Chủ Nhật, 22 tháng 5, 2011
MICHAEL GORDON DOWN UNDER IN AN ONTARIO CAVE
It should come as no surprise that an Ontario cave is cold and wet and smelly – so much so in fact that we have named a nearby sink “the stink sink”. Anyway, here is me crawling from the entrance of the cave, the snow is yet to fully melt on the nearby slopes, but when you find an undiscovered cave (undiscovered to cavers that is) you have no choice but to explore it.
We only went in a short distance today as we needed wetsuits. I believe we must have seen about 100 feet of tunnel. It gets more spacious once you pass the entrance and the tunnel meanders in a limestone bedding plane. By the gently curved roof, it would not be unreasonable to suspect that the passage had initially developed beneath the water table, and by the multitude of other nearby karst features you absolutely know that numerous other sinks will be linking up as you get deeper in. Looking over the hill above the cave we could only speculate the route of the underground passage, a nearby sink led us to suspect the first part of the route, but after that who knows? Unlike the relatively predictable route of a joint oriented tunnel like my recent trip to the Casselman Cave, the bedding plane orientation (without joints thus far noticed) was a crap shoot.
Post courtesy of Michael Gordon, an intrepid caver in Ontario, Canada
Posted by Anne Gordon on Sunday 22nd May, 2011
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