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Professor offers insight into Florida's recent sinkholes

Professor offers insight into Florida鈥檚 recent sinkholes
A sinkhole formed feet away from a home in Windermere, Fla. on May 3.

A sinkhole, about 100-feet-wide and 50-feet-deep, opened up in the backyard of a home in a Windermere, Fla. May 3. Almost one week later, another sinkhole that was 80-feet-long and 40-feet-wide opened in the backyard of a home in .

A sinkhole is a natural depression or hole in the Earth鈥檚 surface that is caused by the dissolution of carbonate rocks. According to Grenville Draper, professor in the Department of Earth and Environment, rain is not necessary for a sinkhole to form, but a period of intense rain after a drought can trigger one.

鈥淎 sinkhole can open in a matter of hours, that鈥檚 why there鈥檚 a dramatic element to them,鈥 Draper said. 鈥淢ost times, we can鈥檛 really predict when and where a sinkhole will occur.鈥

Florida bedrock is made almost entirely of . A sinkhole occurs when that limestone dissolves, Draper said.

鈥淕roundwater dissolves the limestone upwards, forming a type of cave or cavity,鈥 he said. 鈥淥nce that cavity reaches the top of the limestone, loose surrounding sand falls back into that cavity, kind of like sand running through an hourglass. That鈥檚 when you have sinkhole.鈥

Sinkholes can happen worldwide. The largest are currently found in New Guinea and Venezuela in South America. They are also common in Michigan, Kentucky and Tennessee. As for Florida, Draper says sinkholes are not uncommon, but occur more often in the central part of the state.

Citation: Professor offers insight into Florida's recent sinkholes (2012, May 22) retrieved 7 May 2025 from /news/2012-05-professor-insight-florida-sinkholes.html
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