Sunday, April 29, 2007

Carlsgood


The Guadalupe Mountains on the Texas-New Mexico border reach heights of almost 9,000 feet. Not far away, deep beneath the surface, are hundreds of caverns formed when sulfuric acid dissolved surrounding limestone. The limestone is what remains of a coral reef of an inland sea from around 250 million years ago. There are over 113 caves within Carlsbad National Park but only two are open to the public. The temperature in the caves is always about 56 degrees F. There's a very good, detailed article by the NPS HERE.

We entered through the Natural Entrance and descended a gradual mile along the traditional explorer's route to a depth of around 750 feet. The caves were used in the early 1900s to harvest bat guano, a rich fertilizer. It was open to tourists as early as the 1920s. From May to October over 400,000 (down from 8 million once) Mexican free-tailed bats live in one of the passageways of the caves. They leave at dusk and return to rest during the day. They migrate to Mexico for the winter. Native Americans knew about the caves long before, and artifacts including an ice scraper of an Ice-Age hunter and two spear points dating from about 10,000 years ago have been found nearby.


The "Big Room" at the bottom is over 8 acres (the size of 114 football fields). Among the many amazing features is Iceberg Rock, a single 200,000 ton boulder that fell from the ceiling thousands of years ago. There was also an overwhelming array of cave formations: stalactites, stalagmites, flow stone, soda straws, lily pads, draperies, columns, popcorn, cave pearls and mirror pools.


Click HERE for some photos, and PLEASE leave a comment here on the blog from time to time. It makes our day, and lets us know someone is actually checking it out.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Pictures are pretty amazing. Is the lighting inside the cavern natural or man-made? Old Fart

D3 and HT said...

The lighting was almost exclusively man made. After you entered the only natural light was from the natural entrance, it reached a few hundred feet. It was pretty difficult to take a decent photo. If I remember correctly there is something like 19 miles of wire hidden in the cave.

Anonymous said...

great pixs guys. It seems you keep find those "close" places. I'm not sure I could have done that cavern thing either. Wish I taught science, I'd use the photos, ghl

Anonymous said...

Looks like you were on another planet!! Great pics!!

dad

Anonymous said...

Great description and pictures - I am sitting here in UK viewing your blog - it makes me want to get on a plane and head over there.Your in my favourites list now - so I will keep checking you guys out.
Your the lucky ones !

Gary

D3 and HT said...

Thanks, Gary! Glad you're enjoying it. Nice to hear from you.