Toronto Star

N.S. sinkhole growing a centimetre at a time

The hole is about the size of two basketball courts

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OXFORD, N.S. — As residents of a small Nova Scotia town gathered Thursday for a public informatio­n session about what created a large and active sinkhole near a busy Tim Hortons, a geologist suggested the high-tech tools needed to solve the mystery could soon be on their way.

Amy Tizzard, a regional geologist with the provincial Department of Energy and Mines, said the muddy sinkhole remains almost as big as two basketball courts — but it hasn’t grown much in the last week.

“I wouldn’t say that it’s done, though,” she said in an interview from Oxford, N.S., a town of 1,000 roughly 30 minutes from the New Brunswick border. “It’s still an unpredicta­ble situation ... (But) it’s still eroding along its margins, only on the centimetre scale.”

The town recently issued a re- quest for proposals to get the gear they need to look beneath the surface of the surroundin­g area — and the deadline for contractor­s was Wednesday.

“We want to find out the extent of the undergroun­d cavern responsibl­e for this ... sinkhole,” Tizzard said, suggesting there may be other sinkholes nearby .

A geophysica­l survey is needed, using ground-penetratin­g radar and other tools, she said.

The ground beneath the Oxford area is known to contain gypsum and salt deposits, minerals that dissolve when infiltrate­d by water.

First reported in July as a hole the size of a dinner plate, the sinkhole has since swallowed trees, picnic tables and part of a parking lot near the Oxford and Area Lions Club.

The spectacle has been drawing curious onlookers to the small town, and has even caused minor car accidents.

Residents were to gather at a local theatre for an informatio­n session led by community liaison geologist Garth Demont.

 ?? SEAN WHALEN PHOTOGRAPH­Y THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A geologist says high-tech tools are needed to solve the mystery of a large and active sinkhole in Oxford, N.S.
SEAN WHALEN PHOTOGRAPH­Y THE CANADIAN PRESS A geologist says high-tech tools are needed to solve the mystery of a large and active sinkhole in Oxford, N.S.

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