way beneath her

The giant hole in the road was caused by a burst water main. The car's female driver had stopped after hearing a noise when the road gave way beneath her

A female motorist driving a silver hatchback had stopped her car after hearing a loud noise coming from the road.

In a matter of seconds, the road then gave way and swallowed her car up.

 

Police were called to the scene shortly afterwards and the road was then closed at around 7am.

The water was turned off by 8.30am, but the road remained shut on Wednesday lunchtime because of the substantial hole in the southbound carriageway.

Pitfall: The A320 remained shut on Wednesday lunchtime because of the substantial hole in the southbound carriageway

Pitfall: The A320 remained shut on Wednesday lunchtime because of the substantial hole in the southbound carriageway


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2045550/Car-left-stranded-g...

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 5, 2011 at 2:57pm

'Satanic' sinkholes plague Johannesburg: MEC

Sapa | 05 October, 2011 11:25
A sink hole in Oxford Road, Johannesburg. File photo.
Image by: THYS DULLAART © The Times

Gauteng authorities have warned of an increasing risk of dolomitic sinkholes opening up around Johannesburg, which has cost 38 lives in the last 50 years.

"The dolomitic situation is satanic," says Gauteng MEC for local government and housing, Humphrey Mmemezi.

"[Residents don't realise] it comes during the night... .People can wake up and the section [of the township] is not there."

Greg Heath, an engineering geologist at the Council for Geoscience (CGS), says dolomite forms a loose belt around Johannesburg and makes up a quarter of the province. It stretches from Westonaria in the west to Centurion in the north and Thokoza in the east.

At least 2600 sinkholes have been recorded.

"The damage they have caused to development and infrastructure is estimated at a very conservative R1.5 billion.

"At least 38 people have died as a result of sinkholes and the number will increase if people do not move off unstable land," says Heath.

About 110 informal settlements exist on dolomitic land in Gauteng.

Heath says sinkholes are almost always man-induced and develop when communities move into an area with water-bearing services. In townships and informal settlements, leaking taps or burst pipes could trigger dolomitic erosion, which expands underground cavities.

In areas of mining or farming, dolomitic ground could become unstable through changes in the water table.

Two weeks ago, part of a street in Centurion collapsed as a sinkhole opened up. The 7m x 5m hole stretched over a lane of Jean Avenue, revealing water pipes and a dark depth below.

In Westonaria, an ever-growing sinkhole the size of a small dam and about 100 metres deep, lies a metre away from a tee-off at the local golf course.

http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/2011/10/05/satanic-sinkholes-plagu...

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