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Friday, July 25, 2014

Bayou Corne, Louisiana: The Sinkhole, Part 1


Bayou Corne, Louisiana


Just a little over a year ago, while still in New Mexico, I ran across something astonishing. Well, three astonishing things.

Below is my September 2013 post:

Louisiana: The Sea Below

I'm not in Louisiana yet - won't be til November, but this grabbed my attention
From the New York Times article, Ground Gives Way, and a Louisiana Town Struggles to Find Its Footing:
Much of Louisiana sits atop an ancient ocean whose salty remains, extruded upward by the merciless pressure of countless tons of rock, have formed at least 127 colossal underground pillars. Seven hundred feet beneath Bayou Corne, the Napoleonville salt dome stretches three miles long and a mile wide — and plunges perhaps 30,000 feet to the old ocean floor. 
A bevy of companies has long regarded the dome as more or less a gigantic piece of Tupperware, a handy place to store propane, butane and natural gas, and to make salt water for the area’s many chemical factories. Over the years, they have repeatedly punched into the dome, hollowing out 53 enormous caverns.


More here and here and here.



At the time I wrote the above post, I thought: 

Louisiana sits atop an ancient sea?!
Salt domes?!
The sucking sinkhole?!

I made a vow to visit this sinkhole when I came to Louisiana.

In July 2014, I went to Bayou Corne to see the sinkhole. Look for Part 2 to learn what I found.

  




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