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Saturday, March 24, 2007

100 speleologists trapped as quarry collapses in Moscow region

Amateur speleologists who were trapped in an abandoned quarry in the Moscow Region following a cave-in, have cleared a passageway to the surface and are now out of danger, emergency services said Saturday.

"The report of a collapse at a quarry near the village of Starostyanovo [near the town of Domodedovo, about 30 km to the south of Moscow] came at about 3 p.m. Moscow time [midday GMT]," a police source said earlier today.

It said up to 100 speleologists may have been trapped after a section of quarry collapsed, blocking the only exit.

But an emergency services official said later they had managed to unblock the passageway before rescue workers arrived at the scene.

"About 20 of them have already come to the surface. There are no casualties," he said.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

'Cave entrances' spotted on Mars

South polar region of Mars
Nasa release on the topography of the
south polar region of Mars
Scientists studying pictures from Nasa's Odyssey spacecraft have spotted what they think may be seven caves on the surface of Mars.

The candidate caves are on the flanks of the Arsia Mons volcano and are of sufficient depth their floors mostly cannot be seen through the opening.

Details were presented here at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Houston, Texas.

Temperature data from Mars Odyssey's Themis instrument support the idea.

The authors say that the possible discovery of caves on the Red Planet is significant.

The caves may be the only natural structures capable of protecting primitive life forms from micrometeoroids, UV radiation, solar flares and high energy particles that bombard the planet's surface.

Monday, March 12, 2007

Caves Of St. Louis County: A Tale Of Loss

Robert Osburn (yellow helmet, recording and sketching) and
WUSTL graduate student Jenny Lippmann (measuring and
doing compass readings) conducting the cave survey in
a small passage of 23 degree cave in Crawford County, Missouri.
The Caves of St. Louis County and the Bridges of Madison County share a common theme: loss.

The former, a scholarly paper that appears as the sole entry of the journal Missouri Speleology (Vol. 45, No. 1, 2007) is a description of some of St. Louis County's 127 known caves and a warning that development over the past two centuries has eliminated or destroyed many caves in a state that could quite rightly call itself the Cave State. The latter is a tear-jerking novel, made into a movie by Clint Eastwood, about a doomed, unlikely love affair, a hallmark of the '90s with all the permanence of the Backstreet Boys.

Caves, though, are in trouble, at least in St. Louis County, Missouri, USA, says co-author Robert Criss, Ph.D., professor of earth and planetary sciences in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis.

"Caves have been discarded by developers with the same impunity as trees," said Criss. "Things are developing so rapidly in St. Louis County and elsewhere that we should try a little harder to protect our natural habitat. There is no law in Missouri to protect caves on private land, and we don't seem to have any protocol as to what is acceptable. The loss of caves is not on anyone's radar screen, and I think it should be."

Caves are a feature of karst terrain, along with sinkholes, springs, and "losing" streams that disappear into "swallow holes" and resurface in other areas. Criss and his collaborators, Washington University earth and planetary sciences graduate student Jennifer Lippmann and research colleagues Everett Criss and G.R. Osburn, studied most of the 127 reported caves in St. Louis County — which excludes St. Louis city — a county of 508 square miles with a population (2000 Census) of 1,016,315, comprising nearly one-third of the St. Louis area's population of approximately 2.7 million.

Legendary caves of Missouri

Caves in this karst region are legendary, having served over time as beer storage sites, ballrooms, taverns, speakeasies and disposal sites. Farther north, outside Hannibal, who could forget Injun Joe's lingering death in the cave that was gated after Tom and Becky Thatcher became lost there?

Like Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, the authors, using existing data of mostly paper documents, including maps — most between 20 and 50 years old, but some extending into the late 19th century — located many of the 127 caves, whose aggregate length is more than four miles. The cave lengths, though, are exponentially distributed, with half of the caves less than 100 feet long. Two of the longest caves, Cliff Cave and Cave of the Falls, both in the southeast part of the county, account for a full half of the aggregate length of all caves in the county.

They found that the entrances to at least two caves have undergone significant natural modification from breakdown or landslide processes. They also found that a far larger number — greater than 10 percent — have been highly modified or obliterated by suburban expansion in the county. At least 24 caves have been obliterated or made into culvert entrances. St. Louis County's Metropolitan Sewer District even manages several caves as part of the sewer system that handles street runoff. Indeed, there is a picture in the journal paper of a typical suburban yard, the homeowner standing next to a storm sewer culvert, which is the entrance to Fogelbach Cave.

During the project, Criss and his associates located and examined the caves, wrote new reports for them and typed-up and entered all the preexisting reports into the Missouri Speleological Survey electronic database. In the historic reports, multiple names or index numbers were sometimes found for the same cave, or the same name and index number were applied to different caves. The authors updated the records and visited many of the caves, refining the previously reported locations with a Global Positioning System (GPS). It was from these visits and checking physical features versus previous reports that they determined the natural modifications to the entrances of two caves.

Caving adventure, astonishment

The caving experience was not without adventure and astonishment. Lippmann early on came face-to-face with a startled animal in one cave.

'I was in a tight, watery spot when suddenly found myself face-to-face with a beaver," she said. "Many people do not realize how many caves there are in this area, and yet caving lets you experience a whole different world that is mysterious and beautiful."

Criss and Lippmann say that caves are the homes of many species, including several types of bats and salamanders, the Ozark cave crayfish, amphipods, isopods and many others. In addition, some species, such as raccoons, bears and the beaver Lippmann encountered, use caves as temporary domiciles.

Caving should be done with proper respect for potential dangers and for preserving these natural features and their inhabitants, the authors said.

"It's hard to measure the impact of filling in caves on habitat and species loss," Criss said. "I'm not saying I want all development to stop or that owners shouldn't sell to developers. My point is that we really haven't sufficiently discussed the issue."

Another karst feature, the sinkhole, is little understood in St. Louis County. In county parks that have not been developed, topographic maps show numerous sinkholes, as many as 100 per square mile. Many other areas including downtown St. Louis had similar numbers of sinkholes before development obscured them.

"There are thousands of sinkholes in the county that people are unaware of, as well as maybe one hundred more caves that we haven't yet been able to find," Criss said.

Together, the issue of sinkholes, caves and springs, the components of a karst geological system, has created structural problems in suburban housing, and ecological and water pollution concerns.

"Disregard for springs, caves and sinkholes can lead to their destruction and can result in engineering problems for structures built on karst terrain," the authors write.

Outgrowths of this project include Lippmann's master's degree thesis and a paper on stress effects in caves by Everett Criss.

Source: ScienceDaily

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Prototype Space Probe Prepares To Explore Earth's Deepest Sinkhole

Doctoral student Marcus Gary SCUBA dives with the DEPTHX
probe during initial in-water tests at The University of Texas
at Austin Applied Research Laboratories wet test facility.
Scientists return this week to the world's deepest known sinkhole, Cenote Zacatón in Mexico, to resume tests of a NASA-funded robot called DEPTHX, designed to survey and explore for life in one of Earth's most extreme regions and potentially in outer space.

If all goes well with this second round of testing and exploration, the team will return in May for a full-scale exploration of the Zacatón system.

Sinking more than 1,000 feet, Zacatón has only been partially mapped and its true depth remains unknown.

During eight years of research, doctoral student Marcus Gary and hydrogeology professor Jack Sharp from The University of Texas at Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences, discovered the system's unusual hydrothermal nature is analogous to liquid oceans under the icy surface of Jupiter's moon Europa.

Technology developed to explore the sinkholes could be applied to future space probes of Europa, where scientists believe that deep cracks and holes in the ice offer a chance of finding extraterrestrial life.

Monday, March 5, 2007

Discovery Of New Cave Millipedes Casts Light On Arizona Cave Ecology

The north rim (left) and south rim (right) species of the
new millipede genus. While they may appear identical
, careful examination of the gonopods indicates
these are two distinct species.
Photo by D. Billings
A new genus of millipede was recently discovered by a Northern Arizona University doctoral student and a Bureau of Land Management researcher.

J. Judson Wynne, with the Department of Biological Sciences at NAU and cave research scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey's Southwest Biological Center, and Kyle Voyles, Arizona State Cave Coordinator for the Bureau of Land Management, collected specimens leading to the discovery of two new millipede species in caves on opposite sides of the Grand Canyon.

Wynne and Voyles, known for their cave research, also discovered a new genus of cricket last spring.

"We knew the millipedes likely represented two distinct species because the two populations were separated by the Grand Canyon," Wynne said. "The fact these two species belong to an entirely new genus was a great surprise to us."

Wynne said these eyeless albino millipedes are "essentially living fossils" and provide researchers with another piece of the puzzle needed to better understand cave ecosystems.