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    Mysterious Louisiana Sinkhole Raises Concerns of Explosions and Radiation

    A nearly 400-foot deep sinkhole in Louisiana has swallowed all of the trees in its area and enacted a mandatory evacuation order for about 150 residences for fear of potential radiation and explosions.

    The 400-square-foot gaping hole is in Assumption Parish, La., about 50 miles south of Baton Rouge.

    The sinkhole sits in the middle of a heavily wooded space where it has consumed all of the soaring cypress trees that had been there. Flyover photos show some of the treetops still visible through the mud.

    Authorities enacted a mandatory evacuation for between 100 and150 homes in the area, but most people have chosen to stay, according to the Mayor's Office of Emergency Preparedness. If any of the dangers seem to become more imminent, the order will be escalated to a forced evacuation.

    While officials are not certain what caused the massive sinkhole, they believe it may be have ben caused by a nearby salt cavern owned by the Texas Brine Company.

    After being used for nearly 30 years, the cavern was plugged in 2011 and officials believe the integrity of the cavern may have somehow been compromised, leading to the sinkhole.

    [Slideshow: Massive sinkholes wreak havoc around the world]

    On Thursday, Louisiana's Department of Natural Resources required that Texas Brine drill a well to investigate the salt cavern as soon as possible, obtain samples from the cavern and provide daily reports on their findings. It could take up to 10 days to set up the drilling process, even with an expedited process.

    "We have to arrange for the driller. We have to pick a location. We have to be very careful to not be in a point that's too close to the sinkhole because of the weight of the rig," Texas Brine Company spokesman Sonny Cranch told ABCNews.com today. "We don't want to aggravate the situation."

    The sinkhole is on the outside edge of the salt dome where this particular brine well is located.

    "There are some indications that it very well may have been connected, but there's just indications," Cranch said. "There's nothing concrete that has connected the sinkhole to the cavern."

    There was bubbling in the water and the sinkhole is near areas where there has been exploration for oil and gas in the past, which would make the presence of low levels of naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM) possible.

    The state's Department of Environmental Quality said water samples from the sinkhole showed oil and diesel on its surface, but initial readings did not detect radiation.

    In the days after the sinkhole opened up on Aug. 3, nearby Highway 70 was closed down because officials discovered that the sinkhole caused a 36-inch natural gas pipeline to bend and feared the possibility of an explosion, according to ABC News' Baton Rouge affiliate WBRZ.

    "That's why the mandatory evacuation is going to stay on, because there is a risk for explosion," John Boudreaux of from Assumption Parish Emergency Preparedness said at a meeting with residents on Tuesday, WBRZ reported.

    "We are determined to do everything we can to find the answer," president of Texas Brine Mark Cartwright told the residents.

    Some community members were visibly frustrated with the situation and lack of answers.

    "You can give us a straight answer because that's all we want," one woman said at the meeting. "We want to know when we can come home and be safe. Because you all go home after a days work. You're safe, but we're not."

    Gov. Bobby Jindal issued a declaration of emergency allowing the Governor's Office of Homeland Security to assist in the efforts if necessary.

    "This is extremely serious and it's been going on for too long to still be at this point," Kim Torres, spokeswoman for the Office of Emergency Preparedness, told ABCNews.com today. "The people are very aware of how serious this is."

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    3,640 comments

    • F.E.M.A  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      CALL BEFORE YOU DIG .
      • F.E.M.A 1 hr 32 mins ago
        @LIAM1694u , yea that the first thing that I thought of . there are so many under ground utilities , phone , fober optic , natural gas , electric, sewer ect I just though SAFETY FIRST. I'was running a ditch witch and I was 17 , the owner of the company was in a hurry a screaming at me to trench from . a to .b and I showed him the the blue prints / drawings we were 1/2 miles from the city water tower and the trench I was to cut whent right through a 24 inch water main for the entire city . he screamed at me told to get off the machine he would do it him self ......GUESS WHAT HAPPENNED it looked like old faithfull with an idiot on a ditch witch sinking into an ever growing lake. this man owned the company and I was 17 I knew what the out come would be . true story ( CALL BEFORE YOU DIG ) .............YOU DIG. It was so funny under my breath you could hear me saying I TOLD SO , I TOLD YOU SO!. I have a bunch more first had stories one includes death . another time maybe
      • Bill Smith 1 hr 58 mins ago
        Harold is a crackerhead!
      • tuna 3 hrs ago
        two can dig better than one DIG
    • foreigner427  •  16 hrs ago
      So no radiation has been detected, but the headline declares "Mysterious radioactive sinkhole in Louisiana".....

      The headline might as well say "Loch Ness Monster Found Living in Sinkhole" since it'd be as equally accurate.
      • Me 23 mins ago
        Yes, Srt8, but it's not like they have to panic or anything. I could probably wave a Geiger counter around my backyard and get a NORM click or two. The headline is misleading at best.
      • Me 3 hrs ago
        Louisiana, August 2012:

        Mysterious radioactive sinkhole!

        Forces Moon out of Earth orbit...

        No, wait! That's the opening for "Space 1999"! :)
      • A Yahoo! User 5 hrs ago
        Foreigner, can't read huh? Look at the title again!
    • HootieMcBoob  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      Ok lets look at this article from the beginning:

      Yahoo Headline:"Mysterious radioactive sinkhole in Louisiana"
      Article Headline: "Mysterious Louisiana Sinkhole Raises Concerns of Explosions and Radiation"
      In story:"The state's Department of Environmental Quality said water samples from the sinkhole showed oil and diesel on its surface, but initial readings did not detect radiation."

      Really, now? Seriously, Yahoo and abc News?
      • A Yahoo! User 5 hrs ago
        HootieMcGoob, you are blonde right? Read the headline again please! The article is by ABC News. The title reads "Mysterious Lousiana Sinkhole Raises Concerns of Explosions and Radiation." There is not "Mysterious radioactive sinkhole".........
      • WesleyM 9 hrs ago
        Yeah, talk about inconsistency
      • orc1925 9 hrs ago
        They do this just to get people to read the articles.
    • Connor  •  Hockessin, Delaware  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      Anyone else find it odd that evacuation is optional when a "mandatory evacuation" is enacted?
      • Gloria 5 hrs ago
        James S of Center #$%$ those of us with 3 or more eyeballs know where u live. Since u have jokes u r the special ingredient need for the gumbo. LOL
      • scor 5 hrs ago
        Only in the south do so many 'words' have multiple meanings.
      • Mojo 6 hrs ago
        Kat - "self-reliant people who live on the bayous"
        Im with you. A lot of people on yahoo with crazy conspiracies
        Salt dome that was mined years ago finally collapsed. Gas pipeline is the risk of explosions. Naturally occurring isotopes in the earth was yahoo's stretch for "radiation"
    • N. PA  •  16 hrs ago
      The headline alone is symptomatic of the problem with journalism today, i.e., a distinct absence of truth. Basically, journalism is dead.
      • Witness 3 hrs ago
        @N.PA - Yes, the liberal media killed it.
      • BBI 5 hrs ago
        That's what happens to journalism in a society that worships profit above all else. It isn't designed to inform, it's designed to make money.
      • scor 5 hrs ago
        Don't be such a Troll, imatroll. Given the msyrterious nature this article leaves it's readers looming questions for, Grover could be on to something. After all, the article didn't say that is wasn't a GWBush legacy, did it?!!
    • ana2rosa2003  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      When is a radioactive sinkhole not radioactive? When ABC news writes the article.
    • Tracey  •  16 hrs ago
      So, you read the article and find: it is not mysterious, there have been no explosions and the radiation is normal. And the press wonders why they have little to no credibility.
    • Ophidian  •  Rochester, New York  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      Can we chuck Snookie in that thing?
    • Dude  •  Columbia, Tennessee  •  12 hrs ago
      Radioactive sinkhole in a swamp? Isn't this the backstory of the ninja turtles?
    • Jackson  •  1 day 3 hrs ago
      "...officials believe the integrity of the cavern may have somehow been compromised" Gee, ya think?
    • designerlt  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  1 day 2 hrs ago
      Come and listen to a story about a man named Jed. A poor mountaineer, barely kept his family fed. Then one day he was shootin at some food, and up through the ground came a 400-foot deep sinkhole.
    • me  •  Dayton, Ohio  •  14 hrs ago
      Sinkholes are to be taken very seriously. I lived in a town that had a salt mine that caused about 8 sinkholes in our area. We were very lucky they were mostly all in the bays and outside water of the gulf. Though 2 were on land. It happened when a shaft at the salt mine sprung a leak and water was moving into the shaft and caused sinkholes. The shalf then had to be sealed off and filled full of salt water to stop the sinkholes from continuing. Because the salt mine ran underground through the town which could have and would have been disasterous for us all.
    • Roman K  •  New York, New York  •  21 hrs ago
      i feel the 2012 crazies coming out
    • Motie  •  15 hrs ago
      Sunlight is radiation. Shhh, don't tell the morons.
    • Rich  •  13 hrs ago
      A mysterious hole? With explosions? and radiation?

      For a minute there I thought they were talking about my ex-girlfriend. She had a.... problem.
    • serf_tide  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  4 hrs ago
      Mandatory evacuation and nobody leaves. What is it with people in Louisiana? Sounds like Katrina...then when their homes are sinking they'll start blaming the government for not rescuing them quick enough.
    • Mark  •  9 hrs ago
      Louisiana's equivalent of the EPA is 90% funded by oil companies. Guess where it ranks in water quality nationwide ... NEAR THE BOTTOM ... that's right .. what a coindidence... ?
    • Heckster  •  Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts  •  16 hrs ago
      Somebody already knows the reason for this. I'll bet anything.
    • Josie Buchanan  •  15 hrs ago
      what happens if the salt company is responsible for this? Lawsuits? Sinkholes happen naturally in the wild and even in cities. Philadelphia was infamous for it's baby sinkholes at one time, they called them potholes and we would race around them all the time. (humor there folks)
    • Robert  •  Ashland, Massachusetts  •  11 hrs ago
      ABC News? This article is written like a junior high essay. There are too many errors to count.