This cave is huge and it sets a record that may even stand up.
We are presently living through a golden age for cave discovery. There are plenty of participants and almost
all prospective country is open for cavers.
They are thus been discovered. The only thing needed to finish the job is remote
sensing technology able to pick up deep hidden caves without access.
I find the cavern size amazing in terms of unsupported spans that have
held up. A simple fracture will quickly
propagate to bring down a roof. It does
not take any sort of a tremor to get one going.
World's Biggest Cave Found in Vietnam
A British caver wades through Vietnam 's Son Doong cave, Earth's
largest known cave passage, according to a survey team.
Photograph by Barcroft/Fame
Pictures
James Owen
Updated January 3, 2011 (Published July 24,
2009)
A massive cave recently uncovered in a remote Vietnamese jungle is the largest single
cave passage yet found, a new survey shows.
At 262-by-262 feet (80-by-80 meters) in most
places, the Son Doong cave beats out the previous world-record holder, Deer Cave in
the Malaysian section of the island of Borneo .
By contrast, explorers walked 2.8 miles (4.5
kilometers) into Son Doong, in Phong
Nha-Ke Bang
National Park , before
being blocked by seasonal floodwaters—and they think that the passage is even
longer.
In addition, for a couple of miles Son Doong
reaches more than 460-by-460 feet (140-by-140 meters), said Adam Spillane, a
member of the British
Cave Research Association
expedition that explored the massive cavern.
Spillane was in the first of two groups to
enter the cave. His team followed the passage as far as a 46-foot-high
(14-meter-high) wall.
"The second team that went in got flooded
out," he said. "We're going back next year to climb that wall and
explore the cave further."
Laser Precision
A local farmer, who had found the entrance to
the Son Doong cave several years ago, led the joint British-Vietnamese
expedition team to the cavern in April.
The team found an underground river running
through the first 1.6 miles (2.5 kilometers) of the limestone cavern, as well
as giant stalagmites more than 230 feet (70 meters) high.
The explorers surveyed Son Doong's size using
laser-based measuring devices.
Such modern technology allows caves to be
measured to the nearest millimeter, said Andy Eavis, president of the
International Union of Speleology, the world caving authority, based in France .
"With these laser-measuring devices, the
cave sizes are dead accurate," he said. "It tends to make the caves
smaller, because years ago we were estimating, and we tended to
overestimate."
Eavis, who wasn't involved in the survey,
agreed that the new findings confirm Son Doong's record status—despite the fact
that he had discovered Borneo's now demoted Deer Cave .
"This one in Vietnam is bigger," Eavis
conceded.
However the British caver can still claim the
discovery of the world's largest cave chamber, Sarawak Chamber, also in Borneo .
"That is so large it may not actually be
beaten," he said. "It's three times the size of Wembley Stadium"
in London .
Noisy and Intimidating
Son Doong had somehow escaped detection during
previous British caving expeditions to the region, which is rich in limestone
grottos.
"The terrain in that area of Vietnam is very
difficult," said expedition team member Spillane.
"The cave is very far out of the way.
It's totally covered in jungle, and you can't see anything on Google
Earth," he added, referring to the free 3-D globe software.
"You've got to be very close to the cave
to find it," Spillane said. "Certainly, on previous expeditions,
people have passed within a few hundred meters of the entrance without finding
it."
The team was told that local people had known
of the cave but were too scared to delve inside.
"It has a very loud draft and you can
hear the river from the cave entrance, so it is very noisy and
intimidating," Spillane said.
Bigger Caves Waiting?
Of more concern to the caving team were the
poisonous centipedes that live in Son Doong.
The explorers also spotted monkeys entering
through the roof of the cave to feed on snails, according to Spillane.
"There are a couple of skylights about
300 meters [985 feet] above," he said. "The monkeys are obviously
able to climb in and out."
A biologist will accompany the team on its
return visit next year to survey the cave's subterranean wildlife.
Eavis, of the International Union of
Speleology, added that there are almost certainly bigger cave passages awaiting
discovery around the world.
"That's the fantastic thing about
caving," he said.
Satellite images hint, for example, that caves
even larger than Son Doong lie deep in the Amazon rain forest, he said.
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