Dead Sea peril: sinkholes swallow up the unwary
EIN GEDI, Israel — Eli Raz was peering into a narrow hole in the Dead Sea shore when the earth opened up and swallowed him. Fearing he would never be found alive in the 30-foot- deep pit, he scribbled his will on an old postcard.
After 14 hours a search party pulled him from the hole unhurt, and five years later the 69-year-old geologist is working to save others from a similar fate, leading an effort to map the sinkholes that are spreading on the banks of the fabled saltwater lake.
These underground craters can open up in an instant, sucking in whatever lies above and leaving the surrounding area looking like an earthquake zone.
The phenomenon, Raz said, stems from a dire water shortage, compounded in recent years by tourism and chemical industries as well as a growing population. “This is the most remarkable evidence of the brutal interference of humans in the Dead Sea,” he said.
The parched moonscape, famous as the site of biblical Sodom and Gomorra, is the lowest point on earth and runs more than 60 miles through Israel and the West Bank.
Large sections of the coast are fenced off and signposted in Hebrew and English: “danger, open pits” and “sinkhole area ahead.” But it’s too expensive to inspect every place for danger. Just two months ago an Israeli hiker wandered into an area that had no warning signs and was critically injured when he fell into a sinkhole.
While such accidents are rare, Raz says there are up to 3,000 open sinkholes along the coast and likely just as many that haven’t burst open yet. And they’re having a big impact on Israeli development plans.
The collapsing terrain has forced authorities to close a campground, date groves and a small naval base, and to scrap plans for 5,000 new hotel rooms, said Galit Cohen, director of environmental planning at the Ministry of the Environment.
The holes, also found on the Jordanian side of the sea, are the result of the Dead Sea having shrunk by a third since the 1960s when Israel and Jordan built plants to divert water flowing through its main tributary, the Jordan River.
The holes form when a subterranean salt layer that once bordered the sea is dissolved by underground fresh water that follows the receding Dead Sea waters.
The main road along the shore has been torn apart by streams whose energy is increased because they are flowing farther to reach the receding sea, and all construction along the strip between sea and highway is banned, Cohen said.
Both Israel and Jordan evaporate Dead Sea water to extract its phosphates and have built hotels along the coasts for the thousands of tourists who come in search of the curative powers of Dead Sea mud, or simply for the experience of floating unsinkably in its salt-saturated waters.
Only micro-organisms survive in the Dead Sea, but indigenous species of fish, amphibians and snails live in small nearby ponds fed by underground springs, and these could be wiped out as the Dead Sea gets smaller, Raz said.
Many of the changes are masked at the pricey resorts on the sea’s southern end, which lie on the banks of a large artificial pond built by the mineral industry. But around Ein Gedi, the kibbutz or communal farm where Raz lives, the Dead Sea’s shrinkage is evident.
Twenty-five years ago Ein Gedi built a spa by the sea. Now it’s a one-mile trolley ride from the water.
“Any visitor that’s come back for a second visit in these last 10 years would see a dramatic change,” said Gidon Bromberg, Israel director of Friends of the Earth Middle East, an advocacy group. “The sea has run away from the cliffs and it’s exposed kilometers of mud and sea floor.”
No quick solution is in sight.
The World Bank is studying a proposal to dig a canal from the Red Sea, more than 100 miles south, to replenish the Dead Sea’s waters. But with costs estimated at up to $15 billion, there’s little optimism it will happen.
Without a solution, the sea is expected to shrink to lose another third of its area over the next century.
Related News
Two dead men found on Maurya Express yet to be identified (Second Lead)October 4th, 2009 DHANBAD - The two dead men found in toilets of a passenger train's coaches at Dhanbad railway station in Jharkhand are yet to be identified, police said Sunday. No one has urned up to claim the bodies.
Search for bodies in Kerala lake continuesOctober 2nd, 2009 THEKKADY - Indian Navy divers resumed the search for missing people in the Thekkady lake at the Periyar wildlife sanctuary Friday as slippers and scattered bits of clothing floated in the placid waters, mute remnants of the boat capsize that killed 41 tourists. The otherwise crowded wildlife sanctuary was quiet with just a handful of foreign tourists unaware of the tragedy two days ago standing at the rim of the lake, ringed by the forests famous for their elephant sightings.
Airliner returns to Salt Lake City airport after lightning strike; no damage foundSeptember 16th, 2009 Airliner hit by lightning, returns to Utah airportSALT LAKE CITY — An airliner returned to Salt Lake City International Airport when it was struck by lightning shortly after takeoff. The American Airlines MD-80 was bound for Chicago when it took off during storms that swept over the Salt Lake Valley on Monday.
Sightseeing boat sinks in lake on Macedonia's western border, at least 15 drownSeptember 5th, 2009 Sightseeing boat sinks in Macedonian lake, 15 deadOHRID, Macedonia — An overloaded sightseeing boat carrying dozens of Bulgarian tourists sank Saturday in a lake on Macedonia's western border, and at least 15 people drowned, officials said. The vessel, called the Ilinden, sank rapidly in just six meters (20 feet) of water in Lake Ohrid, police spokesman Ivo Kotevski said.
Riverside County family gets unexpected guest as 11-foot Burmese python slithers into yardAugust 18th, 2009 11-foot python unexpected guest for Calif. familyLAKE ELSINORE, Calif.
Woman says she was bitten several times by at least two otters while swimming in Wisconsin lakeAugust 12th, 2009 Woman says she was repeatedly bitten by ottersDRUMMOND, Wis. — An Austrian woman on vacation in Wisconsin is getting rabies shots after she said she was bitten by otters while swimming in a lake.
Charges of felony endangerment filed against Ark. mother of 3 boys who drowned in lakeAugust 7th, 2009 Ark. mother of 3 drowned charged with endangermentLITTLE ROCK, Ark. — The mother of three children who drowned after she drove into a central Arkansas lake has been charged with felony endangerment in the deaths of her sons.
FAA says it will take years to consider proposal for Crater Lake helicoptersJuly 27th, 2009 FAA: Crater Lake helicopter decision to take yearsGRANTS PASS, Ore. — A company wants to fly helicopter tours over Crater Lake National Park, but the Federal Aviation Administration says it will take "several years" to consider the proposal.
Delta reducing number of nonstop Salt Lake City-to-Tokyo flightsJuly 24th, 2009 Delta reducing Salt Lake City-to-Tokyo flightsSALT LAKE CITY — Delta Air Lines says it's reducing the number of nonstop Salt Lake City-to-Tokyo flights, less than two months after the carrier launched them. Delta executive vice president Glen Hauenstein said Wednesday that the swine flu virus hurt traffic that was expected to be on the flight between Salt Lake City International Airport and Narita Airport.
Nevada gold mine fined $500,000 for safety violations in death of worker in 2007July 7th, 2009 NV gold mine fined $500,000 for fatalityRENO, Nev. — Federal regulators have fined Newmont Mining Corp.
Summer happenings in the AdirondacksJuly 6th, 2009 Summer happenings in the AdirondacksLAKE PLACID, N.Y. — A redesigned Web site for New York's Adirondacks region offers aerial videos of the region, with a bird's-eye view of everything from main streets to mountain tops.
Late own goal lets Real Salt Lake tie Earthquakes 1-1July 4th, 2009 Real Salt Lake ties Earthquakes 1-1SANDY, Utah — San Jose kicked in an own-goal in second-half injury time, allowing Real Salt Lake to tie the Earthquakes 1-1 on Friday night. Real Salt Lake (5-6-5) extended its undefeated streak to five matches (2-0-3), tying a franchise record last done Sept.
Police say bus crash kills 23 in head-on collision near Lake Titicaca in PeruJuly 3rd, 2009 Peru bus collision kills 23 near Lake TiticacaLIMA, Peru — Two buses crashed head-on Thursday on a mountain road near Lake Titicaca in Peru, killing at least 23 people and injuring 50 more, police said. The morning crash occurred in the Santa Lucia district, about an hour's drive from Lake Titicaca high in the Andes, a Puno state highway police officer told The Associated Press by phone.
Report: 26 people confirmed dead from landslide in southwest ChinaJune 6th, 2009 Report: 26 people dead in China from landslideBEIJING — China's state television says 26 people have died in a landslide that buried an iron ore plant and several homes in a valley in southwestern China. CCTV said Saturday that seven people have been rescued, three of which were seriously injured but in a stable condition in the hospital.
UK construction activity shrinks again, mortgage approvals riseJune 2nd, 2009 UK construction activity shrinks againLONDON — Activity in the U.K. construction industry retreated for the 15th straight month in May, but the number of home mortgages approved has risen for the third month, according to reports published Tuesday.