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Lake Peigneur

Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 6:04 pm
by Ptarmigan
Lake Peigneur is in the heart of the Louisiana Bayou near New Iberia, which is a two hour drive from New Orleans. It was a freshwater lake that was up to 11 feet deep. However, that would all change on November 21, 1982. Diamond Crystal Salt Company operated a salt mine under the lake, while Texaco had a oil rig drilling down for oil. Most likely, it was a miscalculation that led up to this drastic change of Lake Peigneur. The drill hit the Diamond Crystal Salt Company's salt dome. The water starts to drain into the hole. The salt absorbed the water from the lake. However, the salt dome was very large and the fiasco starts to happen, in which a massive whirpool forms sucking everything in from 11 barges, oil platforms, trees, houses, and land. Even Delcambre canal was flowing backwards into the lake. It sucked water from the Gulf of Mexico and created a waterfall that was 150 feet high, the highest in Louisiana. This maelstrom continues for five days. In the end, Lake Peigneur became a saltwater lake that is now 1,300 feet deep. Everyone from the salt miners and oil workers escaped unharmed. No human life was lost in this maelstrom. Nine of the eleven barges popped out of the whirlpool onto the surface. All evidence of the disaster is under Lake Peigneur and in the flooded out salt dome. As a result, no one got blamed for this crazy misfortune.

Lake Pegineur
And away goes the lake down the drain!
Lake Peigneur: The Swirling Vortex of Doom
Wikipedia-Lake Peigneur

Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 6:13 pm
by CajunMama
20 minutes from me. I remember when that happened.

Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 9:01 pm
by Ptarmigan
CajunMama wrote:20 minutes from me. I remember when that happened.


How was it like?

Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 9:07 pm
by CajunMama
I remember hearing the news reports and just a feeling of disbelief that a lake could disappear.

Posted: Fri Dec 29, 2006 9:17 pm
by Ptarmigan
CajunMama wrote:I remember hearing the news reports and just a feeling of disbelief that a lake could disappear.


Really bizarre all I can say. :eek:

Posted: Sat Dec 30, 2006 1:21 am
by HurricaneBill

Posted: Sat Dec 30, 2006 9:18 pm
by DaylilyDawn
We had a lake here in Lakeland that 4 sink holes developed in, the level of the lake dropped so low that grass started to grow on the lake bottom. Even with the rains we have had, it hasn't filled back up to its previous level.