www.fastcompany.com Open in urlscan Pro
151.101.65.54  Public Scan

Submitted URL: http://click1.email.fastcompany.com/mtyzqsysqpgldqvtltbgglmyvplvcgkqtnwmkzkdqnwqq_mnpywwywnblcdntytbbwp.html?a=&b=39228
Effective URL: https://www.fastcompany.com/90757626/630-feet-below-the-earth-in-china-an-ancient-forest-blooms-at-the-bottom-of-a-sinkhole?...
Submission: On June 07 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

FAST COMPANY

Follow
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

Login
 * Co.Design
 * Tech
 * Work Life
 * News
 * Impact
 * Podcasts
 * Video
 * Recommender
 * Innovation Festival 360IF360
 * Subscribe
 * 
 * FastCo Works
    * AWS
    * Genpact
    * IBM


 * HOMEPAGE


 * CO.DESIGN


 * TECH


 * WORK LIFE


 * NEWS


 * IMPACT


 * PODCASTS


 * VIDEO


 * RECOMMENDER


 * INNOVATION FESTIVAL 360


 * SUBSCRIBE

Help Center
fastco works


 * AWS


 * DELOITTE


 * DEPT


 * ELEVATE PRIZE


 * EY


 * IBM


 * KLARNA


 * VISA


 * FASTCO WORKS
   
   An award-winning team of journalists, designers, and videographers who tell
   brand stories through Fast Company's distinctive lens

FC Executive Board
collections


 * FAST GOVERNMENT
   
   The future of innovation and technology in government for the greater good


 * MOST INNOVATIVE COMPANIES
   
   Fast Company's annual ranking of businesses that are making an outsize impact


 * MOST CREATIVE PEOPLE
   
   Leaders who are shaping the future of business in creative ways


 * WORLD CHANGING IDEAS
   
   New workplaces, new food sources, new medicine--even an entirely new economic
   system


 * INNOVATION BY DESIGN
   
   Celebrating the best ideas in business

Newsletter
Events


 * INNOVATION FESTIVAL

Courses and LearningAdvertiseCurrent Issue
Current Issue
SUBSCRIBE
Follow us:

advertisement

 * 06-02-22


630 FEET BELOW THE EARTH IN CHINA, AN ANCIENT FOREST BLOOMS AT THE BOTTOM OF A
SINKHOLE


SCIENTISTS BELIEVE THE UNDERGROUND WORLD COULD BE TEEMING WITH SPECIES UNKNOWN
TO HUMANS.

A typical karst geological site in WuLong town, Chongqing, China. [Photo: Getty]
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

More Like This
Apple and Harry Styles echo iconic iPod ads with a bright new campaign for
AirPods
Doja Cat, Taco Bell, Mexican pizza, and the making of a marketing unicorn
Klarna’s laid-off workers are the latest casualty of tech’s cult of personality
By Connie Lin2 minute Read

In May, a team of spelunkers rappelled into the dark heart of a 630-foot-deep
sinkhole in China’s Guangxi region. Near the southern border, Guangxi is home to
a landscape of mountainous rock, formed into towering domes, etched with ridges,
and steeped in pools of jade-green water and a lush thick of trees.




It is among China’s most beautiful terrain. It is also marred by at least 30
giant, sunken swaths of earth—tiankeng, or “heavenly pits,” in Mandarin,
scattered like beads across the countryside.











But this newly discovered sinkhole—deep enough to swallow the U.S.’s tallest
national monument, the 630-foot-tall Gateway Arch in St. Louis—houses an even
more majestic world. At its bottom, the expeditionists found a flourishing
prehistoric forest, with 130-foot-tall trees branching skyward to a faraway
circle of sunlight. Their roots dig into a tangled growth of forest floor that
could bury a person up to the shoulder.

Blooming amidst the flora and fauna are ferns, wild bananas, fig fruits, and
rare square-shaped bamboo shoots—one stalk with a large bite taken from it,
explorers told the Guangxi Daily news.



As described to Chinese news outlets, it sounds like a near-mythical realm—a
fantasy kingdom of Narnia, or the highlands of Middle Earth—and its promise for
biologists and geologists is no less thrilling. Scientists believe the forest
could harbor thus unknown plant or animal species, as sinkholes can offer an
oasis for botanical life. Such “ancient” or “primitive” ecosystems have never
been disturbed by humans. And they are natural jewels for study, offering a
glance at what our planet might’ve looked like in primeval times, devoid of
humankind’s intrusion.

“I wouldn’t be surprised to know that there are species found in these caves
that have never been reported or described by science until now,” Chen Lixin,
who led the trek through the sinkhole’s forest, told China’s Xinhua news.



Guangxi is one of the world’s richest treasure troves of karst topography—found
mostly in China, Mexico, and Papua New Guinea—where dramatic landscapes are
formed by eroding underground bedrock. In such climates, rainwater runs first
through soil—becoming gradually more acidic as it saps carbon dioxide from the
earth—and then flows through cracks in the bedrock, hollowing it away into
sprawling webs of limestone chambers, pillars, bridges, and tunnels. If the
chambers grow large enough, they collapse inward and a sinkhole is born.

According to NASA, 13% of China is karst topography, including the world’s
largest sinkhole, Xiaozhai Tiankeng, at 2,172 feet deep in Chongqing. Set upon
an enormous underground river, it also houses a robust forest ecosystem
connected to a network of caves, much like Guangxi’s site—which is named
Shenying Tiankeng, for the way its cliffside looms like a pair of soaring wings.



Scientists now seek to illuminate its untold secrets, hidden in the tiny
universes of heaven’s Earthly craters.









advertisement



FEATURED VIDEO

1
/
7
Serial entrepreneur Marc Lore wants to change the way you eat
Read More

111K
4



Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Unmute

Duration 2:42
/
Current Time 0:04
Advanced Settings

Loaded: 24.49%


0:04
Remaining Time -2:38
 
FullscreenPauseUp Next

This is a modal window.



Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.

TextColorWhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyanTransparencyOpaqueSemi-TransparentBackgroundColorBlackWhiteRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyanTransparencyOpaqueSemi-TransparentTransparentWindowColorBlackWhiteRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyanTransparencyTransparentSemi-TransparentOpaque
Font Size50%75%100%125%150%175%200%300%400%Text Edge
StyleNoneRaisedDepressedUniformDropshadowFont FamilyProportional
Sans-SerifMonospace Sans-SerifProportional SerifMonospace SerifCasualScriptSmall
Caps
Reset restore all settings to the default valuesDone
Close Modal Dialog

End of dialog window.

Settings

Playback Speed
Normal
Video Quality
Auto (270p)
Closed Captions
Off
Replay the list
 * Powered by AnyClip
 * Privacy Policy

TOP ARTICLES





Serial entrepreneur Marc Lore wants to change the way you eat

advertisement


Today's Top Stories:
01

co-design
Here’s the real reason why all of the crypto logos look alike
02

technology
What we know about Javier Olivan, Facebook-parent Meta’s new COO
03

co-design
What will the metaverse actually look like in 5 years? This studio may have
cracked it
04

news
Harvard researchers have calculated how many unnecessary deaths the Trump
administration left behind
05

technology
I was offered an intimate look at Rent the Runway’s turbulent year. Here’s what
happened
More Top Stories:
PLAY Fast Company Top Articles: Video Settings Full Screen About Connatix
V165210 Read More Read More Read More Read More Read More Read More
Sesame Workshop’s new multi-language initiative helps displaced Afghan and
Ukrainian children
READ MORE
Sesame Workshop’s new multi‑language initiative helps displaced Afghan and
Ukrainian children 1/1 Skip Ad Continue watching after the ad Visit Advertiser
websiteGO TO PAGE




advertisement

ideas
He quit Google to work on climate change. Now, he’s helping others do the same
thing
news
Oreo continues its LGBTQ+ allyship despite the culture war against ‘woke’
companies
leadership
How Natalie Portman and her Angel City FC cofounders are changing the game for
women’s soccer
entertainment
K-pop stans may have caused the Dallas Police Department’s surveillance app to
crash
co-design
The surprising psychology of fonts
co-design
6 ways Apple updated iOS to be ready for a mixed reality metaverse
technology
Sexual assault is already a problem in the metaverse, and a new report suggests
it will get worse
co-design
Pulse oximeters are racist, and that likely cost lives during COVID-19
co-design
Why RISD students are designing spaces for people to safely do drugs
technology
4 Gmail productivity boosters you’re probably not using yet
co-design
Ikea just redesigned one of its most popular products. Here’s why
news
Why are so many high-income Americans living paycheck to paycheck?
news
Disney is finally taking a more vocal stand against racist Star Wars fans
news
Could harsh parenting make children hyperactive? Here’s what behavioral research
says
news
Are you wealthy? Here’s how much money Americans say they need to live
comfortably
advertisement

advertisement

ideas
No soil, no problem: Reshaping agriculture to be more carbon friendly
co-design
18% of offices are vacant. Here’s a brilliant idea for how to use that space
ideas
Climate inaction could cost the world $178 trillion
leadership
Six Verbs That Make You Sound Weak (No Matter Your Job Title)
news
How to watch Apple’s WWDC 2022 keynote today: iOS 16 and more expected
leadership
Exclusive: Modern Fertility announces a new campaign featuring female athletes
leadership
Millennials are driving the Great Resignation. They’re also working harder
because of it
technology
In Armenia’s biotech boom, remarkable women are leading the way
magazine
These innovative projects are changing the health industry
leadership
A psychologist explains why negativity dominates your daily thoughts, and what
to do about it
news
IRS audits are on the rise: Your chances are now double if you’re in this income
range
technology
Here are the programs that will help you finally learn to draw
co-design
22 apps designers can’t live without
technology
Digital health has failed, but that doesn’t mean the future is hopeless
advertisement



IMPACT

Impact


3 CHARTS THAT EXPLAIN THE U.S.’S NEW RECORDS IN RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION

Impact


SOME STATES WANT TO RAISE THE AGE FOR ASSAULT RIFLE PURCHASES. WOULD THAT CURB
MASS SHOOTINGS?

Impact


IN THE DESERT, THESE SPRAWLING GREENHOUSES HELP DECARBONIZE HEAVY INDUSTRY


NEWS

News


WHY RAPPER MACKLEMORE SAYS CREATING HIS GOLF APPAREL BRAND IS A LOT LIKE MAKING
MUSIC

News


DOJA CAT, TACO BELL, MEXICAN PIZZA, AND THE MAKING OF A MARKETING UNICORN

News


WHY ARE SO MANY HIGH-INCOME AMERICANS LIVING PAYCHECK TO PAYCHECK?


CO.DESIGN

Co.Design


SCHOOL SHOOTINGS ARE NOT A DESIGN ISSUE

Co.Design


THE SURPRISING PSYCHOLOGY OF FONTS

Co.Design


SEE HOW THE ICONIC AIRSTREAM HAS EVOLVED OVER THE PAST 90 YEARS


WORK LIFE

Work Life


THIS IS HOW TO SEE THE FUTURE (AND 5 WAYS TO BE READY FOR ANYTHING)

Work Life


FEELING FORGETFUL? HERE ARE 5 EASY WAYS TO IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY ACCORDING TO
SCIENCE

Work Life


YOUR REMOTE EMPLOYEES AREN’T DISLOYAL. THEY JUST NEED MORE OF THIS

 * Advertise
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms
 * Notice of Collection
 * Do Not Sell My Data
 * Permissions
 * Help Center
 * About Us
 * Site Map
 * Fast Company & Inc © 2022 Mansueto Ventures, LLC
 * 






FAST COMPANY

Follow
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

Login
 * Co.Design
 * Tech
 * Work Life
 * News
 * Impact
 * Podcasts
 * Video
 * Recommender
 * Innovation Festival 360IF360
 * Subscribe
 * 
 * FastCo Works
    * AWS
    * Genpact
    * IBM


 * HOMEPAGE


 * CO.DESIGN


 * TECH


 * WORK LIFE


 * NEWS


 * IMPACT


 * PODCASTS


 * VIDEO


 * RECOMMENDER


 * INNOVATION FESTIVAL 360


 * SUBSCRIBE

Help Center
fastco works


 * AWS


 * DELOITTE


 * DEPT


 * ELEVATE PRIZE


 * EY


 * IBM


 * KLARNA


 * VISA


 * FASTCO WORKS
   
   An award-winning team of journalists, designers, and videographers who tell
   brand stories through Fast Company's distinctive lens

FC Executive Board
collections


 * FAST GOVERNMENT
   
   The future of innovation and technology in government for the greater good


 * MOST INNOVATIVE COMPANIES
   
   Fast Company's annual ranking of businesses that are making an outsize impact


 * MOST CREATIVE PEOPLE
   
   Leaders who are shaping the future of business in creative ways


 * WORLD CHANGING IDEAS
   
   New workplaces, new food sources, new medicine--even an entirely new economic
   system


 * INNOVATION BY DESIGN
   
   Celebrating the best ideas in business

Newsletter
Events


 * INNOVATION FESTIVAL

Courses and LearningAdvertiseCurrent Issue
Current Issue
SUBSCRIBE
Follow us:

advertisement

advertisement

 * 06-02-22


630 FEET BELOW THE EARTH IN CHINA, AN ANCIENT FOREST BLOOMS AT THE BOTTOM OF A
SINKHOLE


SCIENTISTS BELIEVE THE UNDERGROUND WORLD COULD BE TEEMING WITH SPECIES UNKNOWN
TO HUMANS.

A typical karst geological site in WuLong town, Chongqing, China. [Photo: Getty]
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 

By Connie Lin2 minute Read

In May, a team of spelunkers rappelled into the dark heart of a 630-foot-deep
sinkhole in China’s Guangxi region. Near the southern border, Guangxi is home to
a landscape of mountainous rock, formed into towering domes, etched with ridges,
and steeped in pools of jade-green water and a lush thick of trees.

advertisement

advertisement



It is among China’s most beautiful terrain. It is also marred by at least 30
giant, sunken swaths of earth—tiankeng, or “heavenly pits,” in Mandarin,
scattered like beads across the countryside.



> A waterfall of 188 meters high and 30 meters wide in Guangxi, China.
> pic.twitter.com/rIcnMDR69i
> 
> — Lijian Zhao 赵立坚 (@zlj517) April 21, 2022





> Xianggong Mountain is located between the Mural Hill and Yellow Cloth Shoal in
> Xingping Town of Yangshuo, Guangxi of China. Xianggong Mountain is about 28 km
> from Yangshuo and 57 km from Guilin. The mountain is a popular tourist
> destination beloved by enthusiastic photographers pic.twitter.com/ytAa2QW04X
> 
> — The Silk Road (@thesilkroad) May 24, 2022



advertisement


> Rice terraces in early morning mist in Guangxi, China | Photography by
> ©Thierry Bornier pic.twitter.com/TLIr79hcyR
> 
> — Piclogy (@Piclogy) April 5, 2022



But this newly discovered sinkhole—deep enough to swallow the U.S.’s tallest
national monument, the 630-foot-tall Gateway Arch in St. Louis—houses an even
more majestic world. At its bottom, the expeditionists found a flourishing
prehistoric forest, with 130-foot-tall trees branching skyward to a faraway
circle of sunlight. Their roots dig into a tangled growth of forest floor that
could bury a person up to the shoulder.

Blooming amidst the flora and fauna are ferns, wild bananas, fig fruits, and
rare square-shaped bamboo shoots—one stalk with a large bite taken from it,
explorers told the Guangxi Daily news.

advertisement


> “Giant sinkhole with a forest inside found in China” https://t.co/oQ4bLL1cDY
> pic.twitter.com/csuUvxHNd3
> 
> — pourmecoffee (@pourmecoffee) May 11, 2022



As described to Chinese news outlets, it sounds like a near-mythical realm—a
fantasy kingdom of Narnia, or the highlands of Middle Earth—and its promise for
biologists and geologists is no less thrilling. Scientists believe the forest
could harbor thus unknown plant or animal species, as sinkholes can offer an
oasis for botanical life. Such “ancient” or “primitive” ecosystems have never
been disturbed by humans. And they are natural jewels for study, offering a
glance at what our planet might’ve looked like in primeval times, devoid of
humankind’s intrusion.

“I wouldn’t be surprised to know that there are species found in these caves
that have never been reported or described by science until now,” Chen Lixin,
who led the trek through the sinkhole’s forest, told China’s Xinhua news.

advertisement


> 30th giant karst sinkhole discovered in south China's Guangxi
> pic.twitter.com/52ZxFnyuWF
> 
> — CGTN (@CGTNOfficial) May 11, 2022



Guangxi is one of the world’s richest treasure troves of karst topography—found
mostly in China, Mexico, and Papua New Guinea—where dramatic landscapes are
formed by eroding underground bedrock. In such climates, rainwater runs first
through soil—becoming gradually more acidic as it saps carbon dioxide from the
earth—and then flows through cracks in the bedrock, hollowing it away into
sprawling webs of limestone chambers, pillars, bridges, and tunnels. If the
chambers grow large enough, they collapse inward and a sinkhole is born.

According to NASA, 13% of China is karst topography, including the world’s
largest sinkhole, Xiaozhai Tiankeng, at 2,172 feet deep in Chongqing. Set upon
an enormous underground river, it also houses a robust forest ecosystem
connected to a network of caves, much like Guangxi’s site—which is named
Shenying Tiankeng, for the way its cliffside looms like a pair of soaring wings.

advertisement


Scientists now seek to illuminate its untold secrets, hidden in the tiny
universes of heaven’s Earthly craters.



> The Xiaozhai Tiankeng (小寨天坑), also known as the Heavenly Pit, is the world's
> deepest sinkhole [read more: https://t.co/9YYHXG8iLi]
> pic.twitter.com/ebJsoWtYE2
> 
> — Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) July 11, 2021




advertisement

advertisement

advertisement

advertisement






VIDEO

How this CEO is changing the way we bake
Bread Alone is the first commercial bakery in the US to Operate on 100%
renewable energy bakery. The family run business have been baking with organic
grains since our first loaf in 1983. This is Fast Company's Changing the Game
More Videos


0 seconds of 4 minutes, 51 secondsVolume 0%

Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
Keyboard ShortcutsEnabledDisabled
Play/PauseSPACE
Increase Volume↑
Decrease Volume↓
Seek Forward→
Seek Backward←
Captions On/Offc
Fullscreen/Exit Fullscreenf
Mute/Unmutem
Seek %0-9
Next Up
Disney defends Star Wars actor against racist trolls
03:24
facebook twitter Email
Linkhttps://www.fastcompany.com/video/how-this-ceo-is-changing-the-way-we-bake/YuVE84iS?jwsource=cl
Copied
Auto180p1080p720p406p270p180p
Live
00:00
04:52
04:51








 



IMPACT

Impact


3 CHARTS THAT EXPLAIN THE U.S.’S NEW RECORDS IN RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION

Impact


SOME STATES WANT TO RAISE THE AGE FOR ASSAULT RIFLE PURCHASES. WOULD THAT CURB
MASS SHOOTINGS?

Impact


IN THE DESERT, THESE SPRAWLING GREENHOUSES HELP DECARBONIZE HEAVY INDUSTRY


NEWS

News


WHY RAPPER MACKLEMORE SAYS CREATING HIS GOLF APPAREL BRAND IS A LOT LIKE MAKING
MUSIC

News


DOJA CAT, TACO BELL, MEXICAN PIZZA, AND THE MAKING OF A MARKETING UNICORN

News


WHY ARE SO MANY HIGH-INCOME AMERICANS LIVING PAYCHECK TO PAYCHECK?


CO.DESIGN

Co.Design


SCHOOL SHOOTINGS ARE NOT A DESIGN ISSUE

Co.Design


THE SURPRISING PSYCHOLOGY OF FONTS

Co.Design


SEE HOW THE ICONIC AIRSTREAM HAS EVOLVED OVER THE PAST 90 YEARS


WORK LIFE

Work Life


THIS IS HOW TO SEE THE FUTURE (AND 5 WAYS TO BE READY FOR ANYTHING)

Work Life


FEELING FORGETFUL? HERE ARE 5 EASY WAYS TO IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY ACCORDING TO
SCIENCE

Work Life


YOUR REMOTE EMPLOYEES AREN’T DISLOYAL. THEY JUST NEED MORE OF THIS

 * Advertise
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms
 * Notice of Collection
 * Do Not Sell My Data
 * Permissions
 * Help Center
 * About Us
 * Site Map
 * Fast Company & Inc © 2022 Mansueto Ventures, LLC
 * 





search by queryly Advanced Search



WE VALUE YOUR PRIVACY

To deliver the best possible experience, we and our partners use techniques such
as cookies to store and/or access information on a device and provide
personalised ads and content, ad and content measurement, audience insights and
product development. Precise geolocation and information about device
characteristics can be used. Personal data such as network address and browsing
activity may be processed.

You may click to consent to the processing described above or review options and
make granular choices. Some processing may not require your consent, but you
have a right to object. Your preferences will apply to this site only. You may
change your mind at any time by visiting our privacy policy.


review options accept & continue