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Sinkholes like this one, near the Ein Gedi Spa, are spreading on
the shores of the Dead Sea, geologists say.
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, he scribbled his will on an old
postcard. After 14 hours a search party pulled him from the
10-meter-(30 foot-) deep 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 sign posted 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 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.
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. The World Bank is
studying a proposal to dig a canal from the Red Sea, more than 160
kilometers (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. |