The World's Longest Cave System Just Got Even Longer (livescience.com) 82
schwit1 shared this report from LiveScience: The world's longest known cave system just set a new record after surveyors spent hours mapping an additional 8 miles (13 kilometers) of the passageways at Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky.
The corridors at Mammoth Cave now measure a whopping 420 miles (676 km) in length, according to the National Park Service (NPS). That's about the distance between New York City and Raleigh, North Carolina.
Mapping the cave system was a huge undertaking, carried out by volunteers at the Cave Research Foundation (CRF), a Kentucky-based nonprofit group, and other locals, including those from the Central Kentucky Karst Coalition. "Many of the cave trips are long and arduous, involving climbing, vertical exposure, squeezes, crawlways, water and mud," Karen Willmes, the eastern operations manager with CRF, said in an NPS statement... "After the trip, cartographers turn the data collected on the cave trip into a map. Other volunteers provide surface support.
The corridors at Mammoth Cave now measure a whopping 420 miles (676 km) in length, according to the National Park Service (NPS). That's about the distance between New York City and Raleigh, North Carolina.
Mapping the cave system was a huge undertaking, carried out by volunteers at the Cave Research Foundation (CRF), a Kentucky-based nonprofit group, and other locals, including those from the Central Kentucky Karst Coalition. "Many of the cave trips are long and arduous, involving climbing, vertical exposure, squeezes, crawlways, water and mud," Karen Willmes, the eastern operations manager with CRF, said in an NPS statement... "After the trip, cartographers turn the data collected on the cave trip into a map. Other volunteers provide surface support.
Cool. Any bat poop? (Score:2)
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Re:Robots (Score:4, Informative)
Who has autonomous robot tech capable of performing the completely arbitrary climbing and traversing challenges that this requires?
This makes any 2-D locomotion task, regardless of how complex, look trivial. They might be useful adjuncts, to send into crevices and the like, and I'll bet they lower camers into holes, but an autonomous system that can traverse and unknown cave to produce a complete map of the traversed sections seems likely to be beyond current art.
Re: Robots (Score:2)
Speaking of which, I'm given to wonder what constitutes a newly measured branch of a cave.
Going with reductio ad absurdum for a minute, if you had a nanobot small enough to traverse pores in the rock, could you add the pores to the length? Could you add each shallow dimple?
I don't purpose adding such things, but wonder: what makes the difference between a deep corner and a new branch? Human judgement call from the guy writing things down?
An autonomous system might be able to traverse smaller passages, might
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Going with reductio ad absurdum for a minute, if you had a nanobot small enough to traverse pores in the rock, could you add the pores to the length? Could you add each shallow dimple?
When measuring things with fractal dimensions it is common to state the length of your measuring stick. This has been well studied [wikipedia.org].
Re: Robots (Score:2)
That is a _great_ cite. Fascinating stuff. Thanks!
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The cave system is 30752.4915 Brontosaurus long. Or 73320.2911 double-decker busses.
Calculate your own here. [theregister.com]
Re: Robots (Score:2)
I'm from the UK where we use metric. What's that in regulation football (soccer) pitches?
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I assume the NSS (National Speleological Society) have broadly comparable survey standards.
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Who has autonomous robot tech capable of performing the completely arbitrary climbing and traversing challenges that this requires?
Almost any small drone.
Re: Robots (Score:2)
The question specified autonomy. Wouldn't there be a problem getting a control signal through the rock?
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If you need signal, it's not autonomous.
Re: Robots (Score:3)
Exactly my point. "Any small drone" does not include the level of autonomy necessary to explore a cave.
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Upthread I mentioned the Cave Radio and Electronics Group. Far and away their most successful project has been multiple generations of "Molephone" which can communicate through up to about 400ft of limestone thickness. That is primarily for emergency situations - cave rescue, but the same physics can be used for positional location because the antenna is (by choice) very directional. So if you se
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Got a drone that can fly for 48 hours, autonomously? Without recharging / refuelling?
The CREG (Cave Radio and Electronics Group) have been keeping a weather eye on such possibilities for a long time, and their cross-ove
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How far can they go without recharging?
And I expect there are plenty of places where drones would have trouble getting through.
Though they could have some uses. See a hole in the ceiling? Send up a drone to see if it goes somewhere. And even without drones, getting a high-resolution lidar map would be really cool.
Re: Robots (Score:1)
The recharge issue can be solved by a network of charge stations inside the cave system.
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Been tried. Before drones. On the far side of a kilometre-long dive. They took a small heliox bottle through the sump (maximum depth about 10m, didn't need the gas for diving purposes) and some metal foil balloons. Sent up a head torch on the balloons. "Ohh, it's big. Ohhh, it's really big. Ohhh, we'll have to bring climbing ropes through the sump. It's still going up. Houston, we've got a really nice problem." After about 4 years of cl
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Yeah we all saw that movie. Seriously though if anyone is working on this problem or knows of projects going in this direction it would be great if there's any updates or roadmaps that could be shared. It seems to be sort of inevitable the question is how many years away are we?
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They might even have websites about it. I haven't looked. It's more fun talking to them.
Re:Robots (Score:5, Insightful)
oh boy are you funny, tell me about your neutrino beam tech that these drones will use for comm since radio would be useless, and your arc reactors to power them and their AI brains with the software you wrote. Hell in in the surrounding park cell service is very spotty because of the terrain.
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If you dig out 1990s numbers of the CREG newsletters from your local caving library (there are several in Britain, and I assume there are equivalents in other countries. Your caving club will know how to get access.
Re:Robots (Score:5, Insightful)
I really don't think you've actually worked with drones or robots from the sounds of it. This isn't some sci-fi movie where you grab a tiny bot from your bag throw it in a hole and 'bam! instant high rez fully rendered perfect map in 5 seconds'
Go watch some DARPA challenges to get a realistic sense of some of the hurdles
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But you got to admit, that was a pretty awesome little drone that mapped out that entire alien complex. One day we'll come up with something that can manage it.
Obviously it will be autonomous and won't need constantly radio communication.
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So it'll need to fly back to base (or at least, daylight ; or starlight) for you to get the map. And when it doesn't come home, you have no good idea of where it is because you don't have a map.
So, you explore (and map) in relatively small increments. Which is exactly how it is done today - explore in, survey out, draw up the survey that evening (nobody believes an "original" survey that doesn't have beer rings on it).
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Equip the drone with an infrared camera and LiDAR, and make extremely detailed maps.
Retarded headline (Score:4, Informative)
The cave is as long today as it was last week.
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Hysterical, but not even representative of how bad /. editors actually are. Funny how a site for nerds cannot employ editors that understand English.
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There's still water flowing through the cave so I suspect it actually does get slightly larger every week although such minor changes in size are difficult to measure.
The tour I took as a kid left quite an impression on me. That's where I learned the difference between stalactites and stalagmites and how they were formed. And I saw the water still dripping and leaving small mineral deposits so if those things were still growing, I suspect the cave is still growing as well. Just very slowly as such things d
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Hydrology is the science of water resources. A lot of the science was established in limestone areas, trying to understand where the water went and where it could be found in drought.
One of the first things cavers do on assessing a new area (which does happen, normally because of politics changing) is to start mapping underground watersheds (
Longest Known System? (Score:2)
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If you look at the various "awards" in various countries, they are for greatest length of survey, not for len
Could Mammoth lose its title? (Score:5, Informative)
But two cave systems in Mexico #2 and #4 in the world are 240 miles and 200 miles in size, and they are just 30 miles apart as the cros flies. Google map link below. If they find a passage connecting the two, they will take number 1 spot.
https://www.google.com/maps/di... [google.com]
Re:Could Mammoth lose its title? (Score:4, Informative)
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Mammoth/Flint Ridge system probably interconnects the Toohey Ridge and Fisher Ridge systems within 5 miles of their known limits to the south and east, we just haven't found the spots yet.
1983 Connection made to Toohey Ridge by a ten-member team. Mammoth Cave system surveyed to 294 miles.
https://www.nps.gov/maca/learn/historyculture/timeline.htm [nps.gov]
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Yes, I've done my time at the mud-face, squirming through the squeeze, one nostril in the airspace, and spending the next week in the office, blood and pus running down my shins. It's great, isn't it?
Was there years ago (Score:4, Interesting)
I've only done the tourist thing - I'm not a spelunker - but even given the typical touristy vibe of the public parts, it's pretty darn impressive.
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I never became a spelunker either, but as a child my family visited a lot of caves. Mammoth was the first one I actually remember. I think it's the one that sparked our interest in caves in the first place.
I don't think I could become a spelunker because I think I'd be too claustrophobic to fit into tight spaces, but Mammoth is...well, mammoth. I would live in it and kick all the tourists out if I could. I'm so selfish that way.
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If you get underground, claustrophobia won't be a problem. You'll be surprised how using a head lamp changes your view of the darkness.
Xyzzy (Score:3)
Plugh?
Re:Xyzzy (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Xyzzy (Score:4, Funny)
A low wide passage with cobbles becomes plugged with mud and debris
here, but an awkward canyon leads upward and west. A note on the wall
says "MAGIC WORD XYZZY".
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Dirt Cheap Housing. (Score:2)
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Cave mapping? (Score:2)
If not, why not? Is automatically stitching point clouds together very hard?
I am asking, because this tech would be so awesome for Lunar and Martian tunnel systems.
Re: Cave mapping? (Score:2)
Are there such things? Tunnels on earth are as far as I know made by volcanism and water, neither of which have existed in large quantities either place for a very long time.
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Both the Moon and Mars were volcanic ally active for a long time, and there's evidence suggesting that both have lots of lava tubes, probably larger than on Earth. As I recall, under the low lunar gravity stable lava tubes could potentially be miles wide. And much smaller and more stable ones are probably far more plentiful, while being plenty wide enough to build towns in.
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That's pretty cool!
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You have more confidence in the stability of cave roofs than I have. But I've probably crawled through more "hanging death" (technical caver's term, do it need an explanation?) than you have. I can tell by the way that you seem to have an immense amount of confidence in the stability of cave roofs.
And you are volunteering other people to live under this stuff? That's not something I'd ask
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Yeah, I've stayed away from hanging death. But there's also lots of caves that *aren't* hanging death, and would be potentially suitable for living in.
And keep in mind that on the Moon, or even Mars, the environments are far different than on Earth. The two biggest factors being far, *far* weaker seismic activity, and virtually no water - two of the biggest factors that degrade the structural integrity geologic formations on Earth. (And of course that also means that many kinds of water-carved cave system
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They're certainly unlikely to do any major construction using materials from Earth, but lunar resources are plentiful. Keep in mind that we're likely to be on the moon a long time, and the driving force is going to be building an industrial base there to supply raw materials for orbital construction. With oxygen likely being the first major export - it's 80% of the propellant mass for Starship, and lunar regolith is about 45% oxygen by mass. Plus, using Sadoway's electrolytic magma refinery the side-prod
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Yes, there are some tunnels on both planets. But if they have adequate strength. Where we can see into them, by definition the roof has collapsed - and probably relatively recently.
Some schmuck - very likely with at least half his degree studies having covered the same areas as me - is going to have to put his name to a piece of paper saying "this roof is strong enough for people to live under".
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Have you considered just how much reinforcement air pressure alone would actually provide?
One atmosphere of air pressure equals ten tons per square meter of outward force - under the moon's 16.6% of Earth gravity that's enough to completely support the weight of more than 20 meters of basalt directly above any tunnel, even if it all spontaneously crumbled to sand. Especially for a relatively small tunnel only a few tens of meters across that's way more support than you actually need. And for tunnels very n
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Well, at least one person in this conversation has spent decades dealing with the fact that (this is complex) rocks aren't gas tight. Even for big, complex molecules like methane. The leaked gas tends to make what we call a "gas chimney" above the points of greatest gas pressure differential. Which (we can tell this by the difference in vertical height between the relatively tight bits and the "chimney roots") is a mat
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>rocks aren't gas tight
Right, which is what the inflatable tube is for. Inflatable habitats seem to be the way to go for the immediate future, and on the surface you need one of those complex multi-layer structures that's capable of providing micro-meteorite puncture protection. In addition to the abrasion and puncture protection that it needs anyway because every grain of sand and dust on the moon is a razor-sharp impact fragment. Spraying a layer of concrete a few inches thick on the walls is going t
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(How do the blockquote and Q tags compare? Never tried that composition before.)
Well, we agree on rocks not being gas tight. But you s
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Q tags? You mean the >? Far as I know it's just an older way to quote. I just find it more convenient than typing out quote tags for small clips, and prefer small clips because anyone reading it should already have context so a quick reference should be enough to "anchor" my reply.
>Why did you introduce this concept? I haven't.
I'm assuming near-term, which means no significant industrial base in place. You've got gravel and sand to work with locally - everything else is imported until you've actu
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Oh, and I actually DON'T think there's a good reason for people to live on Mars, at least not for any sort of practical reason - I suspect colonization won't happen in any big way until asteroid mining and the associated habitation technologies have matured to the point that really ambitious homesteaders (quite possibly crazy dreamers) can afford to make the attempt.
The moon though is a different question entirely - it's essentially a massive asteroid already captured in orbit around Earth, massing 80x mor
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Correction - the moon masses 25x more than the entire asteroid belt. Not sure where I got 80.
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Oh, no, I recognise that style perfectly well (I did use USENET back in the day, once I'd had a phone line installed to the house). A few weeks ago I had a spat with some twat here telling me that there was a noticeable (to him
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Absolutly, so you use the industrial base that is closest to hand - which would be chewed up asteroids (NE-asteroids, to be more precise) in the orbital vicinity of the Earth-Moon system.
You might have a system on the Moon, but even so, that's still down at the bottom of a gravitational hole, relatively little use for going anywhere other than the Moon. The same arguments for not wasting effort on the Moon apply as for Mars, but wi
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I actually have quote tags mapped as a WinCompose sequence, and still don't use them. Just too much hassle.
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Just to be clear there is basically *nothing* near the Earth-moon system. There's occasionally stuff that zooms past at ridiculous speeds, and there's stuff near the L4/L5 points. But those Lagrange points are about the same distance away as the inner edge of the asteroid belt, with a 16-minute communication lag to Earth. And while it takes minimal energy to reach them once you escape Earth, that's only if you're happy with *huge* shipping delays, far longer than the slowest trip to Mars. Which is maybe
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If it's in an Earth crossing orbit, that is equivalent to saying "it comes back frequently". You get multiple bites at the cherry in relatively short order.
There is? I know a number of surveys have been run looking for "Earth Trojans", but with negative results. You may have heard differently, but I'd like to know where. The basic problem is t
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Sorry to hear that, hope you feel better soon.
Goodness, this is getting long. I'm think I'm going to try to pare this down to some high points.
>If it's in an Earth crossing orbit, that is equivalent to saying "it comes back frequently".
Depends what you mean by frequent. Their orbit has a different period that ours, most of the time when it crosses Earth's orbit, Earth will be nowhere nearby, it can be many years before the next pass anywhere close. Plus, to actually match speed with it, you've got to d
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Some more bits
>You're going to have to make using the resources available not "late-industrialisation" but the core of industrialisation.
Absolutely. My point is plastic is NOT a local resource on the moon, which is very carbon-poor. Even on Mars it's likely to take a whole lot of industrial development before they're able to make plastics in any quantity. An industrial-scale plastic synthesis plant is not a trivial thing to build, and likely demands a whole lot of supporting industry to already be in p
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Nice, thanks.
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Because (this is complex) you can't see through rock.
OK - caveat : you can see through 30 micron slices. 100 micron in some rocks, but no so many of them, Up to a few centimetres if you've got a high power X-ray machine.
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Companies that manufacture equipment for caving use field expedient tests such as throwing the test item out of a car at 100mph to see if the test item is fit to go into an actual cave for proper testing. Oddly, they don't get a lot of delicate equipment sent for testing.
I have helped with doing a Lidar survey in a cave - 1999,I think it was. That was a cave where we'd rigged up a 100m Bosun's Chair arrangement powered by a small diesel engine (with manpower backup) for lowering mem
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It is pitch black. (Score:3)
These researchers had better be careful, or they may be eaten by a grue.