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Lots of new activity at mysterious Louisiana sinkhole in Bayou Corne. Assumption Parish Police Jury blog reported abundant surface water movement and burp event in the center of the sinkhole starting early on July 19, 2013. Video below, released on the same day shows sudden water movement at sinkhole area with tidal wave characteristics.
Lakes and smaller bodies of water do not normally have "tidal waves" which are typical only for oceans and seas but also bodies of water that are connected with them. There are some suggestions that Louisiana sinkhole somehow connected with the Gulf of Mexico through the salt dome and the Louann salt layer which connects all of these salt domes and covers over 7 states. The Louann underlies much of the northern Gulf coast from Texas to the Florida panhandle and extends beneath large areas of the Gulf coastal plain of Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas. Pressure, sediment movements, another floor collapse, gas leak...there is a list of possible causes.
According to experts, the depths change because the sediment in the sinkhole is constantly shifting and changing.
Originally posted by jude11
Someone pulling on the line from the other end perhaps?
Originally posted by havok
Originally posted by jude11
Someone pulling on the line from the other end perhaps?
Jude...really?
That's the best thing you can think of?
If you watch the video, everything sways back and forth with the water.
There's branches and debris that sway, not to mention the small tuft of grass.
Pulling the line? :facepalm:
The water is clearly being pulled by an unseen force.
I don't believe it's tidal although it could be.
Seems very indicative of a rise and swell from an underground pool.
Maybe the filling of underground chambers and pockets of gas being released.
This is not the end of the sinkhole that's for sure.
What we are seeing maybe telling of what's to come.
Something much, much more serious.
Let's all keep an eye on this one.
edit on 21-7-2013 by havok because: spelling
Originally posted by Cataka
reply to post by Mugen
Reminds me of Edgar Cayce and his future map.
I think the Navy's predicted map of the US coastline fits with that prediction somewhat?
Cayce says that the East Coast of the United States will be disturbed, the west coast will literally disappear, and all coastal and close to sea level land all over the world will be under water. It looks like the Rocky Mountains will be the new coastal mountains in the United States. Anyone who was thinking that Nevada would be beach front property, it will be under water. Colorado doesn't fare too well even though the Rockies runs through it, it's elevation in general is still not high enough to stay above water entirely once the new land masses rise out of the oceans.
Originally posted by Mugen
reply to post by jude11
Let me get this straight. That line going down the middle of the video in the water?
You say someone is on the other side of the lake, pulling it. Making it go back and forth. Would you not have to do it for a long time to generate enough.... force? Perhaps a tractor or something could have done it. But still, i dont believe you can generate enough force from that line.
Ok i thought of an example. You're sitting in the bath tub. Waving your hand back and forth in the water - going along with the mini wave you have created.
Still, why is that the only part of the line that is moving?edit on 7-21-13 by Mugen because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by havok
Originally posted by jude11
Someone pulling on the line from the other end perhaps?
Jude...really?
That's the best thing you can think of?
If you watch the video, everything sways back and forth with the water.
There's branches and debris that sway, not to mention the small tuft of grass.
Pulling the line? :facepalm: