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One theory is that an earthquake opened up a fissure in the ground, allowing the lake's water to drain through.
"In March we patrolled the area and everything was normal," said Juan Jose Romero from Chile's National Forestry Corporation, Conaf.
"We went again in May and to our surprise we found that the lake had completely disappeared. All that was left were chunks of ice and an enormous fissure."
Originally posted by asala
Interesting and one to watch..
Originally posted by asala
I was reading in to this yesterday and they are saying that there really has been no quakes in that part for a while, So that may actualy take that theroy out,
A bunch of geologists are heading down there to look at it and hopfully come up with an idea as to why
I recall a similar incident where a sink hole opened up under a lake and drained it.
Originally posted by apex
Well, I'd think that this makes sense:
One theory is that an earthquake opened up a fissure in the ground, allowing the lake's water to drain through.
"In March we patrolled the area and everything was normal," said Juan Jose Romero from Chile's National Forestry Corporation, Conaf.
"We went again in May and to our surprise we found that the lake had completely disappeared. All that was left were chunks of ice and an enormous fissure."
Interesting.
Experts now say melting glaciers put pressure on an ice wall that acted as a dam, causing it to give way.
Water in the lake flowed out of the breach into a nearby fjord and then out to the sea, said Andres Rivera, a glaciologist with Chile's Centre of Scientific Studies. Source