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I don't believe "collapse" is the operative word any longer. I realize Lake Peigneur collapsed, but wasn't it due to having a vacated area beneath it? In this case, we have pressure, and as soon as the gas is evacuated, the crude pushes up from the BOTTOM of the sinkhole, and there is bubbling for miles and miles. If this is due to Macondo breaching horizontally across the Continental shelf into the Coastal aquafer (and by connecting dots, this can be conjecture), which merges with the Mississippi aquafer, the game has changed. The pressure is from UNDERNEATH and if its sealed in, IMO, it will just explode somewhere else. The only Lake Peigneur-like affect would be sucking down or shifting masses in the Gulf of Gulf of Mexico to compensate for the cavity that will develop as material finds its way into less overhead pressure in the aquafer for the undersea crude at 1000psi, when the clay/loam can only support 75psi. Add this to it. Two munitions bunkers exploded last night…READ bunkers…underground…in NW Lousinana and Huntsville Alabama. They tried to blame it on a meteor shower, which did not show up on radar, but flashes of light were seen on the ground, as well as loud booms and houses shaking nearly off foundations. Sound familiar? There was also a debree field of ash. http://beforeitsnews.com/alternative/2012/10/alert-northwest-louisiana-reporting-loud-boom-shaking-rattlingwindows-breaking-2480494.html Be sure to watch the second video of the three from a local news.
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I think you're right these events seem to be connected. It's not nice to fool Mother Nature. She will always win.
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Took them long enough…..
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