Airmen's Cave

Airmen's Cave
Map showing the location of Airmen's Cave

Showing location of Airmen's Cave in Texas

Location Austin, Texas, U.S.A.
Coordinates 30°14′30″N 97°47′30″W / 30.241673°N 97.791595°W / 30.241673; -97.791595Coordinates: 30°14′30″N 97°47′30″W / 30.241673°N 97.791595°W / 30.241673; -97.791595
Depth 9 metres (30 ft)
Length 3,444 metres (11,299 ft)
Height variation 15 metres (49 ft)
Elevation 170 metres (560 ft)
Discovery 1971
Geology Cretaceous limestone
Entrances 1
Hazards small passages
Access gated
Cave survey Un. Texas Grotto, NSS. 1974

Airmen's Cave is a cave located adjacent to Barton Creek in Travis County in south Austin, Texas. It is 3,444 metres (11,299 ft) long,[1] and is characterized by long crawls and tight passages.[2] The cave is within the Barton Creek Greenbelt public park, and is managed by the City of Austin's Parks and Recreation Department.[3]

Features

The cave is formed from the Edwards limestone of the early Cretaceous, and was original a feeder for Barton Springs before the water table lowered and the stream found a different course.[4] It is home to a number of endangered troglobite species, including Rhadine persephone (the Tooth Cave ground beetle), Tartarocreagris texana (the Tooth Cave pseudoscorpion), Neoleptoneta myopica (the Tooth Cave spider), Texella reddelli (the Bee Creek cave harvestman), Texella reyesi (the Bone Cave harvestman), and Texamaurops reddelli (the Kretschmarr Cave mold beetle).[5]

One of the more foreboding passages, found within sight of daylight, is the "Birth Canal": a tight, restricting tunnel that once discouraged many novice cavers from continuing on. Much deeper in the cave is a space known as the "Aggie Art Gallery," containing a reddish maroon clay and dozens of handmade sculptures, all formed and left behind by cavers.[6]

History

The cave was discovered in 1971 by two airmen from Bergstrom Air Force Base, who excavated a draughting crack under a crag. It was explored and surveyed over the next three years by members of the University of Texas Grotto of the National Speleological Society, who had to dig their way through several blockages.[7]

The cave was the subject of a major rescue effort in October 2007 when three students became lost. They emerged unharmed after being underground for 30 hours.[8]

In 2012 a security gate was installed in response to a sharp increase in traffic, which was considered to pose a serious safety risk to untrained individuals exploring the cave, as well as being a threat to the cave and its fauna.[9]

References

  1. Gulden, Bob (November 2013). "USA Longest Caves". NSS GEO2 Committee on Long and Deep Caves. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  2. Weinstein, Natalie (15 October 2007). "When low-tech triumphs: a cave rescue". CNET. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  3. "Park Directory". The City of Austin. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  4. Hovorka, Sue. "Edwards Limestone Outcrop along Barton Creek" (PDF). Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  5. "Wildland Caves". City of Austin. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  6. Lewis, Patrick. "Airmans's Cave to the Aggie Art Gallery". Mountain Drawn. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  7. Russel, William (November 1975). "Airmen's Cave" (PDF). The Texas Caver. 20 (6): 167177. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  8. "Student Spelunkers Emerge Unharmed After Being Trapped in Texas Cave". Fox News. 14 October 2007. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  9. "Biological Monitoring". City of Austin BCCP Coordinating Committee Meeting. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
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