enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sinkhole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinkhole

    The Red Lake sinkhole in Croatia. A sinkhole is a depression or hole in the ground caused by some form of collapse of the surface layer. The term is sometimes used to refer to doline, enclosed depressions that are also known as shakeholes, and to openings where surface water enters into underground passages known as ponor, swallow hole or swallet.

  3. Depression (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depression_(geology)

    Sinkhole: a depression formed as a result of the collapse of rocks lying above a hollow. This is common in karst regions. Kettle: a shallow, sediment-filled body of water formed by melting glacial remnants in terminal moraines. [3] Thermokarst hollow: caused by volume loss of the ground as the result of permafrost thawing. Impact-related:

  4. List of sinkholes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sinkholes

    Bering Sinkhole – natural limestone sinkhole in Texas used for prehistoric burials [4] Big Basin Prairie Preserve – St. Jacob's Well, Kansas, a water-filled sinkhole which lies in the Little Basin, and the Big Basin, a 1.5-kilometre-wide (1 mi) crater-like depression; Blue Hole (Castalia) – a fresh water pond located in Castalia, Erie ...

  5. Ocean City sinkhole: How are they formed, and what can cause ...

    www.aol.com/ocean-city-sinkhole-cause-them...

    A sinkhole was discovered at on Wednesday evening near the base of Ocean City's Isle of Wight Bay Bridge, Route 90. Here's what caused it, plus more.

  6. Scientists Are Planning on Plunging Into the World’s ‘Portal ...

    www.aol.com/scientists-planning-plunging-world...

    Sinkholes filled with water, also known as blue holes, completely surround the island nation of The Bahamas, and now OceanGate’s co-founder wants to explore the deepest of them all.

  7. Suffosion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suffosion

    Suffosion sinkholes are normally associated with karst topography although they may form in other types of rock including chalk, gypsum and basalt. In the karst of the UK's Yorkshire Dales, numerous surface depressions known locally as "shakeholes" are the result of glacial till washing into fissures in the underlying limestone. [citation needed]

  8. Scientists just discovered cold, dark sinkholes in Lake ...

    www.aol.com/scientists-just-discovered-cold-dark...

    The sinkholes range in size from 300 to 600 feet across. The scientists found roughly 40, although Ruberg said there are likely more. A sonar image of a few of the sinkholes found at the bottom of ...

  9. Hranice Abyss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hranice_Abyss

    Karst phenomena (e.g. sinkholes) can also be observed in the immediate vicinity of the abyss. At a depth of 48 metres (157 ft) below the surface of the lake, after crossing the siphon called Zubatice (after its jagged shape), it is possible to ascend to the dry caves (Rotunda Dry, Heaven I-III, Monika). These are continuously monitored ...