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Home / Environment / Turkey's Earth Cracks: Biblical or Drought-Driven?

Turkey's Earth Cracks: Biblical or Drought-Driven?

13 Dec

•

Summary

  • Hundreds of deep sinkholes have opened across Turkey's Konya Plain.
  • Severe drought and excessive groundwater pumping are primary causes.
  • Scientists warn similar risks could emerge globally due to declining water levels.
Turkey's Earth Cracks: Biblical or Drought-Driven?

Gigantic sinkholes, some exceeding 100 feet in width and depth, have begun to appear with alarming frequency across Turkey's crucial Konya Plain. While some observers have drawn parallels to biblical prophecies of the earth opening up, scientific explanations point to severe drought conditions and unsustainable groundwater extraction as the primary drivers.

Over 648 such massive collapses have been documented in the Konya region alone, with new sinkholes emerging consistently. Researchers attribute this surge, particularly over the past 25 years, to falling groundwater tables. This crisis is compounded by farmers pumping excessive water to save crops like sugar beet and corn, further depleting underground reserves.

Scientists caution that the risks associated with declining groundwater levels are not isolated to Turkey. Similar scenarios are predicted for parts of the United States, Asia, the Middle East, Australia, and the Mediterranean, threatening communities and ecosystems worldwide as water scarcity intensifies.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The sinkholes are primarily caused by severe drought and excessive groundwater pumping, leading to collapsing underground caves.
While a few sinkholes appeared each decade before 2000, the rate has dramatically increased over the past 25 years due to climate change and prolonged drought.
Yes, scientists warn that parts of the US, particularly in the Southwest and Central Plains facing severe drought, are at similar risk if groundwater levels continue to decline.

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