SAUDI
CAVE
FEATURED AT AZORES
SYMPOSIUM
Copyright 2004 - All photos by J. Pint unless
otherwise
indicated Updated September, 2013
Sixty-seven cavers from fifteen countries came
together on
Portugal’s Pico Island, in the Azores, for the Eleventh International
Symposium on Vulcanospeleology, May 14-17, 2004. Presentations and
discussions
on volcanic caves and pits were held every other day and, of course, in
between
there were visits to caves, calderas and other attractions of these
volcanic
islands of the Atlantic.
These meetings are held every two years under the
auspices
of the International Union of Speleology (UIS) Commission on Volcanic
Caves. The
last gathering was in Iceland
and
this year’s event was organized by cavers in the Azores (GESPEA)
and the Environmental Department of the Regional Government.
Most of the opening talks were in Portuguese with
simultaneous translation into English via headsets. Geologist Antonio
M. Galopim
de Carvalho led off with slides of natural wonders in Portugal which,
despite
many obstacles, are now being recognized as geomonuments
by the
government. He also stated that “Vulcanospeleology is no longer a
punishment
from God,” in reference to olden times when tremors, boiling seas and
other
“mysterious” volcanic phenomena were much feared on these islands.
An outdoor dinner followed, with folk dances for
entertainment. We were surprised and pleased to see that the dancers
really were “just folks” from the neighborhood...
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...The dances were held
near a beautifully illuminated Dragon’s Blood tree (Dracaena draco)...
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...The next day, we took the ferry boat to
Faial Island, about a half an hour from Pico. We visited a museum
dedicated to the 1957 and ’58 volcanic eruptions and then drove to
Ponta dos Capelinhos where it all happened....
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...Dr. Stephan Kempe and
John Pint put their noses to the grit, looking for semi-precious stones
at Capelinhos...
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After sampling the world’s most delicious
“Churrasgo”
chicken, we visited a two-km-wide caldera surrounded by all sorts of
wildflowers, and then headed for our first cave...
....Capelo Cave on Faial
Island. Unfortunately, when you put 30 people into a 30-meter-long
cave, all you can see are bodies!
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SAUDI CAVE RATED
AMONG WORLD'S TOP TEN
The next day featured presentations. The most
important one
for Saudi Arabia was Paolo Forti’s description of nineteen
minerals, many of them quite rare, which his team discovered
in samples we
gathered from Hibashi Cave. The most unusual of these minerals were
formed due
to the effect of heat from a guano fire on the components of bat-urine
“stalactites”
and unburnt guano.
After showing surprisingly sharp pictures of these
tiny
crystals, Paolo announced that Saudi Arabia’s Hibashi Cave had been
added to
the list of the ten most important volcanic caves in the world in terms
of the
mineral contents of its speleothems. He further pointed out that the
Hibashi
results confirmed his theory that lava caves are likely to house more
rare
minerals than limestone caves.
It should be observed that inclusion among the ten
most
important volcanic caves of the world implies that Hibashi cave is
eligible for
world-scale recognition as one of the most important geological sites
on the
planet.
Below is a picture of one of the samples and a few
of the
minerals found. For more information, see "Ghar
Al
Hibashi Lava Tube: the richest site in Saudi Arabia for cave
minerals" by P. Forti and others, available from GESPEA.
Left: One of the most
important samples, a fragment of a jaw with external vitreous saccaroid
crusts. Right:
Opal-C
(SiO2�nH2O – tetragonal),
distinguishable by its flat, lenticular shape. |
Left: Chlorapatite [Ca5(PO4)3Cl
- monoclinic] Right: "A still not
determined material which may be an intermediate phase between
pyrocoproite and arnhemite.” Could it be a new
mineral?. |
CAVE EDUCATION AND TOURISM IN THE AZORES
In other presentations, Azores cavers
brought us up to date on the many different projects and studies they
are
involved in. Te�filo
Braga discussed their environmental education
program and told us that, in the last few years, 1,441 school children
have gone
on guided visits to the Gruta Do Carvao on Sao Miguel Island...
...Ines Vieira da Silva and Miguel Vieira showed
plans for an unconventional visitors’ center for Gruta das Torres Cave
on Pico Island. The shape, material and color would suggest lava and
fit in with the environment around the mouth of the cave. An equally
harmonious wall would protect the cave entrance from intruders while
still leaving it open to the sky. Stairs made of local
pahoehoe slabs have already been built...
Visitors to
Torres Cave. will be issued helmets and lights in order to preserve the
cave's natural state.
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LAVA CAVES DISCOVERED IN JORDAN
...Dr. Stephan Kempe reported studies
carried out in Jordan by himself, Dr. Ahmad Al-Malabeh, Dr.
Horst-Volker Henschel, and others. They found five lava tunnels and two
pressure ridge caves in the Harrat Al-Jabban volcanics, part of the
Harrat Al Sham volcanic field which covers territory both in Jordan and
in Saudi Arabia...
Dr. Al-Malabeh, Abdulrahman Al-Jouid and Mahmoud
Al-Shanti in Abu Al Kursi East
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Note: Dr. Kempe
uses the term “lava tunnel” in preference to lava tube
because his studies in Hawaii reveal that lava does not flow through
channels
which are later crusted over, but by repeated underflowing and
inflating of
initial lava deltas.
...All of the Jordanian caves were
surveyed and mapped, the longest being Beer Al-Hammam (445 meters). As
in Saudi Arabia, sediments cover the floors, stone walls and cairns are
seen and pigeon (probably rock dove) droppings are found, as well as
bones carried in by hyenas. Indeed, a naturally mummified hyena was
found in Dabi� Cave. Unlike in Saudi Arabia, digs have been carried out
in some of the Jordanian caves and numerous flint tools, possibly
Neolithic, have been found....
Entrance to Beer Al-Hammam
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NEW PROJECTS IN SAUDI LAVA CAVES
...John Pint gave two
presentations. One was on the Caves of
Shuwaymis reporting the mapping of Kahf Al Shuwaymis (513 m)
and of Dahl Romahah (202 m long). The latter is well decorated with
flowstone and speleothems composed of secondary minerals which have
leaked through the ceiling and walls...
Saeed Al-Amoudi
setting up a survey station beneath the sort of flowstone
typically found throughout Dahl Romahah.
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...The second
presentation was on surveys and studies conducted in Hibashi Cave
(565 m long). OSL age-dating of the fine silt or loess on the floor has
shown that it is 4500 years old at a depth of 1.5m and, farther inside
the cave it is 5800 years old at the bottom of a hole 40cm deep. Carbon
dating of a human skull found in the cave reveals it is 425 years old... |
...Speculation was made
that much could be learned about the plant life of ancient Saudi Arabia
from phytoliths, or tiny, uniquely shaped bits of opal which have been
found in plant material contained in hyena scat commonly seen in Saudi
caves.
Left: broken coprolite
with plant material. Right: phytolith photo courtesy of C. Mulder
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The Hibashi presentation concluded with
a report that
Researchers working with the Field and Space Robotics Lab at MIT to
develop
microrobots for cave exploration on Mars, recently requested permission
to use
photos of Hibashi Cave to illustrate the possible interior conditions
of lava
tubes on Mars. They had been using Arizona caves as models,
but they now
think that the thick layer of loess on the floors of Saudi caves is
closer to
conditions that will be found on Mars.
HOW
TO EXPLORE A CAVE WITH NO ENTRANCE
At this session, Chris Wood described
the study of a lava
cave in Iceland which no one has ever entered! These studies began in
2000 with
a magnetometer and ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey which
indicated that
Stef�nshellir Cave, (see Saudicaves in Iceland [[link]] ) continues on
the
other side of a 20m long lava seal at its upflow end. Three hundred and
fifty
meters of cave passage were “discovered” (but not seen!) and more
recent
studies indicated that the concealed cave (given the Icelandic name
Hulduhellir,
Hidden Cave) may be 1.2 kms long.
THE
CAVES OF PICO ISLAND: GRUTA DAS TORRES
Next day, May 15, we
visited some of the most interesting caves on Pico. First we went to
Torres Cave, 5214m long. This is the one the Azores cavers would like
to build a tourist center for.
A pahoehoe-block
stairway leads down into Gruta das Torres.
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Paolo Forti ducks under
the lovely ceiling of the cave. The steam in this picture may look like
"hot air" but Paolo is exploring, not giving a lecture!
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Ropy-lava floor of the cave, something we never see
in Saudi Arabia due to thick layers of sediment or loess, up to 1.5m
deep.
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As everywhere, there’s
a graffiti problem. However, these words are written in the
slime on the cave walls and can be erased in an instant.
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GRUTA
DOS MONTANHEIROS
To get everyone in and
out of Montanheiros Cave quickly and easily, a ten-meter aluminum
ladder was set up.
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Marieke Meuller
examines lava stalactites on a fallen piece of the cave’s ceiling.
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Bill Halliday
inspecting delightful dribbles on the walls of Gruta dos Montanheiros.
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Stephan Kempe
explained that what we see here was once a lava ball which was carried
along in the lava stream until it got stuck (forever) at this tight
spot.
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GRUTA
DO SOLDAO
Gruta do Soldao was a
fascinating cave, as you'll see from the pictures below...
Ken Ingham's
cheerful smile tells us that the cave entrance may be tight, but it's
well worth it.
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...Ahem, well,
beside the tight entrance, there is this tricky
little climb-down, but it's still worth the effort!
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...For example,
I finally got to see a lava bench...which not only looks like a bench,
but can actually be used for one, as Paolino Costa demonstrates here.
And
guess what? Soldao Cave also has a lava gutter... which looks just
like... yes, you got it: a real gutter!
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...Moreover, the
ceiling of this cave is covered with curious formations, such as the
brightly colored coating on the left and the amazing OPAL stalactites
on the right...
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...But most
wonderful of all is the stunning view of the sea from a small "window"
in the cave wall. That's Paolo Borges admiring the waves.
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UIS
LAVA CAVE COMMISSION MEETING
The next day there was a power outage
at the school where the presentations were being held and the entire
day’s sessions were all jammed into one very long afternoon. The
morning was dedicated to the official meeting of the UIS Commission on
Lava Caves. Paolo Borges and Jan Paul van der Pas chaired the
meeting. Inquiries were made into the publication of the Proceedings
from the Iceland Symposium and it came to light that some contributions
may have vanished into Cyberspace instead of reaching the hands of
Siggy Jonsson....
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...The venue for the 2006 Symposium was
then discussed. Saudi Arabia was a contender, but, in the end, the
honor of holding the next Symposium was given to Korea. This was
accepted by Mr. Kyung Sik Woo, who suggested holding the event on Cheju
Island, whose lava tubes are candidates for World Heritage status....
Kyung Sik Woo describing the
extraordinary features of Korean lava tubes...
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HOPPERS
AND SLIME
In the afternoon, oral presentations
began with Biospeleology of Volcanic Caves. Paulo Borges, Rosalina
Gabriel and Elvio Nunes, among others, spoke of ground beetles,
hoppers, liverworts and mosses while Diana Northup focused on
“bacterial mats” meaning the “slime” we often find on the walls of
humid caves. ...
Yuck. Here is yet
another feature from Soldao Cave. On the wall we found what seems to be
cave slime mixed with muck that has leaked in from outside. Will Diana
discover strange new creatures growing in it?..
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HAWAIIAN
NEWS AND AN ICELANDIC DREAM
Later in the afternoon, Stephan Kempe
presented two
Hawaiian lava caves that have been eroded and greatly modified by
water. Arni
Stefansson of Iceland then speculated on ways to permit
public viewing of
Thrihnukagigur Cave, a giant bottle-shaped volcanic chimney. He
proposed a
balcony 60 m below the entrance, accessible through a 200 m man-made
tunnel
angling down from the surface. “The sight downward into the widening
chamber
is as if one were standing on the top of a 20-story building inside a
mountain.”
If one Euro could be collected from all persons who can't pronounce the
name of
this cave, Arni's project would be guaranteed success!
At the closing session of the
Symposium, the Azorean cavers
proudly announced the discovery -- made during the Pre-Symposium field
trip to
Algar do Montoso at S. Jorge Island -- of yet another new species of
troglobitic
insect (Trechus n.sp.). It was obvious from these presentations that
studies of
the flora and fauna in caves are likely to result in important
discoveries and
we look forward to the day when such research will begin in Saudi caves.
On this optimistic note, we end this
report on the XI
Symposium on Lava Caves and look forward to the next one on Cheju
Island in
Korea: MANSEI!
John
J. Pint
Member
UIS
Commission on Lava Caves
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