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A crack forms in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula

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200 yards long, 5 feet deep in parts.

A large crack can evoke something ominous and unsettling. They are like the door at the end of the hallway that is only partially open — nagging at you to find out where it came from and what lies just beyond the opening. There is something alien about the sudden arrival of a crack.

These are the very sorts of feelings gripping residents of a small town in Michigan’s upper peninsula. A crack has arrived, accompanied by tremors, in Menominee Township — right at the southern part of the base of Michigan’s upper peninsula. View Map

The crack isn’t noticeably growing bigger — and it has a long way to go if it’s going to turn the peninsula into an island. So rather than being afraid, local residents are simply scratching their heads and wondering where it came from. A team of researchers are expected to investigate soon.

Fortunately, the crack didn’t swallow up anyone’s home. It runs through a woodland. No one was reported injured.

An article at Upper Michigan Source has comments from residents who reported the tremor that announced the arrival of the mysterious crack:

It all started early Monday morning between 8 & 9 a.m. Central time, when Eileen and her neighbors heard a loud boom, and that’s when Eileen felt her house start to shake.

“I heard something, but I was concentrating more on the chair moving than I was listening,” Eileen explained. “It was just moving back and forth, like I had a vibrating chair, which I don’t have.”

Later on, Eileen told her friend, Doug Salewsky, what happened. On Tuesday, he stumbled upon the crevice a short distance away in the woods and later called the state police.

But what caused this unusual event? An earthquake? A sink hole? Authorities say, at the moment, no one seems to know.

“It’s a pretty remarkable sight really,” said MSP Trooper, Paul Anderson. “Everyone will speculate I’m sure. There are probably a hundred different opinions out there as to what caused this, but at this time, we don’t know what caused this.”

The U.S. Geological Survey along with Michigan Tech professors have been called to help “crack” the case. Until then, it remains a mystery.

A local FOX News, from WLUK, article reports that the crack has become something of a local tourist attraction. It also mentions that, while local residents felt tremors, there were no reported earthquakes.

Nestled just beyond the tree line of Eileen Heider’s 53 acres, is Menominee County’s newest tourist attraction. “It’s amazing, I want to get back there and check the rest of it out,” said Kevin Clermont of Wallace, Michigan, who stopped on his way home from work to sightsee.

Heider and neighbors heard an explosion-like sound Monday morning. Heider found the nearly 200-yard-long crevice, which measures five-feet deep in parts, Tuesday. “I was sitting in my recliner and the recliner started to vibrate,” said Heider. “And it’s not electric.”

Trooper Paul Anderson with Michigan State Police was the first to check it out. He said he ruled out a gas line leak, but could not determine much more. “This would be a first,” he said. “You don’t learn that at the academy.”

Anderson said he called some geological experts. So far none have come to look at the crevice.

There have not been any reported earthquakes in the area.

According to an article at WWLP, the crack is ”up two feet wide and five feet deep” in some parts.

A large unexplained crack now runs 200 yards through the Salewsky family’s property, eight miles north of Menominee in Birch Creek.

The family thinks it happened Monday around 9:00 in the morning. The ground raised five feet up, taking trees along for the ride. Some cracks were

“The house shook, the chairs shook,” Doug Salewsky said. “The logs weren’t there when I piled them.”

http://www.datelinezero.com/?p=4568

Oct. 8, 2010