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Watch: Four killed after massive sinkhole opens in Chinese city

Watch: Four killed after massive sinkhole opens
Watch: Four killed after massive sinkhole opens
Posted at 4:25 AM, Oct 09, 2018
and last updated 2018-10-09 08:31:40-04

Four people have died after they were swallowed up by a massive sinkhole in a Chinese city, despite desperate rescue efforts to save them.

According to state media, the sinkhole opened up around 2:30 p.m. Sunday in Dazhou, Sichuan province. Dramatic video from the scene showed people suddenly plunging through the pavement as it collapsed beneath them.

Two victims died after being pulled from the pit and rushed to a hospital, state media said. They were reportedly married only days before.

Efforts to rescue the other victims, a father and his young son, were unsuccessful, with the two found dead on Tuesday afternoon.

Rescuers believed the final two were trapped around 10 meters (32 feet) underground, some two meters deeper than local rescuers' equipment could reach.

"The biggest difficulty is that the road surface is thick with a large amount of soil," Gao Mingyue, a fire service official, told state broadcaster CCTV, earlier in the search.

"We had to move excavators to a lower place and we now have two large excavators digging out soils so that we can stand on a lower place and use the long arm excavator to dig deeper."

More than 40 firefighters were involved in the rescue effort. The government still hasn't disclosed what caused the deadly sinkhole to suddenly appear.

Sinkholes typically form when acidic rainwater dissolves limestone or similar rock beneath the soil, leaving a large void that collapses when it's no longer able to support the weight of what's above -- whether that be an open field, a road or a house.

The cave-in area was more than 10 square meters (107 sq ft), the broadcaster said.

"When we arrived, the caved-in area was not big, which only covered two meters both in length and depth. But during the rescue process, it collapsed again, causing another two-meter sink. Firefighters at once evacuated while doing the rescue work," Gao said.

The presence of high-voltage power cables and water pipes made the rescue work especially difficult.

"Given what we found in the hole, cables are crossed in a mess, including two high-tension lines, weak electric wires and gas pipelines," Gao added.