A Giant Cave in Vietnam

Places

Vietnam caveVietnam cave

Photographs by Carsten Peter for National Geographic

Just when we think we’ve found the biggest, longest, largest, or whatever-est of things, nature and man’s ability to discover new things continue to amaze us.

Last year, a cave was found in central Vietnam, and is only now really getting explored. Mark Jenkins recently spent some time there, and it seems to have vastly surpassed his expectations. The January issue of National Geographic covers what has been found out about this cave.

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Vietnam caveVietnam cave

Vietnam caveVietnam cave

Photographs by Carsten Peter for National Geographic

Just when we think we’ve found the biggest, longest, largest, or whatever-est of things, nature and man’s ability to discover new things continue to amaze us.

Last year, a cave was found in central Vietnam, and is only now really getting explored. Mark Jenkins recently spent some time there, and it seems to have vastly surpassed his expectations. The January issue of National Geographic covers what has been found out about this cave.

Mark Jenkins writes:

“I switch off my headlamp just to feel the depth of the darkness. At first there is nothing. But then, as my pupils adjust, I’m surprised to make out a faint, ghostly light ahead. I pick my way through the rubble, almost running from excitement, rocks scattering beneath my feet and echoing in the invisible chamber. Traversing up a steep slope, I turn a ridge as if on a mountainside and am stopped in my tracks.

An enormous shaft of sunlight plunges into the cave like a waterfall. The hole in the ceiling through which the light cascades is unbelievably large, at least 300 feet across. The light, penetrating deep into the cave, reveals for the first time the mind-blowing proportions of Hang Son Doong. The passage is perhaps 300 feet wide, the ceiling nearly 800 feet tall: room enough for an entire New York City block of 40-story buildings. There are actually wispy clouds up near the ceiling.

The light beaming from above reveals a tower of calcite on the cave floor that is more than 200 feet tall, smothered by ferns, palms, and other jungle plants. Stalactites hang around the edges of the massive skylight like petrified icicles. Vines dangle hundreds of feet from the surface; swifts are diving and cutting in the brilliant column of sunshine. The tableau could have been created by an artist imagining how the world looked millions of years ago…”

Visit the National Geographic website for more of the story, and to see more incredible pictures. National Geographic has also put together a useful interactive graphic that will help you understand what has been found, and the sheer scale of the cave.

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