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"We could often hear the underground blasts at home," he said, adding the mining operators use eight tons of explosives every month and collect more than 20,000 tons of gypsum each year.
A villager shows the crevice along one house wall. [Photo by Zhang Tao / China Daily] |
Wu said county authorities would wait for more comprehensive surveys before commenting about the mine's alleged violations. "The geological environment is not steady, so experts can't go underground just yet," he said, adding that the area will be unstable for another few months.
Villagers like Chen say their ancestors have lived in the area "since the first days of the Earth" and had experienced very few natural disasters.
Wu, who shared his concerns, estimated a mass relocation program could cost up to tens of millions of yuan.
"The county certainly doesn't have that much money," said the information official, who revealed that the Shuangfeng People's Court immediately issued a "property preservation" order on the mine, meaning its profits and assets could be used for disaster relief.
"There are lots of coal mines in the county," he added. "Some collapses have happened near mines before but they were never as serious as this one."
Shuangfeng is officially listed as below the national poverty line but is rich in mineral resources, leading Hunan in coal, limestone, gypsum, granite and gold reserves.
In 2004, the county had 87 mining operation units, according to an economic census report published on the county government's website.
Moving problems
All of the affected villagers, including Liu and Chen, are now living in tents provided by the authorities. Each person is also receiving drinking water and a daily subsidy of 10 yuan ($1.5) and two coal balls.
"It's too hot to stay in the tent during the day; it's like a steam box," said Liu. "We've sent our child and parents to stay with relatives. Only my wife and I sleep in the tent. We hope to have our own home soon."
Sinkholes have forced the resettlement of hundreds of villagers this year and also sparked fears they may herald more natural disasters in the near future.
On May 27, farmers in Xinchang town, Sichuan, found a sinkhole in a rice field that was almost 2 meters deep. A probe by technicians from the Sichuan Institute of Geological Engineering found groundwater exploitation was the cause.
Less than 50 meters away was a well that was used to supply a huge amount of water for production to an iron casting company. As excessive pumping of groundwater removes sand and dirt away, the land grew hollow and finally collapsed, explained Yang Biaoshan, one of the geological engineers on the investigation team.
Sinkholes have also plagued the province's Changning county, with 27 of them reported in eight days starting April 27. The diameter of the largest hole was 60 meters, according to a report in the Chengdu Commercial Daily.
Farmer Chen Fenmo, who lives just 30 meters from a hole, said he stayed up all night in the courtyard, holding his ID card and money, ready to run away in case of further collapses.
Officials with the land and resources bureau in Yibin, which covers Changning, revealed the sinkholes were spread across an area of 600,000 square meters and impacted 290 people, who were forced to move in with relatives or sleep in tents provided by the government.
Initial investigations reportedly linked the incident to a complex distribution of karst caves in the area and suggested lowering groundwater levels may have loosened the soil. Experts have yet to make available the final results of the probe.
The definition of a tiankeng can differ depending who is giving it.
Geologists say they are more than 100 meters in both diameter and depth and caused by conditions that are tens of thousands of years in the making. Villagers, meanwhile, use the term for smaller sinkholes that are usually the result of human activities such as mining, tunneling and exploitation of groundwater, said Zhu Xuewen, a professor with the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences' institute of karst geology.
"This kind of soil collapse (in Hutang) is very common," he said. "It takes place every year around the world. Guilin (in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region) alone has about 1,000 sinkholes on record."
Like many other geologists, he reassured the public that the sinkholes that have appeared recently have nothing to do with earthquakes.
To prevent further collapses, he suggested geological surveys be done thoroughly before construction projects are started to check the condition of the ground.