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rainmaker
03-04-2007, 02:06 AM
This is fascinating to me. Anyone have any thoughts?

http://en.epochtimes.com/news/7-3-28/53431.html

The Sudden Formation and Disappearance of a Lake in Guangxi
By Lin Yuguo
Central News Agency
Mar 28, 2007

HONG KONG—Eight years ago, at the location where a big mountain once stood, a lake was suddenly formed with more than 60 feet of water depth. The event occurred in Laibin City, Guangxi Province. Eight years after the lake's first appearance and within seven days of a thunderous blast heard throughout the lake area, the lake disappeared. Geologists suggest that the observed changes might have been caused by movements within the earth's crust.

The Hong Kong Sun reported that local villagers had named the newly formed lake "Dun Lake." In Zhuang ethnic language (used by the Zhuang people, most of them live in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region), the word "dun" means a "mountain submerged under water." Dun Lake was located in Suiyi Town, Yicheng County of Laibin. Villagers said that a great mountain had once stood there but was later occupied by the lake. During the summer of 1999, the mountain had changed into a lake after heavy rains had swept through the area. The newly formed lake had a surface area of 66 acres.

Dun Lake supported schools of fish and shrimp. Villagers had recently started to fish the lake. Some of the fish caught in the lake weighed close to 30 pounds. Many villagers from areas surrounding the lake were now making their living as both fishermen and farmers. The presence of the 66-acre lake also meant that farmers had a water supply which could be regulated to supplement rain in times of drought.

A thunderous blast was heard coming from the direction of Dun Lake on the evening of March 9, 2007. At daybreak on March 10, local residents discovered that water levels in the lake were dropping quickly, and there were several huge vortexes producing humming sound. By March 16, Dun Lake had disappeared.

News about the rapidly emptying lake spread quickly throughout the area. Villagers reported large catches of fish and shrimp as Dun Lake's water levels dropped. However, they felt saddened when the lake had completely disappeared. Local officials said that plans for tourism and agriculture around Dun Lake would have to be postponed.

Lan Gande, director of the Water Resources of Yicheng County and retired engineer Zhou Zuzhi tried to explain the sudden changes at Dun Lake. They said that Yicheng County was located within a rocky area of Karst topography. Lan and Zhou suggested that an underground river that had formed in the soluble layers of bedrock beneath the area now known as Dun Lake may have become blocked by collapsing rocks and/or sludge. When the channels of the underground river were blocked eight years ago, the underground water flowed through cavernous porosity or some crevices in the rocks and backed up, resulting in the appearance of a lake at the surface. When geological changes on March 9 caused the underground channels to open, water quickly drained out and flowed through the channels, thus the lake disappeared.

lookfar
03-04-2007, 02:13 AM
Hi rainmaker

Fascinating post! Sounds like hollow earth stuff to me.

Thanks for sharing :)

lumukanda
03-04-2007, 09:51 AM
thats quite insane actually, and when we hear stories of things like this happening in ancient legends, we simply write it off as allegory or imagination...

limelady
03-04-2007, 10:57 AM
Where did the fish come from 8 years ago when the lake first formed? :confused:

2013
03-04-2007, 01:08 PM
ok the water could be explainable in geological terms but was the lake freshwater or salt water ? If the waters rose from deep within the earth did the fish come with it or were they added later .Did some passing saucer have difficulties and have to jettison its cargo of fish stocked water , and return years later to reclaim it ? Was this area anywhere near the dropa site of a previous space ship crash .google dropa loads of info on there.:D --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.livescience.com/environme...g_anomoly.html
Scientists scanning the deep interior of Earth have found evidence of a vast water reservoir beneath eastern Asia that is at least the volume of the Arctic Ocean.

The discovery marks the first time such a large body of water has found in the planet’s deep mantle.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/6405667.stm
Scientists are to sail to the mid-Atlantic to examine a massive "open wound" on the Earth's surface.
Dr Chris MacLeod, from Cardiff University, said the Earth's crust appeared to be missing across an area of several thousand square kilometres.

rainmaker
04-04-2007, 12:19 AM
Thanks for the links, the Live Science one does not appear to work - I'm not sure if it's because it's a long link and the Forum truncates them?

'd love to read it, if you could provide a ************ link?

Thanks in advance

seamus
04-04-2007, 11:03 PM
Where did the fish come from 8 years ago when the lake first formed? :confused:

That's easy... small ponds where fisher birds catch their prey. A bird lifts off the small pond and flies over the lake on the way home. a few eggs fall out of the fish, and whammo, you've got a hatchery! Plus I wouldn't be surprised if there was some seeding going on by the locals. I mean, if I had a new lake I would want to stock it!

s

whitenight639
04-04-2007, 11:26 PM
''ok kids who wants fish fingers for tea?''
''yayyyyyy''
''pass me my spear, ill be back in 10 be good''
''holy moley that green tea is goood''

2013
05-04-2007, 12:10 AM
Thanks for the links, the Live Science one does not appear to work - I'm not sure if it's because it's a long link and the Forum truncates them?

'd love to read it, if you could provide a ************ link?

Thanks in advance

hi i tried this version
http://www.livescience.com/
but it only gives amin page and couldnt find reference off hand maybe try googling the main theme of the article is all i can say sorry :o

december
06-04-2007, 02:21 AM
and when we hear stories of things like this happening in ancient legends, we simply write it off as allegory or imagination...

Would you name those "ancient legends", please?
And what does it say there?

:)


thats quite insane actually

That's quite normal actually. And I think there is no mystery here...


China's Yellow River may soon dry up.
Water levels are only a third of what they were 50 years ago. Drought, deforestation and mismanagement are responsible, according to Professor Cao Mingming of Xibei University. The river was once known as `the sorrow of China', overflowing at least 1,600 times, changing its course 26 times and killing thousands of people.

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0JQP/is_333/ai_30253953


Yong Ding River drying out since the 1980s...

http://yzw.tea.ac.cn/links.htm


And this is how dry Yong Ding river looks like -

http://yzw.tea.ac.cn/photos/YongDingHe.jpg

december
13-04-2007, 07:54 PM
So, lumukanda, what does it say in those "ancient legends"?