the carbon dioxide produced by 1,200 visitors per day had visibly damaged the paintings. The cave was closed to the public in 1963 in order to preserve the art. so because people were contaminating it.
b/c the oxygen carbon dioxide could ruin it
The Lascaux caves in France were closed to the public in 1963 to protect the prehistoric cave paintings from damage caused by exposure to human presence, such as carbon dioxide, humidity, and other contaminants. A replica cave, Lascaux II, was opened nearby to allow visitors to experience the art without risking the preservation of the original site.
its not supposed to be closed
The Caves of Lascaux are a Palaeolithic cave site in Montignac in the Dordogne region of France, containing the most famous cave paintings ever. Discovered in 1940 and opened to the public in 1948, but the level of interest was so great that the cave was closed to the public in 1963, amongst fears that the paintings were suffering harm. A copy of the cave was made and this was opened to the public in 1983. See the link below for more information.
Due to fragile underground chambers, which contain 900 of the most perfect surviving examples of prehistoric art, it was felt that humans being in the caves were a threat to the ancient drawings.
No, the word "cave" is not a closed syllable. A closed syllable ends with a consonant, while "cave" ends with a vowel sound, specifically a long "a" sound. Therefore, "cave" is an open syllable, which typically ends with a vowel and has a long vowel sound.
Yes.
The cave at Chauvet is now open to the public
The address of the Bee Cave Public Library is: 4000 Galleria Pkwy, Bee Cave, 78738 6370
The caves of Lascaux were closed to the public in 1963 by the French government to protect the prehistoric cave paintings from damage caused by increasing visitor numbers. A replica cave, known as Lascaux II, was opened nearby to allow visitors to experience the paintings without the risk of harm to the originals.
The phone number of the Bee Cave Public Library is: 512-767-6620.
You specify any particular examples but the main reasons are conservation (as with the original Lascaux Caves), safety (or rather fears of liability!) and in the case of show-caves, commercial failure. Also of course, closure to the "public" does not necessarily preculde access for genuine cavers & cave-researchers.