
At the end of August, a sinkhole on the East Hill of Chippewa Falls was brought to the attention of local police. Barriers were set up to protect pedestrians from possible misfortune. When viewing this hole near the corner of Rural and Central Streets from a safe distance, it was impossible to know if there was a bottom or if it lead straight to a mythical underworld. Luckily this kind of portal only opens up when weather conditions favor it.

David Macaulay wrote and illustrated a book about utilities below cities called Underground which I was fascinated by in grade school. In a college class on Mesoamerican Art, I learned about a natural opening to the supposed netherworld present at the Chichen Itza archaeological site in Yucatán called the Sacred Cenote. It is ancient and connected to pre-Columbian religious stories of the afterlife.
Coincidently, a sinkhole opened up in my yard after a heavy rain this summer when the excavator redid the septic field and failed to properly fill in the old cavity. If we had not been avoiding the new grass, any member of my family could have fallen into this dangerous trap. The hole has been filled (no thanks to the excavator.) Similarly the hole in Rural Street was filled within a few weeks of its appearance and Chippewa’s residents can hopefully avoid any unplanned trips to the Underworld in the near future. Luckily, the Sacred Cenote in Mexico can safely be visited by curious individuals in this lifetime.

References:
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Macaulay, David. Underground. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, 1976.
https://web.archive.org/web/20220223000905/http://www.smm.org/sln/ma/cenote.html
































