Louisiana officials say a growing, 5.5-acre sinkhole in northern Assumption Parish swamps gobbled up another strip of land this week.
John Boudreaux, director of the parish Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, tells The Advocate trees fell in with the collapse, but no one was injured.
He said the collapsed area extended from a mat road that Texas Brine Co. of Houston has installed to clean trees, other vegetative matter and oil out the sinkhole to a point 80 feet north or the road.
The sinkhole is located between Bayou Corne and Grand Bayou south of La. Highway 70.
A failed underground brine cavern encased within a mountain of salt is believed to have caused the sinkhole, which appeared Aug. 3.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
US Will Test Infant Formula to See If Botulism Is Wider Risk
Navigators Can’t Parse ‘Additional Insured’ Policy Wording in Georgia Explosion Case
Hackers Hit Sensitive Targets in 37 Nations in Spying Plot
One out of 10 Cars Sold in Europe Is Now Made by a Chinese Brand