|
By REBECCA YONKER Associated Press Writer
MONTICELLO,
Ky. (AP)--In the misty darkness, Alan Glennon holds tightly
to a rope as he carefully makes his way down about 20 feet
of jagged, loose rocks.
His
only light is the small lamp on his hard hat as he takes
slow, careful steps down the rugged outcropping to the next
level in the underground obstacle course of cliffs and mud
and water.
``Rock,''
he shouts to his climbing partner, as one of the stones
clinks under his foot into the empty blackness.
They
are among the first explorers experienced enough and small
enough to squeeze through and see the prize that lies ahead
_ perhaps the biggest cave passageway in Kentucky.
The
newly discovered cave room is estimated to have a 90-foot
ceiling and a floor space of 2.5 acres. By comparison, the
largest room in Mammoth Cave is about 2 acres.
``It's
bigger than anything else we know about in the state,''
said Chris Groves, an associate geography professor at Western
Kentucky University in Bowling Green.
The
entrance to the cave was discovered in 1996 by former Western
Kentucky University student Art Pettit. Although he surveyed
a portion of it, Pettit didn't go very far in.
But
he told Glennon and fellow cavers Joel Despain and Shane
Fryer about the discovery. The trio decided a few months
ago to go in and create a detailed map of the cave. After
three months of work, Despain and Fryer found a jagged and
narrow crawl space leading to something beyond their imaginations.
``We
were hoping to find a big cave,'' Fryer said. ``We didn't
expect anything as big as we found.''
Although
it's a fascinating discovery, catching a glimpse of the
big room isn't the only reason the students have made the
trek to Wayne County in southern Kentucky.
They
have come also to learn. Geology and geography students
from the university try to visit the area every couple of
weeks to map and measure this cave and look for others.
The students want to keep the exact location of the cavern
private, to preserve its natural aspects. It is on private
property, about 100 miles south of Lexington.
So far,
they have mapped a 4,000-foot path through the unnamed cavern
along with Fryer and Despain. But there are still areas
that haven't been explored yet.
``A
cave map is the first level to understanding a cave,'' Glennon
said.
That's
a basic part of trying to conserve and protect one of the
state's natural resources, Groves said.
The
studies of cave systems and how they work can also help
researchers better understand water quality and supply problems,
Groves said. Much of the state's drinking water comes from
streams that run through caves.
The
discovery might also help other caves in the region by bringing
more attention to their importance, said Vicki Carson, a
spokeswoman for Mammoth Cave. ``They are delicate places
and they need protection,'' she said.
Fryer
said it was special to be one of the first people to see
such a big passageway.
``We
just sat there for a while looking around,'' he said. ``We
were just awestruck.''
That
expedition led to the recent trip by Glennon, a geology
graduate student at Western Kentucky, and Rhonda Pfaff,
a university senior studying geography. The pair took along
a reporter as they continued mapping some of the untouched
parts of the cave. They also wanted to take some photos
of it and see the big room for themselves.
``You
want to meet the cave on its own terms,'' Glennon said as
he made sure there were three light sources per person,
extra batteries, water, food, gloves and knee and elbow
pads.
His
equipment included a measuring tape, a compass and a notebook
so he could measure and sketch areas that haven't yet been
documented.
Glennon
and Pfaff make it the final 300 feet only after a grueling
six-hour trip. They climb over big chunks of broken rock.
They crawl on hands and knees over rough stones. They climb
carefully up mud banks that slide down into cold waist-deep
water. They inch slowly around crevasses that fall into
blackness. They squeeze through small passageways where
rock closes in so close they can barely raise their heads
to see where to go next.
When
he gets to the final obstacle, Glennon, who has been caving
for 18 years, seems a little surprised by what he finds.
He was expecting to have to crawl through a small, tight
passageway to get to the large room of the cave. But he
finds something a little different.
``This
isn't a belly crawl,'' he says after getting only a few
feet in. ``It's a contortionist crawl.''
Pfaff,
who has been exploring caves for about two years, followed
him only so far before deciding that it wasn't worth going
any farther.
``You
really have to love caving and hate your body,'' she said
after making her way back to a place where she could sit
and rest.
Glennon
pushes on, crawling the crooked, winding length of a football
field through jutting rocks that press tightly against his
chest. His first reaction to finding the place where the
cave opened up into a big room, Glennon said, was relief
that he wasn't being squeezed between the rock anymore.
Then, curiosity took hold as he looked around.
``With
a small light, it was hard to see the walls,'' he said.
Carefully,
Glennon worked his way from one car-sized rock to another
while listening to the babble of a stream below. It wasn't
until he got into the middle of the passageway and turned
around that the enormity of the room really hit him.
``There
was blackness in both directions,'' he said.
Over
the next few months, Glennon and the others will continue
to map the cave to find out what, if anything, lies beyond
the big room.
Although
Glennon has seen bigger passages in other caves in other
parts of the country, he said he feels a special attachment
to this one.
``It's
very exciting because it's a cave I started mapping right
from the entrance,'' he said. ``This is one I was a part
of.''
|