Sinkhole: Now 372 feet diameter, Only 1500 feet from butane-filled cavern
Sinkhole: 
Now 372 
feet diameter, 
Only 
1500 feet from butane-filled cavern 
- August 7, 
2012
 - By: Deborah 
Dupre 
 
'Built to Spill: In 
Louisiana, fewer than one in 100 oil spills result in any fine whatsoever — so 
why should an oil company clean up after itself?' Credits: Gambit 
Expanding 
sinkhole's powerful underground forces bubbling and bending pipes threaten 
integrity of massive butane-filled cavern and human 
rights
The initially 
estimated 200 by 200 feet sinkhole that developed late last week, swallowing 
ancient cypress trees 100 feet tall near Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou communities 
in south Louisiana, is now reported to be 380 
feet deep with a diameter 
of 372 feet, filled mainly with salt water with traces of diesel fuel, and 
only 
1,500 feet from a cavern filled with butane, according 
Tuesday morning news. Analysts' reports further hint that Texas Brine 
Company's cavern failed, but the butane cavern failing is today's worst-case 
scenario.
If a nearby 
butane-filled cavern fails, as it appears the brine cavern did, "it could cause 
an explosion felt up to two miles away," Fox News 8 reported 
Tuesday morning. "That's the worst-case scenario."
"All we can tell 
you right now is we still have bubbling in the bayou and we still don't know 
what happened and some scientists have pointed out to us that it could go from 
200 feet to 2000 feet real quickly. We don't know," said Assumption Parish 
Sheriff Michael Waguespack on Monday.
After releasing 
information to the public Monday that the bayou sinkhole is over 380 feet deep, 
researchers report Tuesday that the diameter of the hole is now 372 feet and has 
now "swallowed" an acre of the once pristine swampland before oil, gas and salt 
miners arrived.
Water analysis 
shows that the water in the sinkhole is comprised mainly of salt water and 
diesel, both used to stabilize unused salt caverns, officials say.
Some closed salt 
caverns have diesel fuel at the top as a “pad” to prevent erosion of the salt 
from the brine, explained John Boudreaux, director of the Assumption Parish 
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness.
Monday's 
disclosures possibly point to Louisiana Department of Natural Resources 
officials’ suggestions Friday that the sinkhole was caused by the possibly 
failed Texas Brine cavern.
“It’s suspect,” 
Boudreaux said.
Texas Brine 
company mined deep below the surface for decades but plugged the mine last year 
by filling it with 20 million barrels of brine, a process that meets the 
definition of environmental modification, ENMOD.
The company 
brought geologists from Florida to establish the best way to learn what's going 
on beneath the surface. Until they know and disclose more about the crisis, 
homeowners who evacuated might not be able to return, according to Fox News. 
Residents who did not follow the mandatory evacuation advisory for the area 
might reconsider. Roughly half of the some 300 people under mandatory evacuation 
orders remained.
Officials will 
brief the small Cajun communities impacted by the expanding sinkhole, Bayou 
Corne and Grand Bayou, Tuesday evening during a meeting at St. Joseph the Worker 
Catholic Church in Pierre Part at 6:30 p.m.
GOVERNMENT = SELF APPOINTED LEGALIZED CRIME SYNDICATE !!!!


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