Sinkholes often form in low areas where they form drainage outlets for a surface drainage basin. They may also form in high and dry locations.
Sinkholes are usually but not always linked with a karst landscape. Karst represents a set of surface features that are characteristic of limestone under the soil. In many such regions, there may be hundreds or even thousands of sinkholes in a small area so that the earth as seen from the air looks pock-marked. Often, in such areas, there are few or no flowing streams on the surface because the drainage is all sub-surface.
Sinkholes have for centuries been used as disposal sites for solid[?] and liquid wastes[?]. An unfortunate consequence has been terrible, even toxic, pollution of underground water resources which has had serious health implications in such areas.
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