it appears that the locals are having problems with pingos,
at Antipayuta, on the Yamal Peninsula, according to Carolyn
Ruppel, chief of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Gas Hydrates Project, she suggested a explanation related to pingos, which are mounds of earth-covered ice in the
Arctic and subarctic regions,
“A pingo is a plug of ice that forms near the surface over
time and has a small mound or hill on top,” Ruppel explained. “When an ice plug
melts rapidly – as may have been, thanks to unseasonably warm temperatures
in Siberia over the past year – it can
cause part of the ground to collapse, forming a crater.” but most experts
contended this theory, saying that the ejected rocks found at the rim of the
craters suggest an explosion, not a collapse,
in July 2015, after conducting an expedition to one of the
craters, Professor Vasily Bogoyavlensky told the Siberian Times that it was
indeed most likely caused by an exploding pingo, “It was a pingo or bulgunnyakh
(mounds with an ice core common for Arctic and sub-Arctic regions), and then,
due to the Earth’s heat flow this pingo starts to thaw and its half melted ice
core is filled with gas that originates from the depth through cracks and
faults in the ground,” he said, while the exact causes of Siberia’s giant
craters remain a mystery, authorities are trying to find an ‘urgent’ strategy
to ensure safety of the people in the region, I have my own theory, aliens, the holes were made when they
switched on their retro rockets as they landed on earth looking for a Sasquatch
or a Yeti to take home as a pet!
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