Shocking footage emerged this week of an enormous sinkhole appearing in a football pitch in Illinois. 

Estimated to be 100-feet wide and 30-feet deep, the hole in appeared with little warning and swallowed a set of floodlights, footage shows. 

Fortunately no-one was injured, but experts warn that dramatic sinkhole formations like this could happen more and more in the future. 

Sinkholes range from a few feet in diameter to enormous, gaping chasms, and are typically a natural phenomenon but can also be caused by human processes like mining. 

Peter Styles, professor of environmental geophysics at Keele University, said the Illinois pitch was likely built over disused mining shafts or ‘workings’. 

The massive sinkhole opened suddenly on Wednesday morning in Gordon Moore Park in Alton, Illinois - although fortunately there were no injuries

The massive sinkhole opened suddenly on Wednesday morning in Gordon Moore Park in Alton, Illinois – although fortunately there were no injuries

What are sinkholes? 

Sinkholes are often saucer-shaped hollows that are the result of some kind of collapse or removal of an underlying layer of rocks. 

Whilst the process of gradual dissolution can cause a sinkhole to form, other factors including human activity, can induce sinkholes to form. 

Sinkholes range from a few feet in diameter to enormous, gaping chasms, and are typically a natural phenomenon but can be caused by human processes like mining. 

‘When you excavate rock to extract either limestone, coal or for other minerals the spaces and tunnels are known as workings,’ he told MailOnline. 

‘Folks think they can get way with having playing fields over old workings. 

‘It costs money to remediate it and they may claim that’s these are historic workings and as they haven’t collapsed up till now and are stable – but that’s not how geology necessarily works. 

‘As you can image if this happens beneath occupied property it is calamitous.’ 

According to the academic, the series of pitches in Gordon Moore Park, Alton, Illinois, would have likely been ‘precariously balanced’ on a relatively thin layer of rock covering the hole. 

‘The very abrupt collapse which we see from the great video suggests that it was precariously balanced,’ Professor Styles said. 

‘Sometimes a heavy rainfall might be enough to trigger the final collapse or even vibration from a small earthquake somewhere regionally.’ 

Sinkholes range from a few feet in diameter to enormous, gaping chasms, and are typically a natural phenomenon but can also be caused by human processes like mining

The shocking moment the football pitch sinkhole in Illinois opened up was caught on surveillance camera – swallowing a set of floodlights 

Experts at British Geological Survey (BGS) agreed that this was likely a human-caused collapse of a limestone mine, rather than a natural sinkhole due to the breaking down of soluble rock by rainwater. 

A BGS spokesperson told MailOnline that town of Alton, Illinois has a legacy of old limestone and coal mines, but this could even be an active mine.

‘Likewise, sinkholes can also develop after a mine has been abandoned as water levels rise,’ they said.  

The BGS spokesperson wouldn’t comment on the cause of the sudden collapse, however.  

Unfortunately, sinkholes could become a more common occurrence in the near future because they’re related to heavier rainfall – a symptom of climate change.

Warmer air can hold more water, so rainfall is increasing on average across the world as the rate of global warming increases.  

Experts at British Geological Survey (BGS) agreed that this was likely a human-caused collapse of a limestone mine

Heavy rainfall, flooding and leaking infrastructure is a known trigger mechanism for both natural and ‘anthropogenic’ (man-made) sinkholes, BGS said. 

‘So, with climate change, there’s higher winter rainfall and hotter drier summers with increased risk of intense storms.

‘[This] means that we are likely to get periods of increased sinkhole activity in future – both natural subsidence, but also the collapse of old mines and mineshafts and subsurface infrastructure.’ 

It follows giant sinkholes opening up in Arizona, Sydney, and California within the past year, as well in England near an HS2 building site. 

Massive sinkhole in San Francisco opens up in the middle of busy intersection after 74-year-old pipe bursts 

A huge sinkhole has opened up in the middle of a busy intersection of a wealthy San Francisco neighborhood, causing chaos for local residents and businesses.

The intersection of Fillmore and Green Streets, a six-minute drive from the Golden Gate Bridge, collapsed after a large nearby water main broke the night before.

Like something from a disaster movie, it left a deep crater estimated to be around 21 feet wide and at least six feet deep.

A second, smaller crater was also seen at the intersection as the city’s maintenance crews appeared.

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