EarthDate
In China, sinkholes are called “heavenly pits.” And China has the largest one in the world, named Xiaozhai. It’s two thousand feet deep and just as wide. Sinkholes occur where Earth’s surface collapses into an underground void. It could be sudden, when a giant hole opens in the ground. Or sinkholes can form slowly, making depressions in the landscape that appear as rolling hills and troughs. Both are caused by water eroding or dissolving the bedrock. This could happen over centuries, when rainfall mixes with plant material to form a weak carbonic acid and percolates into limestone, slowly dissolving it. Or, if that underlying rock is an evaporite—like salt or gypsum—it can happen fast, in months or even days. Especially if water flows through the rock. This might be from an underground river, which is what formed China’s Xiaozhai. Or from water leaking from human infrastructure, like a water main. In the U.S., sinkholes occur in all 50 states and cause 300 million dollars in damage a year. But they also form lakes and provide access to underground caverns. If you ever visit China, you can take the half-mile staircase down into Xiaozhai, where there are more than a thousand rare animal species. The river still flows beneath this massive depression, though, so be warned, the story may not yet be over.
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