Current:Home > NewsSinkhole in Las Cruces, NM swallowed two cars, forced residents to leave their homes -Wealth Evolution Experts
Sinkhole in Las Cruces, NM swallowed two cars, forced residents to leave their homes
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:38:41
A large sinkhole in front of a New Mexico home has swallowed up two vehicles that were parked in the driveway and forced evacuations in an Las Cruces neighborhood where the incident occurred, the city of Las Cruces confirmed in a press release Tuesday.
The collapse was reported around 9:30 p.m. on Monday evening. Las Cruces firefighters arrived on scene and found a sinkhole 30-feet wide and 30-feet deep that had not yet settled.
No one was reported injured.
Watch:Video shows Target store sliding down hillside in West Virginia as store is forced to close
Neighbors evacuated
To ensure the safety of nearby residents, firefighters evacuated people from homes near the sinkhole. Some members of the American Red Cross were deployed to support the family and their neighbors.
"I didn't feel or hear anything, but my parents did," Dorothy Wyckoff, who lives in a home across the street told The Las Cruces Sun News within the USA TODAY Network. "They said there was a loud rumbling and thought nothing of it. They didn't realize anything happened until I told them."
Neighbors were "in total shock and surprise" though, Wyckoff shared. "They thought it was an earthquake. They got evacuated," she said.
Electrical lines in the neighborhood were examined by El Paso Electric and utilities around the home secured by Las Cruces Utilities.
Until the cause of the sinkhole can be determined by City of Las Cruces engineers and the hole filled in, traffic will be limited on Regal Ridge Street where the incident took place.
What is a sinkhole?
According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), "a sinkhole is a depression in the ground that has no natural external surface drainage," so when it rains, the rainfall collects inside of the sinkhole.
"Regions where the types of rock below the land surface can naturally be dissolved by groundwater circulating through them," are hotbeds for sinkholes, the USGS states. Florida, Texas, Alabama, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Pennsylvania have the most, according to the American Geosciences Institute.
Sinkholes are usually undetectable for long periods of time until the space hollowed out underground grows too big to support movement on ground.
veryGood! (923)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Star Texas football player turned serial killer fights execution for murdering teenage twins
- RHONY's Brynn Whitfield Addresses Costar Rebecca Minkoff's Scientology Past
- Man sentenced to nearly 200 years after Indiana triple homicide led to serial killer rumors
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Best Early Prime Day Home Deals: Prices as Low as $5.98 on Milk Frothers, Meat Thermometers & More
- Plans to build green spaces aimed at tackling heat, flooding and blight
- Paris Jackson Shares Sweet Reason Dad Michael Jackson Picked Elizabeth Taylor to Be Her Godmother
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Jeep urges 194,000 plug-in hybrid SUV owners to stop charging and park outdoors due to fire risk
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- US port strike by 45,000 dockworkers is all but certain to begin at midnight
- Texas can no longer investigate alleged cases of vote harvesting, federal judge says
- Seminole Hard Rock Tampa evacuated twice after suspicious devices found at the casino
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Tyler Cameron’s Girlfriend Tate Madden Shares Peek Inside Their Romance
- Mazda, Toyota, Harley-Davidson, GM among 224,000 vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
- 'It was really surreal': North Carolina residents watched floods lift cars, buildings
Recommendation
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
Startling video shows Russian fighter jet flying within feet of U.S. F-16 near Alaska
Best Early Prime Day Home Deals: Prices as Low as $5.98 on Milk Frothers, Meat Thermometers & More
Paris Jackson Shares Sweet Reason Dad Michael Jackson Picked Elizabeth Taylor to Be Her Godmother
Trump's 'stop
Biltmore Estate: What we know in the aftermath of Helene devastation in Asheville
Kendra Wilkinson Teases Return to Reality TV Nearly 2 Decades After Girls Next Door
San Francisco stunner: Buster Posey named Giants president, replacing fired Farhan Zaidi