An unsettling natural hazard: Here's everything you need to know about sinkholes
A large sinkhole opens in a parking area in Ocala, Florida, and swallows a car that teeters on the edge. File picture: June 11, 2017
The ground is not supposed to vanish. Yet every year there are reports of roads splitting open without warning, cars tilting nose-first into the Earth, and perfectly ordinary streets suddenly developing bottomless holes. One moment the landscape appears stable; the next, it is quite literally gone.
Sinkholes are among the most unsettling natural hazards because they offer no drama beforehand. No shaking, no rumbling, no obvious countdown. They seem random. Unfair. Almost targeted...
![<p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p> <p> The International Union for the Conservation of Nature says that “an ecosystem is collapsed when it is virtually certain that its defining biotic [living] or abiotic [non-living] features are lost from all occurrences, and the characteristic native biota are no longer sustained”.</p>](/cms_media/module_img/9930/4965053_12_augmentedSearch_iStock-1405109268.jpg)