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Video: Team reaches the giant Siberian hole at 'the end of the world' | |
(34 minutes later) | |
A mysterious 80m wide crater discovered in Siberia left the world baffled yesterday, with initial speculative explanations ranging from the sensible (possibly a below-ground explosion?) to the ridiculous (obviously it's a Sarlacc Pit). | A mysterious 80m wide crater discovered in Siberia left the world baffled yesterday, with initial speculative explanations ranging from the sensible (possibly a below-ground explosion?) to the ridiculous (obviously it's a Sarlacc Pit). |
Well now man has reached it, with a scientific expedition including a representative from Siberia's Emergencies Ministry heading to the hole to investigate. | Well now man has reached it, with a scientific expedition including a representative from Siberia's Emergencies Ministry heading to the hole to investigate. |
A Russian news report on the visit has yielded better images of the crater, showing rocks tumbling into it as researchers take samples. | A Russian news report on the visit has yielded better images of the crater, showing rocks tumbling into it as researchers take samples. |
A meteorite has been ruled out as the cause of the hole, with the state of the earth around the edge of it pointing to a possible past explosion. | A meteorite has been ruled out as the cause of the hole, with the state of the earth around the edge of it pointing to a possible past explosion. |
It sits around 1,800 miles east of Moscow in a barren permafrost stretch of Yamal, an area that translates as "the end of the world". | It sits around 1,800 miles east of Moscow in a barren permafrost stretch of Yamal, an area that translates as "the end of the world". |
The region is key in Russia's oil and gas production, lending weight to the explosion theory, though a 28 inch layer of permafrost mentioned in the video is puzzling given the amount of heat that would have produced with a blast of that size. | The region is key in Russia's oil and gas production, lending weight to the explosion theory, though a 28 inch layer of permafrost mentioned in the video is puzzling given the amount of heat that would have produced with a blast of that size. |
Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences are said to be collecting soil, air and water samples around the hole, which has an inner diameter of 130 feet – though its depth is unknown. | Members of the Russian Academy of Sciences are said to be collecting soil, air and water samples around the hole, which has an inner diameter of 130 feet – though its depth is unknown. |
Anna Kurchatova, from the Sub-Arctic Scientific Research Centre, told the Siberian Times global warming could be a cause. | Anna Kurchatova, from the Sub-Arctic Scientific Research Centre, told the Siberian Times global warming could be a cause. |
She believes the hole was formed by a mixture of water, salt and gas, igniting an underground explosion. | She believes the hole was formed by a mixture of water, salt and gas, igniting an underground explosion. |
The gas had accumulated in ice mixed with sand beneath the surface of what was a sea 10,000 years ago, and ignited when the permafrost melted “like popping a champagne bottle”, she claimed. | The gas had accumulated in ice mixed with sand beneath the surface of what was a sea 10,000 years ago, and ignited when the permafrost melted “like popping a champagne bottle”, she claimed. |
If her analysis is correct, another explosion could have worrying implications for the many underground gas pipelines running through the region. | If her analysis is correct, another explosion could have worrying implications for the many underground gas pipelines running through the region. |
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