The 1980 Lake Peigneur disaster in Louisiana demonstrates how industrial operations can trigger catastrophic geological events when drilling accidentally breaches underground salt mines, causing freshwater to dissolve the salt structure and create a massive collapse that swallowed a drilling platform, 11 barges, and 65 acres of land, while the canal system reversed direction and created a 164-foot waterfall; remarkably, all workers escaped due to timely evacuation, and the lake was permanently transformed from a shallow freshwater body into a deeper brackish lake.
深度探索
先修知识
- 暂无数据。
后续步骤
- 暂无数据。
深度探索
Lake Peigneur Disaster: The Lake That Opened and Swallowed Everything本站添加:
A lake is not supposed to open. It is not supposed to pull in barges. It is definitely not supposed to swallow the ground around it. But in Louisiana in 1980, one calm freshwater lake suddenly behaved like someone had pulled the plug on the earth. And the worst part is this was not a myth, not a movie, and not some ancient curse.
It was an industrial accident so absurd that even the real footage looks fake.
Lake Pure did not look dangerous. Before the disaster, it was a shallow freshwater lake in Iberia Parish near Jefferson Island. People fished there.
Boats crossed it. On the surface, it looked ordinary. Underneath it, though, Louisiana had stacked one industry on top of another. oil exploration above, a salt mine below, and a giant salt dome shaping the whole structure underneath.
That is the setup that made this disaster possible.
On the morning of November 20th, 1980, a Texico contracted drilling operation was working from a floating platform on the lake while diamond crystal miners were underground below.
Then the drill got stuck at about 1,228 ft. The crew pulled the drill string, heard strange noises, and abandoned the platform.
That decision saved lives because what happened next was not a normal equipment failure.
The drill had punched into the salt mine beneath the lake.
Once the lake water found that opening, the disaster accelerated.
Fresh water began rushing into the mine.
And because the mine was carved into salt, the water did not just pour through a fixed hole.
It started dissolving the structure that contained it. The opening widened. The underground caverns destabilized and the lake above began collapsing into the space below it like a bathtub draining straight into the earth. That is when Lake Pure started eating everything around it. The drilling platform was swallowed. 11 barges were pulled in. A tugboat went with them.
Trees and roughly 65 acres of surrounding land were dragged into the collapse. Fishermen barely escaped.
Witnesses described a giant mud crater and a scene so violent that some compared it to Mount St. Helens.
This was not a storm, not an explosion, not an earthquake, just a lake suddenly failing in the most wrong way imaginable.
And then the story got even stranger.
So much water dropped into the mine that the Del Combre Canal, which normally drained the lake southward, reversed direction.
Salt water rushed back in from Vermilion Bay and the Gulfside, pouring toward what had become an emptying lake bed.
For a few days, that backflow created a waterfall about 164 ft high, reportedly the tallest in Louisiana.
Air forced out of the mine later erupted through shafts as massive geysers.
Even by disaster standards, the visuals were surreal.
What makes Lake Pure especially disturbing is that the death toll was not what you would expect from a scene like this. There were no human fatalities.
The seven men on the drilling rig got off in time.
All 55 miners underground escaped, helped by an electrician who noticed the incoming torrent and sounded the alarm and by the discipline of workers evacuating through the mine's only elevator.
A fisherman on the lake also made it to shore.
The disaster looked apocalyptic.
The survival story was almost impossible in the other direction. And this is where the neat version of the story starts to break down.
In popular retellings, Lake Pure is often framed as a simple measuring mistake. Drill in the wrong place. Hit the mine. Destroy the lake. There is truth in that version. But the official investigation stopped short of assigning one definitive cause because the flooded mine could not be inspected well enough to determine whether Texico drilled in the wrong location or whether the mine maps themselves were inaccurate.
In other words, even the explanation has a crack in it. What is not in dispute is the aftermath.
In 1983, Texico and drilling contractor Wilson Brothers paid Diamond Crystal $32 million, and additional settlements totaling $12.8 million went to the damaged Live Oak Gardens property. The mine eventually closed in 1986, and the lake itself was permanently transformed.
no longer the shallow freshwater lake it had been before the collapse, but a much deeper brackish lake that later became known as the deepest in Louisiana.
A place that once looked harmless had been physically rewritten.
That is why Lake Pure still hits so hard. Not because it feels supernatural, but because it does not need to.
The true horror is completely real. a normallooking lake sitting above hidden industrial geometry where one bad breach turned the surface into a mouth. And once that mouth opened, it did exactly what your brain says a lake should never be able to do. It started swallowing the world around it.
相关推荐
Taking $10,000 Cash To Green the Driest Barrio in Bolivia
LeafofLifeEarth
528 views•2026-05-29
They Laughed When She Let the Weeds Grow Between the Fences — Then Her Cattle Outweighed Every Herd
BackroadHarvest
117 views•2026-05-28
Mozambique RELEASES AFRICA'S MOST DANGEROUS ANIMAL - After 2 Months, The Results Shock Scientists
SimpleDiscovery24
541 views•2026-05-29
Cute Seals Spotted On Remote UK Island | Our Tiny Islands
Channel4OnTour
141 views•2026-05-29
The Bay Poisoned by Mercury #shorts
harmedino
289 views•2026-06-01
Calgary Flood Watch Day 4 🚨 Bow River Not Expected to Peak Until Tomorrow
RealtorDhirYYC
103 views•2026-06-01
This Jamaican Pond Has A Deadly Reputation
MyEyesAreYours-i3s
656 views•2026-05-28
Glowing Blue Powder Turned Brazilian City Into Radioactive Wasteland
Adnan-Sandhu976
637 views•2026-05-31











