Ring of fire: Mysterious blazing sinkhole shocks Chinese village
A blazing sinkhole in northwest China terrified locals, attracting tourists as well as researchers and prompting questions about its origin. The temperature on top of the burning crater was estimated to be 792 degrees Celsius (1,457 degrees Fahrenheit).
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Due to the deadly heat, scientists have been unable to come close enough to the crater to measure how deep it really is.
Located in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, near Urumqi, in northwest China, the sinkhole is 0.9 meters (3 feet) wide.
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It is hot enough to light up branches and other objects placed
next to it. Various tourist videos show people setting things on
fire.
Locals have dubbed it a “gateway to hell.” Many have told the
Chinese media that the ground in the area has been hot for some
time now.
There is no volcanic activity in the region, which led scientists
from the Xinjiang Meitian Geological Bureau to believe that the
sinkhole was created out of coal seam spontaneously combusting.
The area was reportedly used for mining in the 1970s, China
Central TV cited a supervisor from Xinjiang Meitian Fire
Engineering Bureau, Chen Long, as saying, the Daily Mail
reported.
“Primitive mining and extinguishing techniques caused coal to burn deep under the ground,” Chen said. “Operators didn’t seal the mines properly after business discontinued and this leads the underground fire to burn towards the surface of the earth.”
Gateway To Hell? Villagers Horrified To Find Mysterious Hole Spewing Fire (PHOTOS) http://t.co/7FYokrINbppic.twitter.com/6ZAUr7AFlF
— Naij.com (@naijcom) April 9, 2015
Similar phenomena on a larger scale were spotted in Turkmenistan
and America’s Pennsylvania.
The former, referred to as the “the door to hell,” is a
gas crater that has been burning in a Turkmen desert for more
than 40 years. The one in Pennsylvania is a coal mine fire that
has been burning since May 1962.
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