oxygen to breath,
Well, depending on what type of cave we are talking about here (Underwater caves, Underground caves, Mountain range caves, Man-made caves) you can likely derive your own conclusion with some simple research. Caves, in general, do not really belong to any specific Biome. All biomes have some kind of cave somewhere on earth. There are caves on every corner of the earth so the answer to your question is that there are caves in every Biome.
The most common types of cave are limestone caves.
In most parts of the world, where there are sheltered overhangs or caves, previous humans have made some minor art work. Some of the most well known cave paintings are:Lascaux, FranceGrotte de Cussac, FrancePech Merle, near Cabrerets, FranceLa Marche, in Lussac-les-Châteaux, FranceLes Combarelles, in Les Eyzies de Tayac, Dordogne, FranceChauvet Cave, near Vallon-Pont-d'Arc, FranceCave of Niaux, FranceCosquer Cave, with an entrance below sea level near Marseille, FranceFont-de-Gaume, in the Dordogne Valley in FranceCave of Altamira, near Santillana del Mar, Cantabria, SpainCueva de La Pasiega, Cuevas de El Castillo, Cantabria, SpainuKhahlamba / Drakensberg Park, South AfricaTassili n'Ajjer, AlgeriaKakadu, AustraliaBhimbetka rock shelters, India
A stalagmite is a build up of silicate on the base of a cave, many times in the shape of a cone with the base on the floor of the cave, as it extends to the ceiling.
ominovere
scuba diving
One can find information on cave diving through the cave diving website. Another website to look at is Waves n Caves, and if a person wants to know specifically about cave diving in Britain they can search the cave diving group website.
Cave diving is a particularly risky type of diving using specialized SCUBA equipment to explore underwater caves.
Use Dive.
If you're asking about cave diving, North Florida looks like a possibility. You can read more, below.
Sanctum is a film about a group of cave divers who get trapped in the cave system after an accident, which causes further flooding in the caves. To find their way out the survivors have to work together and fight the natural elements.
Oh yes! Most caves in limestone (most caves in fact) are formed by water and very many still hold the streams that are in fact still developing them. Such caves are called "active". Some are completely full of water and explorable only by specialised cave-divers. Caves or cave passages that have lost their formative streams are called "fossil" or "abandoned", but even in these water drips in from the rock's joints through which it percolates.
Here is a listing of caves in South Africa:* Baboti Caves* Blombos Cave* Boesmansgat* Cango Caves* Coopers Cave* Echo Cave* Gladysvale Cave* Klasies River Caves* Kromdraai Fossil Site* Makapan's Cave (Makapansgat)* Motsetsi Cave* Onmeetbarediepgat* Plovers Lake* Sterkfontein* Sudwala Caves* Wonder Cave KromdraaiSource:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_caves_in_South_Africa
Sanctum is based on the true events of the writer/producer of the film, Andrew Wright. Wright was cave-diving in Western Australia's Nullabor Plain, which is a frontier for cave exploration, when a freak storm hit the area and trapped Wright and about 15 other divers underground. The screenplay is loosely based on the events that transpired.The movie is based on events that happened to one of the film's co-writers, Andrew Wight, who went deep-sea diving and ended up trapped with a group of other divers in an underwater cave system.
You will get as many different answers to this question as people that you ask. The "big three" of Caribbean diving are considered to be Bonaire, Cayman and Cozumel. But there is excellent diving all the way up and down the Caribbean. Roatan, Turks & Caicos and Saba are also mentioned as top destinations. Some destinations excel for particular reasons, but have less general interest to divers. For example, Dominican Republic has cave systems which attract cave divers. Several locations are famous for the shipwrecks, such as Martinique and the U.S. and British Virgin Islands. Bahamas is famous for shark diving. To each their own.
They were always known to the locals, as very deep springs, but exploration of them as flooded caves had to wait for the development of cave-diving to a suitable level, so perhaps from the 1970s.
there is no emerald cave but there are other caves in emerald.