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Sinkhole Saturday

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gregm

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It looks like alot of people did well yesterday, I got lucky with the US win in soccer. I just hope fabulous Friday doesnt turn into Sinkhole Saturday. Blackhawks to finish this off. college baseball super regionals ,nc state plays its make up game at 4. Nba. Wnba. Serie A. MLS. womens tennis in paris. MLB.

sinkhole

nc state -1 , -1.5, serena 2-0, spurs +6, seattle -.5, new england -.5, slc pick, chicago -.5 huge, wil be on under most likely

sinkhole


New Sinkhole Opens In Seffner, Florida

"According to Fox News, an 8-foot-wide, 10-foot-deep hole was discovered between two houses in Seffner, Fla., this weekend.

Brandon Patch reports that Hillsborough County Fire Rescue and code enforcement officials set up a perimeter between 1425 and 1427 Lake Shore Ranch Drive in Seffner

So far this year, three sinkholes have been reported in Seffner alone. State geologist Jonathan Arthur told the Associated Press that many more could be on the way, since what is unofficially known as "sinkhole season" has only just begun in Florida.

Sinkholes are made over time as acidic rainwater eats away at underground limestone, forming cavities. According to WTSP, Florida's "unique subsurface structure of limestone, mineral deposits and flowing water underground" make it particularly susceptible to sinkhole formation."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/10/sinkhole-season-underway-_n_2848466.html


Giant Hole Swallowing Up Your House Added To List Of Things To Worry About

http://www.theonion.com/articles/giant-hole-swallowing-up-your-house-added-to-list,31523/

"SEFFNER, FL—Following a Florida man’s sudden death last week after his bedroom collapsed into a 20-foot-wide sinkhole, the possibility of a giant cavity in the earth opening up and swallowing your entire house has now reportedly been added to the list of things one must worry about on a day-to-day basis. “Well, on top of everything else, it looks as though I now have to be legitimately afraid of the earth itself suddenly consuming my house, my family, and everything I own,” said local man Jared Palmer, 38, who noted that his usual list of everyday financial, parenting, social, and mortality-based phobias was only compounded by the prospect of being helplessly sucked into a subterranean cavern.

“Sure, why not? I already spend most of my day worrying about disease, home invasions, hurricanes, and car accidents. I could use a few hours to bat around the idea of the very ground beneath my feet eating me alive.”

Urging the public to remain calm, government officials issued a statement indicating that while falling into a sinkhole and dying is indeed a possibility, the average American is far more likely to die from a lack of adequate health care, in an exchange of gunfire, or while in prison."