Very interesting video. I live in Wisconsin and the Niagra Escarpment, or "The Ledge" as we call it, runs through the eastern part of my county. I'm a retired DNR water specialist and very familiar with Karst topography. It can be a headache for developing areas but also provides some unique habitat.
Christ bro, do you have any ghost stories? My parents lived there when I was a baby and saw headless ghost animals running next to the car at night. I'm from Columbus btw. Which is just as haunted.
I was in Dublin Ohio, saw a large depression, and thought about this. Looked it up, that woods has 6 verified Karst and I used the map and found another one nearby on wind wood dr.
When I was a boy, my parents took me to see the Blue Hole in Castalia. I remember they had a stream with trout and ducks. Also a bee hive enclosed in glass. It was a minor roadside attraction that has now been closed for many years.
Well this video showed up in my feed. Interesting because I just reported a sink hole that developed in my yard. I live in Ohio. Still waiting on the city inspectors to come out to look at. Maybe I should check with ODNR.
Yep! That's common in NE Indiana too, only our Karst landscape is saturated with water, and silt from the last ice age. We have a lot of sink holes that have actually formed into mud springs and fresh water springs. Many of which are actually quite dangerous like the one in Wells County where Pickette's Run in Bluffton begins. It's a silt filled spring that is easy to get stuck in. They have fenced off the area and erected warning signs because of people getting stuck in the spring. There are also records of underground silt-caves found throughout southern Wells County which have swallowed many drill rigs.
Interesting video. I was not aware Ohio was as affected by this as you are. I grew up in Kentucky. My grandfather had a big sinkhole on his farm. There were also a lot of springs on his property so it makes sense.
I lived in castalia next to the duck pond,which never frove because of the constant water being pumped in and also lived in Bellevue for years..glad to see this video and gave me some insight on this topic.
Erosion Police. I like the sound of that. I live in Texas and I found your video educational. I am grateful for your type of work. You could save so many from harm who would be drinking or using bad water. San Antonio, Texas has such a large amount of spring water flowing through it, it has spent millions of dollars to contain it and use it.
Interesting...I'm a lifelong Ohioan. I've been all around our beautiful nation, North to South and East coast to West coast but I'm always happy to be home. Been all over Ohio as well. I'm glad we're considered a "flyover state"! Appalachia to the Great Lakes and everything in-between, I love Ohio!
When I was in Ohio no offense to you, I thought it was the biggest human garbage site in the nation I've never seen so many people living in a hotel and most of them were barefoot in the lobby eating the free breakfast BAREFOOT!!!!
@@AranMcGinnis sure I am you sound more than a little offended at what I observed in your state, I'm just saying what I saw I work for a moving company had to stay in a hotel on my way through and I saw some shit that even Baltimore city didn't have to offer but maybe you're just used to living in garbage
The holes in that cornfield is a tile blow out. I've repaired hundreds of them here in central Ohio. I've seen them big enough to park two combines in it.
That so called fault @3:27 is a beauty, the cause of which reminds me of the energy released during Cosmic "THUNDER BOLTS"..., I see, "saw toothed arcing", vitrified triangles.... The Red Dot in Montgomery County is likely a center dome from the BIG Comet impact. FIERY SERPENTS, ..."turned Them to stone"
Wow, not exactly sure why this was #1 on my suggested videos, but I can say thst I actually learned something new about my homeland and nevertheless about geology all together!
I had heard the term karst used in a travelog about Michigan. No explanation what it meant at the time. Nice to have some understanding about those hollows they were pointing out.
Ohio, my home state, is just such an interesting place. I love it's rich natural and cultural history, unfortunately, I could not make a life there like I have today on Maui. For a state that seems increasingly red party/freedom focused, they sure did make it hard for a moral, intelligent, hard working hippie to get by. I do love the natural beauty of the state though. Growing up in Enon, I know John Bryan, Glen Helen, and Clifton Gorge like the back of my hand. The Miami River Valley is home to dozens of interesting geologic wonders and features as well. Even the Mad River flood plain is dotted interesting cliffs, creeks, and wetlands.
@@TheOhioDNR Nice. I will be back home for a wedding this fall, gonna take my wife to see Clifton Mills with all the lights. I grew up in that area. I miss those rolling hillsides!
I was. born in Toledo. Lived there 14 years. Didn't learn about sinkholes until I was a home health nurse in the Orlando area. I saw a picture of a whole house going down a sinkhole. A road between Maitland and Orlando collapsed.
I used to visit the blue hole in Castalia, it was a tourist attraction when I was a kid. Always wondered what hapenned to it. Like, it has to still be there...ty
I was mushroom hunting in Indiana and come upon a creek that disappeared into the ground like that and it came out about 100yrds down stream. I recorded it. Where the water went into the ground the dirt was very soft i was sketch so i walked on the hill. But it was very interesting.
I live only a few countries away from Ohio Caverns, as a kid wed take school trips there. Amazing to think we have something so amazing that not every school district does... well unless you go to school around here
Never hearad a "sink holes" being called a karst before. Left beautiful Ohio in September of this year. Saw a sink hole down near South end , near Innis off s high on railroad property? If memory serves me, making report because I now reside in Florida, Have to admit, I'm homesick, up in Ohio there will be worry of frost , in 60 years do I remember it snowed in October? Rather be cold then live in this heat . Sorry but wanted to vent
So what about the 655 ft tall commercial wind turbines being proposed by APEX in Seneca and Erie counties, right in the areas which have known Karst and multiple sinkholes?
Those turbines could very well become the greatest environmental disaster/folly of our time. There’s a reason the Ohio Supreme Court is hearing the case (in Feb 2023) to stop the APEX project. Hopefully they’ll do the right thing. So sad for the people of Erie and Huron counties. Karst is NO PLACE to build turbines.
I worked in a housing development next to the Indian caverns in Delaware and the dirt work crew found a sinkhole close to the property line the developer told then to pack stumps and chunks of concrete in it and keep working I only wonder if that was an entrance into the caverns smh
Developer on Fla built a whole subdivision of expensive homes ontop of buried trees he took down then in St. Petersburg . Years later all the homes started having problems with sinkholes all thru out the subdivision & under the foundations when the trees rotted away. It was very costly for the developer he had to pay alot to fix it . My Dad's home was one of them
I live in the 44305 area code and I have sinkholes / Karst in my backyard , my neighbors have worse ones- water pours out. I’ve contacted my city but they recommend I contact ODNR my zip code has coal mining history ( it was part of Tallmadge Townshii in the 18- 1900s)
I have a sinkhole starting in Blountville Tennessee on my property about a mile from Caverns when it rains heavy water pushes up out of the ground and it is so soft I believe if I jumped in the middle I would sink to China 🤔
Reminds me of my parents property in Indiana. The land next door was underground mined for coal years ago; and some of the tunnels are under my parents land, and occasionally caves in; making a sinkhole. Sometimes, the tunnel can be seen in the bottom of the hole. Their land wasn't supposed to have been mined!
While my lifetime interest has been karst and exploration. this video of Ohio geological issues won't prompt me to visit. I have enough to see on the west coast.
@@rossbryan6102 A clueless response. The porous rock that forms the karst could easily route between your “core sample” drill bit(s). If you miss it, and subsequently allow your foundation pancake to block a channel vein of waterflows, the results can be catastrophic. ANY KNOWN KARST FORMATION should be avoided as a location for turbine foundations. This is a crystal clear case of profits coming before people. Karst is more than “voids and sinkholes”; karst is Swiss-cheese like worn holes snaking through limestone, allowing water to travel great distances undetected. Block the holes with concrete and you’re causing major environmental risk.
STILL NOT A PROBLEM AS CORE SAMPLING WILL DETERMINE THE DEPTHS OF STABLE ROCK FORMATIONS! CONCRETE OR STEEL PILINGS CAN FILL THE VOIDS! AS FOR PLUGGING OFF UNDERWATER CHANNELING , THE CHARACTERISTICS OF KARST CAN SIMPLY REROUTE WATER AROUND OBSTRUCTIONS! EXAMPLE ,THINK OF A NAIL DRIVEN IN A SPONGE! KHARST IS SOME FASCINATING STUFF, YEARS AGO I TOURED SENACA CAVE SOUTH OF BELVUE OHIO! LUCKILY IT WAS AT A TIME THE WATER TABLE WAS VERY LOW!
Groundwater becomes acidic from bacterial respiration; they consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide that dissolves in the water producing carbonic acid. This reduces the pH. Acidic water dissolves the carbonate rock which is a buffer. Incidentally, if a sinkhole forms on your property, say underneath your home then you're screwed because home owner's jnsurance policies won't cover it. I had this happen to a friend. He watched his swimming pool drain through a crack in the bottom one morning. Then the pool and his house started to slide into the sinkhole. The city condemned his property and he had to move out. The bank still expected him to make his mortgage payment but the insurance co. wouldn't cover his loss. I never knew how the problem was resolved because I moved away. He was really bummed out.
Shhhhh we don't talk about the grass m@n! Its a state secret and if it was to get out that we have a rather large hairy wild man running loose its unimaginable what that quack moneymaker and his BFRO would do to our beautiful woodlands and open grasslands in an attempt to capture or kill this rather large hairy wild man that freely roams the night!
That expains a whole lot of information possibly. If I am understanding what it looks like...Hitchcock Woods is totally looking like this. Water streams ..and we have sink holes and so does my neighbor. Never know
How about not allowing developing Karst areas. Nature put in these areas as a warning to keep away. But man and his greed just can't help but try to tame her.
Very interesting video. I live in Wisconsin and the Niagra Escarpment, or "The Ledge" as we call it, runs through the eastern part of my county. I'm a retired DNR water specialist and very familiar with Karst topography. It can be a headache for developing areas but also provides some unique habitat.
I was born an raised in Toledo. I learned something new today.
Christ bro, do you have any ghost stories? My parents lived there when I was a baby and saw headless ghost animals running next to the car at night.
I'm from Columbus btw. Which is just as haunted.
Enlightening those who don't know their karst from a hole in the ground.
😆
Um, that would., er, be me until I saw this video......... Very witty post, Ron. :)
Ron Walker, thank God. I can now say, with certainty, "I know my karst from a hole in the ground."
as we used to say in geology class, "gneiss one".
Haha
I learned something, I have never heard of karst before.
Lo look l
Kentucky, too
Yes, I've heard much more about 'cars'.
Never heard of this either.
Did you study geology in school, oh they teach it in Kentucky we have possibly largest cave system in country.
I was in Dublin Ohio, saw a large depression, and thought about this. Looked it up, that woods has 6 verified Karst and I used the map and found another one nearby on wind wood dr.
When I was a boy, my parents took me to see the Blue Hole in Castalia. I remember they had a stream with trout and ducks. Also a bee hive enclosed in glass. It was a minor roadside attraction that has now been closed for many years.
I was there a couple times when I was a kid. Really neat.
Seems I remember feeding llamas too? Maybe that was at deer park? That was 50+ years ago lol
Yes they put die in it and it comes out in the lake.. neat place. Leaned about it from my grandparents
That guy who fell in a hole while running from the police… he was in-karst-erated.
Ha!👍
That's a very good dad joke I love it
Ooh that's a stretch .
Inbread
When they threw the lad in the paddy wagon, he karst up a storm, don't ya' know..
I live in Bellevue. Entire life. It scares me a great deal to live here. Flooding is torrential even with a minor storm. Very interesting!
Well this video showed up in my feed. Interesting because I just reported a sink hole that developed in my yard. I live in Ohio. Still waiting on the city inspectors to come out to look at. Maybe I should check with ODNR.
Idea would be call insurance company to see if home is covered incase of,,,,
Learn something new every day ! Never heard of this before
I used to live just down the street from bluehole. It was a awesome place to go as a kid.
Yep! That's common in NE Indiana too, only our Karst landscape is saturated with water, and silt from the last ice age. We have a lot of sink holes that have actually formed into mud springs and fresh water springs. Many of which are actually quite dangerous like the one in Wells County where Pickette's Run in Bluffton begins. It's a silt filled spring that is easy to get stuck in. They have fenced off the area and erected warning signs because of people getting stuck in the spring. There are also records of underground silt-caves found throughout southern Wells County which have swallowed many drill rigs.
Wow maybe there's some interesting fossils at the bottom of that mud spring kind of like the La Brea Tar Pits
@@doomoo5365 I suppose it would be possible, but the most prevalent fossil in Southern Wells county Indiana is sweet crude.
Interesting video. I was not aware Ohio was as affected by this as you are. I grew up in Kentucky. My grandfather had a big sinkhole on his farm. There were also a lot of springs on his property so it makes sense.
You've thrown me off for years with those nest! But now I know exactly where to find you Grassman.
Will he see this? Must use Verizon.
I lived in castalia next to the duck pond,which never frove because of the constant water being pumped in and also lived in Bellevue for years..glad to see this video and gave me some insight on this topic.
Erosion Police. I like the sound of that.
I live in Texas and I found your video educational. I am grateful for your type of work. You could save so many from harm who would be drinking or using bad water. San Antonio, Texas has such a large amount of spring water flowing through it, it has spent millions of dollars to contain it and use it.
Interesting...I'm a lifelong Ohioan. I've been all around our beautiful nation, North to South and East coast to West coast but I'm always happy to be home. Been all over Ohio as well. I'm glad we're considered a "flyover state"! Appalachia to the Great Lakes and everything in-between, I love Ohio!
When I was in Ohio no offense to you, I thought it was the biggest human garbage site in the nation I've never seen so many people living in a hotel and most of them were barefoot in the lobby eating the free breakfast BAREFOOT!!!!
@@MikeY-nh2we Yeah? Where was that? No offense to you but you're full of shit.
@@AranMcGinnis sure I am you sound more than a little offended at what I observed in your state, I'm just saying what I saw I work for a moving company had to stay in a hotel on my way through and I saw some shit that even Baltimore city didn't have to offer but maybe you're just used to living in garbage
@@MikeY-nh2we Where was this?
@@MikeY-nh2weA moving company? What moving company? First if all; you work for a moving company? Gimme your credentials...you're a liar...no offense.
Live in Highland County. Learned something new.
The holes in that cornfield is a tile blow out. I've repaired hundreds of them here in central Ohio. I've seen them big enough to park two combines in it.
How big, for those who dont know size of combine…
Yup, that would be my guess! Fixed a few on our farm.
@@macking104 a combine is probably 25-28 feet long and 12-15 feet wide and 10-12 feet tall. Think monster truck with a huge body.
Had to fix tile blow holes every year on the farms in Michigan. Deeper the tile the bigger the blow holes.
Tiles?
I never knew about this. Very informative. Thank you! ☺
Well water can be polluted by quarry digging like what happened on STATE ROUTE 601 IN NORWALK HURUN COUNTY OHIO.
Thank you for videos like this.
Great content! The most interesting video I’ve watched in a long time
That so called fault @3:27 is a beauty, the cause of which reminds me of the energy released during Cosmic "THUNDER BOLTS"..., I see, "saw toothed arcing", vitrified triangles.... The Red Dot in Montgomery County is likely a center dome from the BIG Comet impact. FIERY SERPENTS, ..."turned Them to stone"
Wow, not exactly sure why this was #1 on my suggested videos, but I can say thst I actually learned something new about my homeland and nevertheless about geology all together!
Not from Ohio but interesting.
I've toured the Cavern in Campaign County. Beautiful but claustrophobic, it is underground and very narrow path.
I live about 1.5 miles from Serpent Mound in Southern Ohio & there's a BIG sink hole on the property to my north 1/2 mile away....
I had heard the term karst used in a travelog about Michigan. No explanation what it meant at the time. Nice to have some understanding about those hollows they were pointing out.
Ohio, my home state, is just such an interesting place. I love it's rich natural and cultural history, unfortunately, I could not make a life there like I have today on Maui. For a state that seems increasingly red party/freedom focused, they sure did make it hard for a moral, intelligent, hard working hippie to get by.
I do love the natural beauty of the state though. Growing up in Enon, I know John Bryan, Glen Helen, and Clifton Gorge like the back of my hand. The Miami River Valley is home to dozens of interesting geologic wonders and features as well. Even the Mad River flood plain is dotted interesting cliffs, creeks, and wetlands.
You should check our newest state park, Great Council State Park near Xenia. - ua-cam.com/video/zW3YuEp_wuo/v-deo.htmlsi=oR7OfxSDWN5Xio7W
@@TheOhioDNR Nice. I will be back home for a wedding this fall, gonna take my wife to see Clifton Mills with all the lights. I grew up in that area. I miss those rolling hillsides!
I was. born in Toledo. Lived there 14 years. Didn't learn about sinkholes until I was a home health nurse in the Orlando area. I saw a picture of a whole house going down a sinkhole. A road between Maitland and Orlando collapsed.
i lived in the Elyria/Grafton/LaGrange area for most of my childhood .
might go back and look around .
I used to visit the blue hole in Castalia, it was a tourist attraction when I was a kid. Always wondered what hapenned to it. Like, it has to still be there...ty
My great grandfather once owned the blue hole in Castalia John Henry Miller was his name.
I heard they shut it down.
Everything I know about karst, I learned from this video.
I was mushroom hunting in Indiana and come upon a creek that disappeared into the ground like that and it came out about 100yrds down stream. I recorded it. Where the water went into the ground the dirt was very soft i was sketch so i walked on the hill. But it was very interesting.
I live only a few countries away from Ohio Caverns, as a kid wed take school trips there. Amazing to think we have something so amazing that not every school district does... well unless you go to school around here
I learned something new thank you for the information
Never hearad a "sink holes" being called a karst before.
Left beautiful Ohio in September of this year.
Saw a sink hole down near South end , near Innis off s high on railroad property? If memory serves me, making report because I now reside in Florida,
Have to admit, I'm homesick, up in Ohio there will be worry of frost , in 60 years do I remember it snowed in October? Rather be cold then live in this heat . Sorry but wanted to vent
Thanks. Very informative.
used to be a tourist attraction in Highland county Know as the 7 cave
I went to the 7 Caves several times as a kid, Daniel Boone camped out in one of the caves back in the day.
more than one blue hole? oboy!
I loved the 7 Caves went there menu times as a kid and adult
@@joeyank2451 shame it's not open to the public like it used to be
@@birdfire0011 I know Darn shame
7 years late - but here on this farm we just call them "tile blowouts"
Yep and they can eat a tractor sometimes
@@crazycaseyandoldmanangus7143 swallowed a dually articulating 3 years ago..... Still trying to fix it now.
@@macanocious3000 yikes sorry man good luck with repairs
I have a few karsts looking patches in my backyard. But I havent thoroughly inspect it.
Toledo Here .....Point Place to be exact , right next to the Lake....COLD !
So what about the 655 ft tall commercial wind turbines being proposed by APEX in Seneca and Erie counties, right in the areas which have known Karst and multiple sinkholes?
You nailed it.
How do you think they’re powering the lightbulbs in the caves?
Please place them they’ there not in my backyard
Those turbines could very well become the greatest environmental disaster/folly of our time. There’s a reason the Ohio Supreme Court is hearing the case (in Feb 2023) to stop the APEX project. Hopefully they’ll do the right thing. So sad for the people of Erie and Huron counties. Karst is NO PLACE to build turbines.
I knew Karst growing up One crazy dude
I knew him too.....he was a short-tall-fat-skinny guy and his momma was a woman!
@@petermorgan3744 you just made my night. How is USA?
We have this type of land in central florida. I worked for a orange grove company in the late sixties named Karst.😷🍺
I worked in a housing development next to the Indian caverns in Delaware and the dirt work crew found a sinkhole close to the property line the developer told then to pack stumps and chunks of concrete in it and keep working I only wonder if that was an entrance into the caverns smh
I would hate to be that property owner. Gee......why is my house sinking? 😳
Home rd.?
Yea home road and 315
Easiest and fastest way to push them off to another day.
Developer on Fla built a whole subdivision of expensive homes ontop of buried trees he took down then in St. Petersburg . Years later all the homes started having problems with sinkholes all thru out the subdivision & under the foundations when the trees rotted away. It was very costly for the developer he had to pay alot to fix it . My Dad's home was one of them
The guy is a really good speaker!
They are called Karst, because the were first categoried in an area of Poland. Karst, Poland.
Those groundhogs will make there homes anywhere.🤣
What causes a person to not like and thumbs down basic geological information?
I live in the 44305 area code and I have sinkholes / Karst in my backyard , my neighbors have worse ones- water pours out.
I’ve contacted my city but they recommend I contact ODNR my zip code has coal mining history ( it was part of Tallmadge Townshii in the 18- 1900s)
FLs massive limestone sys, makes tons of crystal springs, + drink H2O. Scary to sleep on it though.
Sinkholes all over family farm here in Kentucky
Ah, a farm in Kentucky. Beautiful place. You're lucky to live there!
Mine too (Ohio).... around here we just call them "tile blowouts" though...
@@macanocious3000 what you are talking about and what is in this video are two totally different things.
@@Dougarrowhead I get it that tile blowouts are not natural and Karst is. But many of the images in this clip AREN'T NATURAL .......
I have a sinkhole starting in Blountville Tennessee on my property about a mile from Caverns when it rains heavy water pushes up out of the ground and it is so soft I believe if I jumped in the middle I would sink to China 🤔
Reminds me of my parents property in Indiana. The land next door was underground mined for coal years ago; and some of the tunnels are under my parents land, and occasionally caves in; making a sinkhole. Sometimes, the tunnel can be seen in the bottom of the hole. Their land wasn't supposed to have been mined!
A large sink hole opened up on my nextdoor neighbour's property and the water is moving like a blender.
next door you too close then,,from Kentucky best of luck ck ins company of yours?
Very helpful, thanks
Could you please show me documentation from people telling their stories from tens of millions, heck,...200 million years ago? I’d like to read them.
While my lifetime interest has been karst
and exploration. this video of Ohio
geological issues won't prompt me to
visit. I have enough to see on the west coast.
National Speleological Society. NSS caver explorers ought to be delighted with new finds.
What would happen if you blowout a sink hole, to cause natural filter action?????
We have many in Missouri around where I live!
Did you go to OU? I think u were in my geology class
Wind companies are trying to put 600 plus foot wind turbines on this. How smart is that.
NO PROBLEM HERE!
JUST TAKE ROCK CORE SAMPLES TO DETERMINE THE DEPTH TO STABLE ROCK , THEN DEEPEN FOOTINGS IF NECESSARY !
@@rossbryan6102 A clueless response. The porous rock that forms the karst could easily route between your “core sample” drill bit(s). If you miss it, and subsequently allow your foundation pancake to block a channel vein of waterflows, the results can be catastrophic. ANY KNOWN KARST FORMATION should be avoided as a location for turbine foundations. This is a crystal clear case of profits coming before people. Karst is more than “voids and sinkholes”; karst is Swiss-cheese like worn holes snaking through limestone, allowing water to travel great distances undetected. Block the holes with concrete and you’re causing major environmental risk.
Right on Roger! Right on…
STILL NOT A PROBLEM AS CORE SAMPLING WILL DETERMINE THE DEPTHS OF STABLE ROCK FORMATIONS!
CONCRETE OR STEEL PILINGS CAN FILL THE VOIDS!
AS FOR PLUGGING OFF UNDERWATER CHANNELING , THE CHARACTERISTICS OF
KARST CAN SIMPLY REROUTE WATER AROUND OBSTRUCTIONS!
EXAMPLE ,THINK OF A
NAIL DRIVEN IN A SPONGE!
KHARST IS SOME FASCINATING STUFF, YEARS AGO I TOURED SENACA CAVE SOUTH OF BELVUE OHIO!
LUCKILY IT WAS AT A TIME THE WATER TABLE WAS VERY LOW!
Thanks for the information useful
Groundwater becomes acidic from bacterial respiration; they consume oxygen and produce carbon dioxide that dissolves in the water producing carbonic acid. This reduces the pH. Acidic water dissolves the carbonate rock which is a buffer.
Incidentally, if a sinkhole forms on your property, say underneath your home then you're screwed because home owner's jnsurance policies won't cover it. I had this happen to a friend. He watched his swimming pool drain through a crack in the bottom one morning. Then the pool and his house started to slide into the sinkhole. The city condemned his property and he had to move out. The bank still expected him to make his mortgage payment but the insurance co. wouldn't cover his loss. I never knew how the problem was resolved because I moved away. He was really bummed out.
So if i report any on my property, does it effect property insurance?
You forgot to mention Zane Caverns in Logan County
Actually he was wrong saying Ohio Caverns is in Champaign County. Ohio Caverns are 4 miles out of West Liberty, Ohio which is in Logan county.
@@RedWithBluEyes yep yep
These potentially could reveal dinosaur bones?
be surprised what you find in Ohio
If you'd like to map some sinks, come to Scioto Township in Delaware county. I can show you half a dozen, some quite large.
I feel like there is a large unexplored cave in ohio. Probably in someone’s back yard or woods they don’t know is there.
Awesome
Karst/ good for exciting caving! YAY! 😄😄😄😄😄😄 love caving!
I feel for the people with the flooded yard at 4:19.
When are you going to talk about the creatures witnessed in Ohio?
Shhhhh we don't talk about the grass m@n! Its a state secret and if it was to get out that we have a rather large hairy wild man running loose its unimaginable what that quack moneymaker and his BFRO would do to our beautiful woodlands and open grasslands in an attempt to capture or kill this rather large hairy wild man that freely roams the night!
Presumably, in rural karst areas on many farms the tip/dump was plopped right into the nearest sink hole - within eye sight of the well.
Ohio is weird, in general.
Grandpa I dont wanna dig holes anymore..
Grandpa: well that's too damn bad!!
I'd be afraid to call the government about anything.
Could not agree more!
Yuh. Limestone is such a threat to our freedom.
learned its a big hole in the ground that goes some where to no where ?
This guy is the Karston Daly of Ohio geology.
That expains a whole lot of information possibly. If I am understanding what it looks like...Hitchcock Woods is totally looking like this. Water streams ..and we have sink holes and so does my neighbor. Never know
Can't we just drill a shaft and
drop a charge down there and
collapse the void before it
becomes an open mess ??
"Fix a hole by making it a BIGGER hole?? Da fuq??? You voted for Joe dintcha......?
@Another Wacko shit people asked that 50 years ago.
He lives rent free in your head .
That where them Yeti live?
So is 75 a karstway?
Interesting, my last name is Karst..lol! Maybe that's why this showed up in my recommended 🤔 😅
How about not allowing developing Karst areas. Nature put in these areas as a warning to keep away. But man and his greed just can't help but try to tame her.
Ive seen many depressions in the ground out in the middle of no mans land and had no clue
I thought this was from 1980. How has the state stepped up and helped? Doubtful
What mineral is Jimmy Walker's favorite? ...."Dolomite!"
Now that one made us LOL!
Lol.....wonder how many get that reference
Interesting, Joe Lieberman was the only blue-hole I knew before.
Wow, you learn something new everyday!(if you try)
I work with a Jim Karst…seriously though this was interesting.
Beijing has a biggest karst landscape park in northern China, it's so beautiful!
Too bad I'll never go see them
China Hayes us in the 🇺🇸
What's the name I would like to Google it. There's a great video of a drone flying over Southern China it was incredibly beautiful.
Cool 🌞🌞🇺🇸🇺🇸
Cool!
Have had several strokes. So sometimes it comes out terrible I know. So it's ok to laugh.
I thought it was some kind of animal living in a burro 😂
Land owners nightmare of money down the hole of doom.
Or a tractor! 😄