Massive crack in earth mysteriously opens up in Bighorn Mountains

angelburst29

The Living Force
Incredible massive crack discovered in Bigjorn Mountains, Wyoming.

Massive crack in earth mysteriously opens up in Bighorn Mountains (Photo's)
http://www.grindtv.com/nature/massive-crack-in-earth-mysteriously-opens-up-in-bighorn-mountains/

October 29, 2015 - Hunters on a private ranch in the Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming stumbled upon an incredible and mysterious scene: a massive crack in the earth that in some places resembles a mini Grand Canyon.

SNS Outfitter & Guides first reported the anomaly on its Facebook page on Friday, saying it “appeared in the last two weeks on a ranch we hunt in the Bighorn Mountains. Everyone here is calling it ‘the gash.’ It’s a really incredible sight.”

With no earthquakes reported in the area, locals were stunned and at a loss to explain the shift of soil and rocks that left the gaping crack estimated to be 750 yards long by 50 yards wide.

The opening is said to be located 10 miles south of Tensleep, Wyoming, in the foothills of the Bighorn Mountains.

Randy Becker of Casper, Wyoming, was hunting in the area over the weekend and shot and shared amazing photos of the scene, which he called “an awesome example of how our earth is not as stable as you might think. Awesome forces at work here to move this much dirt!!”

SNS Outfitter & Guides followed up on Monday with this brief explanation:

“An engineer from Riverton, WY came out to shed a little light on this giant crack in the earth. Apparently, a wet spring lubricated across a cap rock. Then, a small spring on either side caused the bottom to slide out.”

A cap rock is described as a harder or more resistant rock type overlying a weaker or less resistant rock type. So what does that mean?

Seth Wittke, geological manager with the Wyoming Geological Survey in Laramie, explained the event in the Bighorn Mountains as simply a landslide.

“Without getting out there and looking at it, I can’t be positive, but from what I’ve seen on the Internet it looks like a slow-moving landslide,” Wittke told GrindTV in a phone interview.

Regarding the engineer’s explanation about a spring and lubrication, Wittke said, “A lot of landslides are caused by subsurface lubrication by ground moisture or water and things like that, or in this case, a spring.”

Wittke described it as a “fairly small event given the overall aspect of how big landslides can be” and said such an occurrence in the fall in Wyoming is “probably more rare” than it happening in the spring when you’d expect more moisture.

“But they do happen year round, so it’s not out of the ordinary,” Wittke said.

Nevertheless, to the general public, it’s an astonishing event.
 
Wow! That is amazing! A "slow moving landslide"??? The earth really is "opening up".
 
It`s really amazing . As the Laura and C`s said in the last session, the earth changes are happening before our eyes. It`s a interesting and dangerous time to live in.

Session Date: October 10th 2015 said:
Q: (L) There are an awful lot of explosions happening all over the world. It's not just China. There are explosions everywhere.

A: And there will be more and more train derailments as the crust continues to open up.

Q: (L) So, not only are there sinkholes, but there are crustal movements and all kinds of other weird things going on. We're seeing the Earth changes right before our eyes, but it's like in slow motion!

A: Yes. Scale!
 
Looking at the pictures i have wounder if this was some sort of electrical event (discharge-?) perhaps from the ground up.

Though what ever happened would represent a much more smaller event then the GC events.

From angelburts link:
http://www.grindtv.com/nature/massive-crack-in-earth-mysteriously-opens-up-in-bighorn-mountains/
Hunters on a private ranch in the Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming stumbled upon an incredible and mysterious scene: a massive crack in the earth that in some places resembles a mini Grand Canyon.
Read more at http://www.grindtv.com/nature/massive-crack-in-earth-mysteriously-opens-up-in-bighorn-mountains/#igxAiijV4qvPhZKR.99

randy-becker-3-.jpg


grandcanyon1.jpg



The Grand Canyon in the Lab?
Published on Jun 2, 2015
By michael steinbacher

Processes thought to occur over millions of years are thought to have created our planet’s most wondrous geological features. However, within the electric universe community, scientists and independent investigators have explored the evidence that high-energy electromagnetic events have dramatically reshaped the Earth, and many other planets. The indelible mark of such an event may be found at the Grand Canyon. For nearly the past decade, professional photographer Michael Steinbacher has personally explored the geology of the American southwest. Michael proposes his own, unique theory for the formation of the Grand Canyon, in which electrical events still play a decisive role.


Weather- 22-10 but nothing significant. Unless the cold and drop in temps were a possible contributer.
http://www.ktvq.com/clip/11941746/q2-weather-feels-like-a-fall-weekend

2-Edits: 4 Weather report and thought
 
I was going to say that it looks like the Grand Canyon, or Badlands in the making. This must really be putting the uniformitarians into a tissy fit.
 
Looks like you don't even need electrical events to create a "Grand Canyon" - just a bigger "earth opening up" event as this crack that just appeared reveals. Imagine what the event might have been like that split the earth to make the Grand Canyon???
 
angelburst29 said:
Incredible massive crack discovered in Bigjorn Mountains, Wyoming.

Massive crack in earth mysteriously opens up in Bighorn Mountains (Photo's)
http://www.grindtv.com/nature/massive-crack-in-earth-mysteriously-opens-up-in-bighorn-mountains/

October 29, 2015 - Hunters on a private ranch in the Bighorn Mountains of Wyoming stumbled upon an incredible and mysterious scene: a massive crack in the earth that in some places resembles a mini Grand Canyon.

SNS Outfitter & Guides first reported the anomaly on its Facebook page on Friday, saying it “appeared in the last two weeks on a ranch we hunt in the Bighorn Mountains. Everyone here is calling it ‘the gash.’ It’s a really incredible sight.”


Seth Wittke, geological manager with the Wyoming Geological Survey in Laramie, explained the event in the Bighorn Mountains as simply a landslide.

The massive crack that opened up in Bighorn Mountains, Wyoming is reported to have appeared two weeks ago and is described as a landslide. Around the same time frame, another massive landside occurred in Mount Steele, Canada.

Aftermath of Gargantuan Landslide Captured in Space Image
http://news.yahoo.com/aftermath-gargantuan-landslide-captured-space-image-133715696.html

A huge chunk of rock and ice slid down the flanks of Canada's Mount Steele on Oct. 11, at a dizzying speed — one estimate suggests a whopping 123 mph (nearly 200 km/h).

The aftermath of the gargantuan landslide — about 50 million tons (45 million metric tons) tumbled down the mountain — was captured in a stunning satellite image, released last week by NASA's Earth Observatory.


The fifth tallest mountain in Canada, Mount Steele is a major peak in the Saint Elias Mountains, towering over part of the southwestern Yukon Territory. And it's laced with seismometers meant to capture waves of energy that travel through Earth's crust as a result of earthquakes, landslides and other jolts in Earth.

This month, cascading debris from the landslide sent seismic waves through Earth's crust. A global network of seismometers picked up the lengthy undulations (as opposed to the fast jiggles caused by earthquakes). Scientists from the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University — Colin Stark and Göran Ekström — were alerted to the rumbling event when their rapid-detection software picked up that spike in seismicity, according to the Earth Observatory.

The seismic information pointed the scientists to a landslide in the area of Mount Steele. Then, on Oct. 13, the Operational Land Imager on the Landsat-8 satellite captured a snapshot of the landside's aftermath, visually confirming the titanic toppling. Comparing the new photo with a satellite image taken on Oct. 4, before the landslide, revealed a new streak of brown debris coating part of the subpeak of Mount Steele and a portion of Steele Glacier.

This long "debris field" is partly the result of the rubble tumbling onto an icy surface, according to the Earth Observatory.

"'Normal' landslides move a horizontal distance that is fairly similar to the height drop, but landslides on top of glaciers often have an elongated runout since the ice surface has low friction," said Columbia University's Stark, as reported by the Earth Observatory.

The slide itself was huge.

"This is a very large landslide," David Petley, a professor of geography at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, told Live Science in an email. "Outside of when there is a very large earthquake in a mountain chain, there are about 5-10 events of this magnitude per year worldwide." Petley estimates the debris traveled at a whopping 55 meters/second.

Not far from the Mount Steele landslide, another one sent 40 million tons of debris onto Turner Glacier on Aug. 11, according to Petley's Landslide blog. And in 2007, about 100 million tons, or the weight of all the cars in the United States, fell off Mount Steele in a giant slide, according to Ekström.

Canada's Mount Steele 61.0927808* 140.3000000*

Wyoming's Bighorn Mountains 44.3833*N -107.1667*W
 

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom