A huge slice of land on the California coast slipped into the ocean on Saturday leaving terrified onlookers running from the cliff edge.
The dramatic scene at Centerville Beach near Ferndale in Humboldt County was caused by a landslide in Northern California.
A massive chunk of the clifftop, including a portion of the trailhead parking lot, slide into the sea, news outlet Redheaded Blackbelt first reported.
Drone footage captured the terrifying moment as people fled the cliffside parking lot as the land crumbled away.
The footage showed the ground at the cliff’s edge as it collapses onto the beach lying beneath it.
A huge slice of land on the California coast slipped into the ocean on Saturday leaving terrified onlookers running from the cliff edge
The dramatic scene at Centerville Beach near Ferndale in Humboldt County was caused by a landslide in Northern California
Landslides at the Fleener Creek Trailhead have been ‘ongoing’ since January, according to the Bureau of Land Management.
Significant winter storms hit the state on January 18 and the trail was closed down to visitors for safety purposes.
‘Fleener Creek parking lot gave away to mother nature last night and a good portion of it is now in the ocean,’ Humboldt County 1st District Supervisor Rex Bohn said on Facebook on Saturday, February 24.
‘It is unsafe to use the parking lot at this time or to even walk in it,’ Bohn continued ‘This is not an invitation to go look. It is a dangerous situation.’
The area is being patrolled by sheriff’s deputies and Ferndale police as it continues to be closed to the public.
Saturday’s landslide happened just a few weeks after a similar incident happened in Southern California.
A massive chunk of the clifftop, including a portion of the trailhead parking lot, slide into the sea
A clifftop in Dana Point gave way in early February in the midst of the crazy winter storms that tore through Southern California.
The landslide caused two multimillion dollar mansions to teeter on the edge of where they perched cliffside over the Pacific.