About 30 minutes east of Tampa Bay, a 45-foot-wide sinkhole opened in late August, depositing at least 215 million gallons of polluted, slightly radioactive water into a vast underground aquifer. (That's enough to fill more than 310 Olympic-size swimming pools.) The company responsible for the spill, fertilizer giant Mosaic, didn't publicly disclose it until last Thursday, two weeks after it started. The company says it promptly informed the US Environmental Protection Agency and Florida state authorities about the fiasco, and it apologized Tuesday for not informing the public sooner, insisting that the fouled water had been contained and wouldn't seep into nearby wells.

Bear with me: This strange event has everything to do with your food.

That's because the breach occurred in a region known as Bone Valley, one of the the world's most productive and valuable stores of phosphate rock, the feedstock for phosphate fertilizer, used to replenish farm fields from the US corn belt to Brazil to Europe. (Here's more on the vexing geopolitics of the global phosphate market.) Florida's phosphate deposits form an obscure but crucial hub in the global food system—they provide about 75 percent of the nation's supply of phosphate fertilizer and about 25 percent of the world supply.

They're essentially ecological sacrifice zones. In Bone Valley mines, cranes equipped with huge buckets (big enough to hold a van) scrape gashes into the land, removing as much as 20 feet of earth to expose the phosphate, which is then mined and processed into fertilizer. For every ton of product, the process generates five tons of a waste product called phosphogypsum, which contains low levels of radiation as well as a range of toxic heavy metals. The region already houses nearly 1 billion tons of phosphogypsum, and 30 million additional tons emerge each year. In Florida, no one knows what to do with the stuff, so it has been accumulating in huge piles known as gyp stacks, of which there are 22 in central Florida.