National Geographic: Mysteries Underground (1992)

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National Geographic: Mysteries Underground (1992)

Post by bunniefuu »

It all begins with water and rock.

As water seeks its level,

it becomes acidic.

And when it flows over limestone,

it etches a path into the rock.

Given eons of time,

water will burrow and carve,

with incredible force,

the veins and arteries of planet Earth

So the underworld of caves is born.

And after torrents have done

their work,

patient drops do more wonders

in a million years or so.

Look now on a landscape no one dreamed

existed just a few years ago.

Here are bizarre and

fantastic treasures that stun the eye

and strain the imagination.

Here is discovery and danger.

Here is adventure.

In New Mexico, members of a

National Geographic Society expedition

explore the world's newest

and most exotic major cave.

They are following one of man's

most ancient imperatives

to see and understand the unknown.

Join us now as we embark on

an extraordinary journey

deep into the earth

to confront MYSTERIES UNDERGROUND.

In the Guadalupe Mountains

of southern New Mexico,

an awesome giant has lain hidden

for a million years.

Sometimes, in the desert silence,

the monster could be heard breathing.

The sound came from a yawning chasm

in the rocks.

In 1986 a trio of weekend explorers

broke through a layer of rubble

and discovered a new cave

only a few miles

from famous Carlsbad Cavern.

Although the cave entrance lay inside

Carlsbad Caverns National Park,

park officials allowed qualified

cavers to explore it.

One of them was Rick Bridges,

an oil and gas prospector.

Now Bridges leads

a hand-picked team of experts,

like rock climber Dave Jones,

on the 25th expedition to Lechuguilla.

You got the survey gear, Anne?

Research geologist Kiym Cunningham

will handle the science studies

for the expedition.

Nuclear test engineer Anne Strait

is an expert

in surveying and mapping caves.

And specialist cameraman from England,

Sid Perou,

will be the first to document

Lechuguilla on motion picture film.

The journey begins

with a deceptively ordinary hike.

The cave is named after a desert plant

that grows in this harsh,

dry environment-Lechuguilla-Spanish

for little lettuce.

Forty people will support the venture,

including two support teams

to pack in supplies

and batteries for photographic lights.

On high rope.

We tend to have this feeling that

the surface of the earth

is the life of the earth.

But we're just this small,

thin little shell that we choose

to call our world,

and beneath it there's an entire realm

that we know very little about.

And we can, if we choose,

enter that realm and

we can learn something from it.

I will never go to the moon,

but I can go to a cave

the nobody else has been to

and have the same elation

of exploration in the sense

that I have gone where

no one's gone before.

Bombs away.

I would like to think that

had I lived in another time

I would have been an explorer.

You know,

had I lived in the late 1700s,

I would have wanted to know what

was across the Appalachian Mountains.

If I'd been around when Lewis

and Clark went to the coast,

I'd liked to have gone with them,

you know.

And I think most people that cave

at this level and do this kind

of exploration feel that way.

Here, Bridges and his companions

excavated to break into Lechuguilla

for the first time.

Now the entrance is protected

by a lockable hatchway.

Through this tiny aperture

the cave breathes

blowing air out or sucking

it in to equalize with the

barometric pressure above ground.

Winds up to 60 miles

an hour howl out of here,

hinting at the vast underworld below.

Today, this is Lechuguilla's

only known entrance,

and there may have never been another.

For a million years

this place has lain undisturbed.

In a real sense,

it is a primordial world,

untouched by all

but microscopic forms of life.

On rope!

It's a long ways down.

See you guys on the bottom.

Dave Jones starts down

the 150 foot pit

called Boulder Falls

It was here

that the first explorers realized

what a vast place they had discovered.

As you progress down,

it gets steeper and steeper

and pretty soon you're free hanging,

but your feet

are still against the rock

And all of a sudden you rappel

by this little ledge

and there's no more rock.

There's nothing in any direction.

Beyond the base of the pit

the cave branches off

in all directions.

Only computer imagery can portray

this labyrinth.

After the May 1986 exploration

the cave was known to be 700 feet deep

and more than half a mile long.

Today the system totals 60 miles

and plummets more than 1,600 feet.

Twisting capillaries and veins pierce

the earth in all directions.

This is a gigantic maze

in three dimensions,

defying conventional ideas

of direction and scale.

Footprints remain forever

in this fragile environment.

Plastic ribbons keep cavers

on main trails.

Expeditions into Lechuguilla have been

likened to exploring Everest

only in reverse.

The team is headed for Base Camp

still hours away.

The trail leads on into inky blackness

Often they traverse chambers so vast

the cave walls are barely discernible.

Gypsum crystals sparkle

along the route.

Now, cavers encounter Lechuguilla's

fantastic decorations

for the first time.

Helictites and gypsum flowers

extrude from the walls

fragile gardens that have taken

centuries to blossom,

as minerals have been squeezed from

the rocks like toothpaste from a tube.

Beauty abounds.

These jewels of the underground

are exquisitely delicate needles

of selenite.

With the constant maneuvering up down

and through the cave's

difficult terrain,

become painful burdens.

Always, in Lechuguills,

danger is not far away.

Okay, on three. One, two, three.

In 1991 seasoned caver Emily Mobley

slipped and broke her leg

while working on a surveying expedition

in the cave's western sector.

A mile and a half from the entrance,

this accident would trigger the largest

and most publicized cave rescue

in U.S. history.

A hundred experienced cavers

summoned to the scene

would labor four arduous days

to bring her to safety.

The bond of comradeship that unites

the caving community was seldom more

evident than during this emergency.

Every caver knows and instinctively

responds to the code of the underground

that only cavers can save

and protect each other.

After almost four hours,

the expedition reaches Lake Lebarge,

the first sizeable body of water to be

discovered in this branch of Lechuguilla.

Beautiful!

One of the greatest sights in caving,

isn't it?

Yes. Fantastic.

Is this Lake Lebarge?

Yeah.

Lebarge Borehole looks easier now.

Beautiful!

On rope!

the lake completely blocks

the way ahead.

Cavers had to wade it until they

found a detour

tricky, but possible.

Well, I think of particular moves

like dancing around the edge of Lebarge

as almost a ballet,

an underground ballet.

I know where my footholds are;

I know where my handholds are.

I know if I hit them just right

and move just right

some of them are kind of dynamic

in so much as you leave one handhold

while you're going for

the next foothold.

And if you do that just right

and you have your pack balanced

just right,

you flow through it real smoothly.

And so I think

it's very much like doing a dance,

a very intricate dance.

And you want to do it perfectly,

you know,

and it's very beautiful when you do.

Deeper into the cave,

mineral formations

become more fantastic and delicate.

Cavers must move among them

with great care.

Spikes of aragonite,

one form of calcium carbonate,

grow in fragile bushes.

The gentlest touch could damage them.

There is infinite contrast here.

The now famous Chandelier Ballroom

is one of caving's classic beauty spots

Plumes of gypsum sprout

from the ceiling,

some as long as 20 feet

the most dazzling examples

of their type ever found.

Utter silence pervades Lechuguilla.

The only sound is made by the intruder

In the constant 68-degree temperature

and high humidity,

dehydration is always a thr*at.

Anybody else need any hot water?

for some, the notion of life

with almost a quarter mile

of rock overhead

can be oppressive, even terrifying.

But cavers like Bridges

relish the experience.

It's almost like coming back to home

after you've been gone for a while.

It's a very comfortable feeling to me,

particularly in that particular cave.

And you know it's a sense of isolation

The world becomes very simple

Here there is no day or night.

If they ignore the time,

cavers tend to stay awake,

and sleep,

for longer and longer periods.

In Lechuguilla Cave,

there is little evidence of life.

But this is rare.

Many caves harbor a hidden kingdom

of creatures, dominated by bats.

Bats thrive in darkness.

They navigate not by sight,

but by subtle patterns

of reflected sound.

Some caves are home to millions

of bats,

the greatest concentration

of mammals anywhere.

Their nitrogen-rich droppings,

or guano,

are harvested as a fertilizer.

Large deposits produce a toxic gas,

which can be lethal.

Mountains of bat guano support

the intricate food chain underground.

Sometimes, an injured bat, or a baby,

falls into the guano

and itself becomes food.

Within minutes the bat is reduced

to a skeleton.

Abundant underground, the cave cricket

Crickets spend much of their time

gathering food outside their caves,

but inside they perform

a vital role as scavengers.

In mute testament to their environment

fish have evolved here without eyes.

The salamander has dispensed

with eyes, too,

and has no need of skin pigment

in a world without sunlight.

People have probably always found

shelter in caves.

Thousands of years ago,

as much of the world still lay

in the grip of the last Ice Age,

prehistoric hunters left spectacular

evidence behind them.

The human spirit was born

and nurtured here,

its expression etched

on walls of stone.

By the early 20th century

most people lived elsewhere.

But science and curiosity drove some

to explore deeper underground.

Magnesium flares lit the way,

filling dark voids with light.

Geologists squeezed into

subterranean chambers

seeking to understand

their origin and structure.

And soon the ancient lure

of caves turned to profit.

Tourists went underground.

Then and now,

humans have been compelled

to seek out caves,

and to combat the gloom

with gay defiance.

In the United States,

New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns

was declared a national park in 1930.

But natural wonders were not enough.

Carlsbad and other caves promoted

all sorts of attractions,

some a bit farfetched.

The time will come

when some master musician

in the Carlsbad Cavern will

be able to create s symphony in stone

Many parts of the world

are known for caves.

Because most lie on limestone bedrock,

the soil is often thin and life is hard

So it has often been

in the remote uplands of Kentucky.

But the automobile brought

a new source of wealth

city folks, eager for amusement.

Everyone who owned a cave

hung up a sign.

Each was touted as being bigger

and better than the others.

The so-called Cave Wars

spurred bitter feuds and even v*olence

Crystal Cave belonged

to the Collins family,

but it was too far

from the beaten path to prosper.

Thirty-seven-year-old Floyd,

one of the Collins boys,

was determined to find a cave closer

to the highway.

He set off alone on a

cold winter morning in January 1925

and squeezed into a narrow,

twisting cr*ck in the earth,

never before explored.

A hundred feet or so into

the tight passageway

Floyd dislodges a rock that falls

on his leg and pains his left foot.

Every detail of this fateful mishap

will soon be known throughout the world

Struggling to free himself,

Floyed becomes more tightly wedged.

His arms are pinned at his sides.

He can do nothing but shout for help.

Twenty-four hours later

Floyd's cries are heard.

A younger brother, Homer,

manages to reach him.

Coffee and sandwiches revive Floyd,

but no amount of tugging or pulling

will set him free.

Would-be rescuers knock down more

dirt and rocks.

Soon more help arrives,

but rescue efforts are clumsy

and disorganized.

Curious onlookers begin to gather.

They become restive and quarrelsome.

A week goes by.

Floyd is still alive

and the crowed swells to thousand.

It becomes a carnival.

Souvenirs are sold

and moonshiners arrive on the scene.

It's hard to maintain order

and the National Guard is summoned.

Skeets Miller

a 21-year-old newspaper reporter,

braves the tortuous passage seven times

to comfort Floyd

and describe his plight.

Miller takes down food and drink

and an electric light bulb

to keep Floyd warm.

In bitter cold and rain,

little more can be done for him.

When a cave-in blocks the passage,

a rescue shaft is begun.

People all over the country

join Floyd's family in prayer.

Floyd's brothers expect the worst.

Rescuers finally reach him

on the 18th day.

It is too late.

Floyd has been dead for some time.

The crowd goes home.

The public is soon interested

in other things.

It takes two months

to recover the body.

The rock that trapped Floyd

was not a boulder,

but a mere 27-pound stone,

shaped like a leg of lamb.

His death left a legacy of fear

of the dark,

mysterious underground

that haunts many to this day.

Today, there are about 16,000 devotees

of caving in the U.S.

Here, where Tennessee, Alabama,

and Georgia meet,

the countryside is studded

by deep pits

vertical caves

the delight of weekend enthusiasts.

Nine-year-old Leah Brown

holds a world speed record

for rope climbing.

Her partner, Avis Van Swearingen,

also holds a climbing record

for women over the age of 60.

With skill and courage

they suspend their lives

on a slender thread.

We call that rope the nylon highway

because it takes us

to wonderful places

and new parts of the cave,

and it's the only way you can get there

If I'm the first one down a drop,

and I have been the first,

the very first person

to ever go down a drop...

if we can't really tell

if the rope reaches the bottom,

the person who goes down first

wears their climbing gear, too,

so that you can put your climbing gear

on the rope and come up.

Also, we put a knot at the bottom

of that rope

so we can't rappel off the end of it,

which has happened to people.

I like the deep pits,

because when they're deep,

you get to go fast more.

That's why I like the deep pits,

because the short ones

you don't get to go fast very long.

The first time I did it in a pit,

it was only a 90-foot pit

and I didn't get scared.

I don't get scared very easily.

I like going fast.

When I go down fast,

the floor is real tiny and then

it starts getting bigger and bigger,

and I like to watch that.

An unfettered commitment

to their sport

compels cavers to seek new thrills

in undiscovered places.

For some, the quest

for adventure knows no boundary.

The Austrian Alps.

A fifth of the world's deepest caves

are located here, high in the mountains

These ice caves are 5,000 feet

above sea level.

They are natural deep freezes

where ice remains, even in hot summers

Here, geological time is condensed.

We can witness the growth

of ice formations

in short periods of months or years,

which in their stone counterparts

would take centuries.

From year to year these caves

are never the same.

As they thaw and freeze again,

the fantastic ice formations

are ever changing.

Few places on earth are more beautiful

or more treacherous,

with perhaps one exception.

Some cavers have merged their love of

the unknown with a passion for diving,

venturing into a bizarre world

underground and under water.

Originally formed above sea level,

these caves became submerged

about 10,000 years ago

as the last Ice Age retreated.

They are now 70 feet

beneath the surface.

Underwater caves are deathtraps

for the inexperienced.

But, from time to time,

tempting fate can have

astounding rewards.

In 1990, when exploring

a submerged tunnel off

the Mediterranean coast of France,

a professional diver surfaced

in a hidden chamber.

He found a treasure chest of art,

perhaps 18,000 years old.

Paintings and engravings depict

animals that roamed southern Europe

before the last great ice sheets melted

Some experts question the authenticity

of the art,

but close examination is impossible.

Cosquer Cave is a place

of haunting mystery.

To protect it, the cave is now sealed

by order of the French government.

In time a new entrance may be built

and the truth known.

An expanse of sinkholes and

depressions pockmark

south central Kentucky

where, beneath the surface,

the limestone is riddled with caves.

They are everywhere,

an integral part of the landscape.

This is Floyd Collins country,

and the contest to attract

the tourist dollar still rages on.

The star attraction is Mammoth

the world's longest cave.

A national park since 1941,

the cave now draws more

than half a million visitors a year.

Back in the 1800s

tour guides here were

often black slaves.

One of them, Stephen Bishop,

became perhaps the greatest caver

of them all.

On his own,

with little more than a lamp,

a rope, and a sketchbook,

Bishop explores the depths

of Mammoth Cave.

He creates a surprisingly accurate map

of this complex underground maze.

Deep in the cave

Bishop is confronted by a gaping void

that came to be known

as Bottomless Pit.

Beyond, Bishop explores regions

that had never been visited in his time

But in these remote reaches

he hinds evidence

that someone has preceded him.

Some archeologists believe

that Stephen Bishop

may have also encountered one

of Mammoth's most compelling mysteries

Trapped under a boulder

are the ancient remains

of a human being.

Not for another century would

the mummified body be rediscovered

and then as the technology

became available,

removed from beneath

the six-ton boulder.

A sensation in its time,

the mysterious body would be

on public display for years

and given the name Lost John.

Two to three thousand years ago

this man was digging around

the base of a heavy rock

when it dislodged and crushed him.

What was he doing here?

How did he get here?

No one believed that ancient humans

could have ventured this far

into the forbidding depths

of Mammoth Cave.

Today, new evidence helps

to answer these questions.

Archeologist Ken Tankersley

has spent years

investigating the traces

of ancient humans in Mammoth.

Armed with cane reeds collected

near the park,

Tankersley simulates

the methods prehistoric

explorers would have used here.

We have long known that human beings

lived near the entrance of caves.

But Lost John suggested

that prehistoric people

had gone far into Mammoth

perhaps two day's travel.

Was this possible?

At first Tankersley himself had doubts

I'm always amazed when I think about

what it takes for us to go into a cave.

We wear a hard hat;

we wear out caving lamp,

whether it's electric or carbide;

and we carry two sources

of back-up light.

We wear enough clothing

to ward off hypothermia.

These people wore virtually nothing

loin cloths at best.

Probably most frequently,

based on what we've seen in the cave

in terms of human remains,

these people were naked,

carrying nothing but cane reed torches

The reed torches were the only light

source available to ancient humans.

They produce surprisingly

efficient illumination

and conjure ghosts

from the heavy shadows.

Their daring was incredible.

For humans, light is life in a cave.

But these explorers traveled

up to 12 miles

with nothing but reed torches between

them and a horrible fate.

Their pathway can be followed even now

A trail of b*rned torch fragments

leads Tankersley and his companions

to a cavity in the rock face.

Digging marks and a crude implement

are evidence of some kind

of activity here.

That's magnificent.

Notice the cut edge.

A primitive tool,

one of dozens found deep in the cave.

What was it used for?

Another clue:

a rich seam of selenite crystal

courses through the rock face nearby.

These findings prove that

prehistoric people were engaged

in widespread mining of crystals

throughout the cave.

The scale of the operation

was staggering.

Tons of material were removed.

The mining continued without

interruption for over a thousand years

The ancient miners took selenite

and other minerals from the cave.

But what they were used

for remains a mystery

as medicines, or ornaments,

or for use in rituals?

Perhaps all three.

Just as mysteriously,

around the time of the birth of Christ

the mining suddenly ceased.

As yet no one knows why.

All that remains is abundant evidence

that they once were here,

driven by needs and desires

we may never understand.

To our right, down below,

is the famous Bottomless Pit.

For many, many years lights were not

sufficient to reach the bottom.

Visiting Mammoth today

is a journey through time.

But as they are guided

along comfortable tourist trails,

few visitors can imagine the tortuous

passageways that lie beyond them.

not knowing the true depth of the pit

or what lay on the other side.

Reaching the other side,

they were surprised to find an avenue

over there and more cave.

This opened up the doorway to the vast

unknown mileage that

we all Mammoth Cave.

Mammoth Cave Ridge skirts

the Houchins Valley.

On the other side, beneath Flint Ridge

lies another cave network,

once shrouded in mystery.

Here, 40 years ago,

one of the great exploits

of cave exploration began.

In the 1950s a group of weekend

adventurers began an intensive probe

into the secrets of Flint Ridge.

There had long been talk of a vast

underground system

that might link all

the caves in the area.

It began as an exciting pastime.

It became a grueling obsession.

Over the years hundreds of

men and women took part.

There were untold yards

of muddy crawlways.

There were pits and crevices and mazes

from which there seemed no escape.

Flint ridge developed its own

colorful place names: the Corkscrew,

Shower Shaft, Agony Avenue.

But the cave grew,

until Flint Ridge alone

was pushed to nearly 90 miles.

And if it could be connected

to Mammoth,

then this was the underground Everest

by far the longest cave in the world.

In the summer of 1972

a team entered Flint Ridge to probe

a tantalizing passage

that led toward Mammoth.

It took seven hours to reach the end

of the known passage.

Then they tackled what would be called

the Tight Spot.

It seemed impenetrable.

But one of the team had a knack

for narrow places

Pat Crowther a computer programmer

and mother of two.

Well, it never occurred to anyone

to try to go through that place.

It was a crazy place to even think

that you could get your body into.

The Tight Sport was a very tiny,

vertical crevice out the bottom

of a small indentation in the floor.

And if you just casually looked down

into the hole and saw that cr*ck,

you would say no one could

possibly fit in there.

Somehow Crowther squirmed through.

Six weeks later,

miles beyond where anyone

had gone before,

a chilling but significant discovery

was made.

In a mud bank were the initials P.H.,

scratched there by Pete Hanson,

a long-dead tour guide.

He could have come here only

from the Mammoth Cave side.

Carpenter Richard Zopf

was in the group

and recalls the impact

of the discovery.

We had the feeling that we had found

...the passage that was going

to take us into Mammoth Cave,

but we hadn't done it.

We seen virtually a mile of passage

but we didn't know

exactly where it went.

And we plugged along

and we plodded along

and we surveyed and we surveyed

and we surveyed.

Ten days later the group tried again,

reaching what they now called

Hanson's Lost River in nine hours.

Excitement and exhaustion dominated

the thoughts of leader John Wilcox.

The worst thing we feared was that

the passage would descent

so that the water would come clear

to the ceiling,

and it sure looked like that

was what was happening.

The water was getting

deeper and deeper

and the ceiling was coming down.

We're getting bent over,

scrunching our backs up

against the ceiling,

trying to keep from getting

our chests wet.

And it was getting so wet that I told

the rest of the party to wait here...

I'm going to look ahead a little bit.

Because I know if I get completely wet

I can get out of the cave,

but I wasn't sure everybody else could

And just go as far as

I can and trying very carefully

not to get my chest wet and not to put

my light out and so forth.

I don't have a good sense of the time

but John only went a few feet,

went ahead for 30 seconds.

And then there was a pause

and it's like:

What's happening, John?

And John says:

You know the passage is opening up!

And, well, you know:

'Should we come ahead?'

From that low point the passage

just immediately opens

into the huge Echo River passage...

and eventually my eyes adjusted enough

I could begin to see a wall clear

across the passage,

a hundred feet away perhaps.

And there was a bright, shining,

horizontal line along the wall,

which is something

you don't see in a cave.

You don't see any straight lines.

And it had these vertical lines

underneath

and I realized that was a handrail.

We had come out on a tourist trail!

All of sudden John shouted:

I see a tourist trail!

And those words just

electrified the party.

It was kind of like

someone yelling Fire! in a theater.

Everybody just surged forward...

...and we realized that

we had made the connection.

Achieving the dream of decades,

they had connected two great

subterranean systems.

Today, it is a cave with 340 miles

of passageways.

It's one of these, you know,

complete victories that

you don't often achieve in life.

Usually things are shades of gray

in your professional work

or your personal relations with

other people or whatever.

In climbing a mountain,

sometimes you have a clear-cut victory

Either you reached the top

or you didn't.

And this was one clear-cut victory

in my life where,

by golly,

we went in the Flint Ridge side

and we came out the Mammoth Cave side

It was a strange and lonely victory.

After a grim struggle in the dark,

subterranean river,

they emerged in Mammoth Cave

at one in the morning.

Not even a watchman

was there to greet them

as they trudged into

one of the most famous

tourist landmarks underground

the Snowball Dining Room.

And they would complete

their historic trek

with sublime ease

riding to the surface in an elevator.

There was no fanfare,

no waiting reporters.

But they were still overjoyed.

Like all cavers, in victory or defeat,

they were used to being on their own.

Beneath the New Mexican desert,

the National Geographic expedition

to Lechuguilla

Begins its second week underground.

The cave's beauty is now legendary,

but there is more to discover here.

High on a hill deep within the heart

of the cave, a mystery unfolds.

Sulfur is prevalent here and

in other regions of the cave.

And tiny bacteria are found

in these deposits along

with fungi that feed on them.

In turn, the bacteria may feed

on the sulfur,

thriving in eternal darkness.

Evidence indicates an unusual genesis

for Lechuguilla.

As hydrogen sulfide rose from below,

it mixed with oxygen in water or air,

forming sulfuric acid.

This potent chemistry gradually

ate through the limestone,

creating the cave from the bottom up.

Lechuguilla's vulnerability

to human impact

may preclude it from ever becoming

a public show cave.

A profound respect for the cave

is shared by most cavers

and severely enforced.

Special shoes are worn for

traversing formations where boots

may mar exquisite flowstone.

Stalagmites of calcite line the shores

of the Persian Gulf,

so called because of the thousands

of pearl-like formations found here.

Looking like fried eggs,

this kind of cave pearl is built up

from calcite in the water.

Another variety of cave pearl forms

when a single grain of sand

becomes coated with calcite.

Over time the relentless dripping

of water swivels the grain

and the coating becomes thicker,

like the creation of a pearl

in an oyster.

Lake Castrovalva guards

a remote corner of the cave.

The only way across is to swim.

But the conservation creed demands

that no dirty clothing soil its purity

The air and water temperatures

are the same year round 68 degrees.

Intricate stone formations

border the edge of the lake,

slowly deposited by waters rich

in calcite.

For eons these exotic shores

have been still and silent

calm until now.

Light on the station.

The primary function of any expedition

is to explore and survey the cave

to produce a detailed map.

Keeping accurate records is virtually

a religion for modern cavers.

Two thirty-nine, point five.

It's what separates them from earlier,

less responsible explorers underground

Plus four.

Plus four.

Finding something new is

the first great thrill of caving.

The second comes later

finding the way out.

Each night the latest survey date

are typed into the computer

to produce an updated map.

The ancient skeleton

of a ring-tailed cat.

Kiym Cunningham examines

one of the riddles of Lechuguilla.

It's a mystery. I mean, altogether

it's a mystery how he got down here.

We're a thousand feet below

the surface.

Many vertical pits and long passages

to get here.

So, he was a heck of a caver!

He evidently d*ed right on the margin

of this old pool system here,

so I would imagine possibly

he was alive when he was down here,

came to the pool to drink.

Only source of water he could find.

And maybe the mineral content

was very high.

It was not a good pool to drink from

and that may have been what k*lled him

The amount of carbon dioxide

in the cave atmosphere is measured.

If the level down here

is the same as on the surface,

it could indicate other openings

yet to be discovered.

Somewhere within the cave's vast system

the air is being disturbed.

There is noticeable movement.

Still, Lechuguilla refuses to yield

its secrets easily.

It remains alien

and strangely beautiful,

a landscape from another world.

Lechugulla's wonder is a fragile thing

What man can discover,

he can easily destroy.

Most of us may never see

these enchanting caverns

and others that lie still undiscovered.

But perhaps it will be enough to know

that they are there.

Lechuguilla now consists

of almost 60 miles

of breathtaking passageways.

New discoveries continue

and there is no end in sight.
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