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#24
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11-11-2013, 02:12 AM
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Re: Darvaza Crater (The Door To Hell). Turkmenistan
One look at the Gates of Hell and you'll be saying your prayers to avoid an eternity surrounded by fire. Located in the Karakum desert in Turkmenistan, this fiery crater has been burning away for over four decades, and its arresting glow can be seen for miles once the sun falls. The crater measures a staggering 197 feet in diameter and is nearly 70 feet deep. The hole is known as the Darvaza Gas Crater, or the “Gates of Hell” by locals, and the crater can be seen, and smelt, for miles around. As Bradley reports, “The smell of burning sulfur can be detected from a distance and becomes quite strong as you near the hot edge of the crater.” So how did this glowing and gaseous crater get there? Unfortunately the burning gates are not a natural phenomenon and the crater is in fact the result of a Soviet gas exploration accident that occurred back in 1971. During drilling, a Soviet rig had fell into an underground cavern and punctured the earth, releasing noxious gas into the air. To avoid an even greater environmental disaster, the Soviets set the natural glass aflame believing it would burn off in just a few days — it has been burning ever since. Read more: The Gates of Hell: Burning Gas Crater in Turkmenistan Has Been Ablaze for 41 Years | Inhabitat - Sustainable Design Innovation, Eco Architecture, Green Building ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |