the ground must have been a bit saturated with gas to cause a hole that size.
Don't think so.
In 94 my department dealt with was a the time the largest gas pipeline rupture in a residential area in the country.
The Texas Eastern pipeline was 36" diameter, 990psi. Think about that for a minute. The pipeline went from Texas to Maine.
Around 11:55pm the pipe failed. I lived about 3 miles from was called ground zero. My house shook. We heard the chatter on the radio almost immediately, I grabbed my video camera and headed out - not knowing where I was going.
There was NO fireball.
36" of 990psi gas with a head of steam from Texas spewed for almost 90 seconds before it lit off.
To this day I am still amazed at what we saw - heard - did.
The fireball was about 500' tall. The noise was equal to what I have heard at two shuttle launches, and indeed it looked the shuttle upside down. A mile from ground zero and you had to yell in each others ear to hear.
The hole from the blast was larger then the one pictured above, and that was "just" a pressure release.
One of the first calls to Emergency Management came from Texas to one of the facilities in NJ, "hey we just had a large pressure drop around the Jamesburg area, anything going on"?
Edison received a record 50,000 plus 911 calls in the first hour.
There was so much product spewing out of the pipes the it took 4 men, turning a 4' diameter shut off wheel, 2 hours to reduce the flow 50%. About 3.5 hours into the incident the gas was shut down and we started the mop up.
When I reported work in the morning it was like nothing I had ever seen. We were bused to the site with the instructions that we would be searching for up to 250 people that were missing.
Within days everyone was accounted for and remarkably there were no injuries.
I still believe the 3 man crew on the first due engine are truly heroes (they can be seen riding in towards the fireball). The officer on the engine had an idea what they running too, he drew a line and made a defense and probably saved 90% of the complex.
Can you imagine driving a rig into the chaos? 1500 residents literally running for their lives and your trying to snake an engine through the crowd.
The crew received no recognition for their actions.
makes ya wonder about all the buried gas lines and there condition.
Yes it does.