"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 February 28, 2012 at 2:21pm

http://www.wowktv.com/story/17025040/sink-hole-damage-prompts-downt...

Sink hole damage prompts downtown Charleston road closure

Posted: Feb 27, 2012 10:26 AM AST 
CHARLESTON -

Summers Street between Virginia and Quarrier will be closed to through traffic during the day because of damage to a sewer line caused by a sinkhole.

Look for barricades and orange cones from 7 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily until the Charleston Sanitary Board completes repairs of a sewer main at a sink hole in Summers Street.

Local traffic will have limited access to the closed block of Summers Street.

While repairs are under way, you won't be able to get on to Summers Street from Virginia Street.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on February 18, 2012 at 7:26pm

West Orange, New Jersey

http://westorange.patch.com/articles/sinkhole-found-on-northfield-a...

Sinkhole Found on Northfield Avenue and Valley Road

A sinkhole is developing on the intersection of Northfield Avenue and Valley Road in West Orange.

Officials on scene this afternoon said the sinkhole is about two-and-a-half feet wide and one foot deep.

As of 2:30 p.m., traffic continued to flow along all lanes of Northfield Avenue and Valley Road and no streets had been closed.

An orange cone has been placed on top of the hole for precaution as West Orange police wait for county officials to arrive. Both streets are county roads.

Police did not know what caused the sinkhole but said there had been recent construction in the area.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on February 18, 2012 at 7:21pm

http://wvgazette.com/News/201202170061

February 17, 2012
Sinkhole collapses part of Summers Street
Lawrence Pierce
Donald Stowes of the Charleston Street Department tries to figure out what caused a section of Summers Street to collapse near the intersection of Summers and Virginia Street.
Lawrence Pierce
Workers moved this section of pavement that caved in at the site of the sinkhole.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Northbound lanes of Charleston's Summers Street between Virginia and Quarrier streets were shut down shortly before noon Friday when a sinkhole opened up in the middle of the 100 block.

The hole was about 3 feet by 4 feet long, and reached about 8 feet deep.

Crews from the Charleston Sanitary Board were at the hole throughout the afternoon, finally placing steel plates over it shortly before 3 p.m.

Charleston city engineer Chris Knox was not sure what caused the street to cave in, but said he doubted it had anything to do with an electric vault located on Summers Street between Virginia Street and Kanawha Boulevard. Construction crews for BBL Carlton had been repairing the vault, which was damaged over the years by runoff and salt used to treat the street above.

Knox said it is possible a section of sewer collapsed under Summers Street, causing the sinkhole, or dirt and sand from just beneath the street might have been filtering into the sewer pipe for years and decades, leaving an air space above that eventually collapsed.

Officials with the Charleston Sanitary Board could not be reached for comment.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on February 17, 2012 at 4:51pm

http://www.cbsatlanta.com/story/16953980/sinkhole-swallowing-up-yar...

Sinkhole swallowing up yard belonging to Clayton County family

Posted: Feb 16, 2012 5:36 PM AST Updated: Feb 16, 2012 5:47 PM AST

CLAYTON COUNTY, GA (CBS ATLANTA) -

Billy Banks said a sinkhole started forming in his backyard about a year ago. Now it's nearly 4 feet deep.

"If it gets bigger and gets close to the house, the house is going to be condemned," Banks said.

Banks said his home is only 7-years-old. He never imagined when he bought the property that his yard would cave in.

Dorothy Banks said Legacy Communities built the homes in the Manor subdivision near Jonesboro and when she tried to contact them about the problem she learned they had gone out of business.

"We just can't win because we can't afford to redo this whole back yard ourselves," Dorothy Banks said.

So CBS Atlanta News tried to locate the builders to no avail and the county said there is nothing they can do since the sinkhole is on private property.

"We might have to walk away from this house because we can't afford to fix this and we don't want to take a chance on something happening where our grandkids or even us walk out here and fall in this sinkhole or even the sinkhole getting to close to the house and our house falling in," Dorothy Banks said.

Comment by Howard on February 12, 2012 at 4:13am

Massive Sinkholes in Mexico, China, Argentina, Ecuador and Russia (courtesy of Andrey Eroshin)

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on February 10, 2012 at 8:03pm

http://www.gadsdentimes.com/article/20120210/WIRE/120219998

Sinkhole shuts down westbound I-20 in Alabama

Miles and miles of traffic exit I-20 because of a large sink hole in the west bound lanes between the 431 exit and Golden Springs exit near the 191 mile marker, Friday, Feb. 10, 2012. Transportation officials say westbound I-20 is closed near the Oxford exit, causing traffic tie-ups for cars and trucks traveling from west Georgia toward Birmingham. Officials are diverting traffic on to U.S. 78 as a detour.

Published: Friday, February 10, 2012 at 12:12 p.m.

HEFLIN, Ala. (AP) — Westbound traffic is being routed off Interstate 20 in eastern Alabama because of a sinkhole that's formed in the highway in Calhoun County.

Transportation officials say westbound I-20 is closed near the Oxford exit, causing traffic tie-ups for cars and trucks traveling from west Georgia toward Birmingham.

Officials are diverting traffic on to U.S. 78 as a detour.

It's not clear how long the interstate will remain closed, and it's unclear whether the sinkhole is still growing.

Comment by Weston Ginther on February 4, 2012 at 10:27pm

Update from a sinkhole that originally formed in December

Sinkhole Continues To Force Traffic Detour

Feb 02,

SYLACAUGA – A 15-foot deep sinkhole on Quarry Road is still sinking despite five attempts to fill it by the street department.

Street department director Tommy Woolley said they are working hard to fill it, but cannot determine when it will stop sinking.

“I know the residents that live near that road are upset by the detour, but it’s for their own safety,” Woolley said. “We’d hate to open the road and have somebody drive through there at night and it is 10-feet deep again. We have to keep it closed until we can determine it is safe.”

Mayor Sam Wright addressed the issue at a city council meeting Wednesday morning.

“We have it barricaded, and we ask citizens for cooperation and understanding in what we’re having to battle,” Wright said. “We know it’s a big inconvenience, but the street department is handling it.”

The hole, which is now about 20 feet wide, was originally 70 feet deep and 40 feet across when it first appeared in December....

READ MORE

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on February 4, 2012 at 5:03pm

http://toronto.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20120203/sinkhole-ba...

Sinkhole swallows city dump truck

CTV News Video

Extended: Dump truck swallowed by sinkhole
Emergency crews are on the scene after a Toronto dump truck gets stuck in a sinkhole in the Coxwell Avenue and O'Connor Drive area.

Photos

A city truck lies stuck in a sinkhole on Barbara Crescent in East York on Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012.

A city truck lies stuck in a sinkhole on Barbara Crescent in East York on Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012.

Date: Friday Feb. 3, 2012 9:27 AM ET

Work continues Friday on a huge sinkhole in an East York neighbourhood that swallowed a dump truck.

Crews were working on the large hole on Barbara Crescent in the Coxwell Avenue and O'Connor Drive area, at around 7 p.m. Thursday when the truck being used to haul dirt to fill the hole ended up in the pit itself.

It took two tow trucks to pull the truck from the hole.

No injuries were reported.

A broken water main is being blamed for the sinkhole.

Comment by Moderating Staff on February 3, 2012 at 4:37pm

Reposted from mainpage blogs:

Toronto Sinkhole

Posted by Dan Lansman on February 3, 2012 at 4:25pm

Send Message   View Blog

Yet another sinkhole in Toronto

 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2012/02/03/toronto-coxw...

Comment by Weston Ginther on February 1, 2012 at 3:48am

15-Foot Sinkhole Found on Ringgold Middle School Property

Jan. 31, 2012

WASHINGTON COUNTY, Pa. —The Department of Environmental Protection was called to Ringgold Middle School after a sinkhole opened up on school property.

Officials said the hole is 5 feet wide and 15 feet deep.

"Our primary concern is to provide our students with a safe environment. If there would be any problems we want to be prepared to address them," said substitute superintendent Dr. Karen Polkabla.

Polkabla said mine subsidence caused the hole form. Channel 11's Vince Sims reported that two other sinkholes were located on private property next to the school.

The Ringgold sinkhole sits far enough away from the building that officials are not calling it a major concern for students.

"There's a football field, a soccer field and a baseball field, and it's even beyond those fields. So at this point it's not any danger to the students," Polkabla said.

The DEP said all three sinkholes are on their priority repair list.

READ MORE


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