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  • 25
    May
    2012
    7:05pm, EDT

    Michael Rubinkam / AP

    Route 61 is shown eroded and covered in graffiti in Centralia, Pa. Fifty years ago on Sunday, May 27, 2012, a fire at the town dump spread to a network of coal mines underneath hundreds of homes and business in the northeastern Pennsylvania borough of Centralia, eventually forcing the demolition of nearly every building.

    Fire burning for 50 years in coal below Pennsylvania town of Centralia

    The Associated Press reports that the fire in Centralia is still burning, 50 years later:

    Whether it's safe to live there is subject to debate.

    Tim Altares, a geologist with the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, said that while temperatures in monitoring boreholes are down — possibly indicating the fire has followed the coal seam deeper underground — the blaze still poses a threat because it has the potential to open up new paths for deadly gases to reach the remaining homes.

    "It's very difficult to quantify the threat, but the major threat would be infiltration of the fire gases into the confined space of a residential living area. That was true from the very beginning and will remain true even after the fire moves out of the area," Alteres said.

    Nonsense, say residents who point out they've lived for decades without incident.

    Read more...

    2 comments

    LEAVE THOSE REMAINING PEOPLE THE HELL ALONE!If they want to continue to live there and are in no present danger,in which they're not,nobody has any right to try and take their homes,that is their land and and their homes, NOT YOURS! ONE MORE TIME LEAVE THESE PEOPLE ALONE,BACK OFF!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: history, fire, pennsylvania, coal, mining, us-news, centralia

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