"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 Juan F Martinez on December 1, 2019 at 3:23pm
Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on November 7, 2019 at 7:48am

https://www.edp24.co.uk/motoring/sinkhole-opens-up-earlham-road-nor...

Another sinkhole has opened up in Norwich

PUBLISHED: 18:57 06 November 2019

Another sinkhole has opened up on a busy city centre road.

The sinkhole has appeared on Earlham Road outside the Black Horse pub and opposite The Workshop.

According to markings around it, the sinkhole is 1.2m and was discovered earlier on Wednesday (November 6).

It has been cordoned off and is near to a set of temporary traffic lights while five months of roadworks takes place on Earlham Road.

The sinkhole is on the same road as the famous one which was 26ft deep and swallowed a double decker bus on March 3, 1988.

The picture and story of a bus stuck in the hole hit headlines worldwide.

It was the result of the collapse of a medieval chalk mine, but fortunately the drivers and passengers managed to escape unhurt.

Norwich has a long history of sinkholes.

Two people were killed on May 11, 1936, in one of the city's worst incidents, when three homes were swallowed by an 80ft-deep sinkhole on Merton Road.

More recently, a "six-metre deep cavern" caused the closure of Plumstead Road and a 20ft-deep hole was discovered in the Plantation Garden - both in 2016.

This year a sinkhole opened up on Muspole Street.

Comment by Juan F Martinez on November 5, 2019 at 5:51pm

UKRAINE  Kiev, Saksaganskogo  Posted one hour ago.  11-5-2019

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on October 2, 2019 at 7:17pm

https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2019/10/01/sinkhole-in-new-lenox-close...





October 1, 2019 at 5:42 pm

CHICAGO (CBS)– Thousands use Gougar Road In New Lenox every day, and it’s now shut down indefinitely.

Friday’s rain event dropped 6 to 8 inches of rain in New Lenox. That amount of water in that short amount of time buckled the bottom part of a 6-foot pipe that runs right under the city’s busiest road.

It’s not the only road in need of repair.

Friday’s torrential downpour turned a small creek into a gusher and caused roadside erosion on Saturday.

Chopper 2 showed the damage from the sky.

Jeff Ronaldson’s been on the engineering beat in Will County for over 20 years.

“I have not seen anything quite like this,” he said. “The material that’s supporting the pipes, the stone around it, it washed it away, the sand, it’s like going to the beach and the water washes away the sand.”

Fourteen miles away in Wilton Township near Peotone another flooded creek created another collapse.

But in New Lenox, where roads are down and detours are up thousands, including families at nearby Lincoln Way West High School who are shuffling their daily routines around the damage.

Engineers scramble to replace the pipe, then pave and patch Gougar Road.

If materials can arrive quickly, the road can be fixed in a week. If this does not happen, it could take the better part of a month before the busiest road in New Lenox is back open to traffic.

CBS2 found the county already had plans in motion to replace the pipe that gave way this weekend. This incident forces them to move much faster on that replacement project.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on July 27, 2019 at 5:49am

http://newjersey.news12.com/story/40843254/heavy-rainfall-causes-ma...

Heavy rainfall causes massive sinkhole in Perth Amboy

Posted: Jul 26, 2019 6:23 PM EDT

PERTH AMBOY -

A large sinkhole developed in Perth Amboy this week after heavy rainfall.

The 20-feet hole emerged Wednesday and forced officials to close one block of Gordon Street near the Perth Amboy waterfront. Officials say that the rain, coupled with an aging brick sewer main below the street caused the ground to collapse below the asphalt.

No one was hurt and no cars were damaged by the hole.

Perth Amboy officials say that it will take several more days to fully complete repairs. The hole will need to be filled in and then the street will need to be repaved.

Repairs may be completed by Tuesday.

Comment by Juan F Martinez on July 14, 2019 at 4:41am

BALTIMORE Light Rail impacted amid Downtown Baltimore street collapse  Baltimore Sun |Jul 13, 2019

When an area near Howard and Pratt streets collapsed Monday, the Maryland Department of Transportation had to respond quickly to help residents and commuters who frequently travel through Baltimore via personal vehicles and public transportation.

The sinkhole has resulted in multiple partial road closures in the downtown area, and six light rail stops, between the Camden and North Avenue stops, are temporarily suspended while repairs continue.

“The safety of our riders is our first priority,” MDOT Maryland Transit Administration chief operations officer Sean Adgerson said in a news release. “We look forward to the Baltimore City Department of Public Works promptly completing these repairs, so we can restore full service quickly and minimize the impact on our riders.”

MTA put in place a “free bus bridge” for light rail passengers to minimize transportation delays. The shuttle buses pick passengers up from the North Avenue light rail station and drive through the city, closely following the light rail’s usual path through Baltimore.

https://www.baltimoresun.com/maryland/baltimore-city/bs-md-ci-shutt...

Comment by KM on July 6, 2019 at 7:18am

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatchewan/sinkhole-regina-may-be-...

Holy moly: City says 7.5-metre deep sinkhole may be largest ever in Regina City says it will take 3 days to fix hole

The sinkhole is located on the corner of Avonhurst and Elphinstone. 

A giant sinkhole is breaking new ground for the City of Regina.

The city believes that the sinkhole, located at the intersection of Avonhurst Drive and Elphinstone Street, may be the largest ever seen locally at an estimated 7.5 metres deep.

The hole has been described alternatively as the next Capital Pointe project or the gopher hole from which the new Gainer mascot arose.

Unusual for Regina, says city

Pat Wilson, director of water, waste and environmental services with the city, said the sinkhole is expected to take three days to repair.

"Our clay soils are part of what makes this a very, very rare occurrence. We don't typically see sinkholes or large sinkholes in Regina," said Wilson. 

Water typically leaks to the surface, tipping the city off to the fact there's a problem underground. 

In this case, a concrete sewer trunk line likely cracked, eroding the soil, said Wilson. 

"Because it's such a large line, the soil was going out through the pipe, and therefore nothing came to the surface," she said. 

The crack in the 750 mm trunk could have been leading to erosion for a long time, with the recent rains finishing off that process, she speculated. One way or the other, the earth opened up cataclysmically on Monday at about 3 p.m. CST, according to Wilson, leading to a truck's front wheel sinking into the gap. 

"[It must have been very frightening for the driver of the truck and we are very grateful there was no injuries," said Wilson. 

A truck dipped into the hole, but no one was injured.

A typical repair job for a sinkhole could cost $10,000 to $12,000, but with its size and complexity this sinkhole will likely cost more, she said. 

In the meantime, the city is asking people to avoid the site until repairs are done and to call if other roads look like they need attention.

"If anybody sees a place that is sagging or bulging — because it could bulge if there's water building pressure up underneath— or any place that seems unusually soft, please let us know," said Wilson.

She said the city relies on these reports, along with its own checks and maintenance.

And that's the hole story. 

Comment by jorge namour on July 2, 2019 at 5:21pm

Sinkhole opens in the Neapolitan: truck swallowed, houses evacuated- Naples ITALY

1 July 2019

Voragine in Casoria, in the province of Naples: it is wide and deep tens of meters, a waste compactor has precipitated there, 7 buildings have been evacuated

http://www.meteoweb.eu/2019/07/voragine-napoletano-camion-inghiotti...

A large chasm opened in Casoria , not far from the Basilica of San Mauro in Largo San Mauro, in the province of Naples .
In the abyss, tens of meters deep and wide, a waste compactor has precipitated: the driver, recovered by the fire brigade, was transported to the hospital for tests.

The road is closed to traffic and cordoned off, 7 buildings were evacuated and the supply of water and electricity is interrupted. A gas pipe would have broken.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on June 14, 2019 at 9:13pm

https://www.ndtv.com/chennai-news/road-caves-in-at-busy-chennai-int...

Road Caves In At Busy Chennai Intersection, Traffic Affected

Chennai road cave-in: No casualties were reported from the incident, and the police put barricades around the hole in the middle of the road.

Updated: June 13, 2019 15:03 IST

Chennai: 

A road caved in at Chennai's Madhya Kailash junction near Adyar today, causing traffic to slow down in the Tamil Nadu capital. No casualties were reported from the incident, and the police put barricades around the hole in the middle of the road.

"Traffic flow slow on Sardar Patel Road both direction as the road has caved in at CPT Jn. Traffic men attending," the city's traffic police tweeted. The cave-in happened near IIT Madras.

This is the second time an incident like this is happening in the area in recent times. In 2017, a stretch of road in Chennai's Anna Salai caved in, trapping a city bus and a car. Passengers, however, managed to escape unhurt.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on May 28, 2019 at 4:16am

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/sinkhole-sheringham...

Sinkhole in high street shuts centre of Norfolk seaside resort

Sixteen-foot chasm set to force closure of road for seven days

A high street in Norfolk is set to be closed for a week after a 2ft-wide sinkhole emerged in the middle of the road. 

The hole, which the fire service said was at least 16ft deep, appeared around lunchtime on Saturday in Sheringham High Street, a seaside resort north of Norwich

Norfolk Police said officers were at the scene following “reports a hole has appeared in the road”. The force advised locals to avoid the area.

Anglian Water, which sectioned off the area, will explore the sewers beneath the hole and carry out repairs. 

Andrew Munden, chair of the Sheringham Chamber of Trade, told North Norfolk News a number of businesses would be forced to close until the issue was resolved. 

It comes less than a year after a supermarket in North Yorkshire was evacuated when a sinkhole opened up in an alleyway behind the building. 

"This is one of the busiest weeks of the year for Sheringham being half term and could have been a disaster for the town but as a result of this camaraderie and fighting spirit the town is very much open for business."

Sinkholes mainly occur in what is known as ‘karst terrain’; areas of land where soluble bedrock (such as limestone or gypsum) can be dissolved by water. 

Though most emerge gradually, ones which suddenly open up are known as cover-collapse sinkholes.

These are often created when water dissolves the bedrock underneath until only a thin layer remains between the surface and an underground opening. This thin layer can then eventually collapse.

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