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Friday, July 13, 2012

Krubera Cave

Since Jules Verne wrote his influential novel “Journey to the Center of the Earth“, the aim to discover the deepest place below surface has sparked the imaginations of generations of explorers, adventurers and scientists. Those in search of the deepest known cave on the planet are always lead to Georgia’s breakaway region of Abkhazia. Deep in the mountains of the Arabika massif, this record-breaking cave can be found - it is the Krubera Cave, also known as Voronya Cave, just to keep it interesting.

The Arabika massif in the Western Caucasus constitutes one of the largest karst massifs on Earth, but despite its enormous potential to scientists, the area, including Krubera Cave, has been woefully under-explored. One of the reasons is the remoteness of the area, which is only accessible for up to four months a year, but the main obstacle for scientists have been the numerous political conflicts in Abkhazia, which continue until today.

Krubera Cave became the world’s deepest cave in 2001, when Ukrainian speleogolists reached a depth of 1710m, thereby exceeding the previous known reigning champion in the Austrian Alps. At a depth of 1500m a subterranean waterfall of near-freezing water has flooded a branch of the cave system, while the main branch continues to a depth of 2140m, where a terminal siphon marks the end of the cave.

The Ukrainian speleogolists needed a staggering 14 days to reach the siphon at the end of the cave. A number of endemic fauna has been found at all levels of depth within the cave, including spiders, scorpions, beetles, as well as stygofauna like shrimps and amphipods.