You can see and hear bats flapping they're wings rapidly, and flying away into the darkness. Cobwebs brush against your head slightly and you stumble over a rock nervously, thinking you heard a bear. Water drips over the rocky ceiling and you explore into this huge, spooky cave. Will you find a way out?
Thats just my short version of a description of a cave.
Hope I helped you guys! :)
+++
You don't find cobwebs beyond the entrance, but I must admit being a bit nervous about disturbing a bear when exploring caves in Norway, having occasionally seen their paw-prints (but not the animals) in the region! We don't usually stumble over rocks - we have good lamps, move carefully and watch where we are going.
.
As for finding your way out... cavers do occasionally become lost in particularly complex caves or old mines, and I have personally helped search for a party overdue from an old zinc mine, but it's very unusual and most find their way out even if late enough for the local cave rescue organisation to start looking for them. In that search, we discovered the party had been within four feet of the bottom of the ladder necessary to enter the mine from the surface - had they just looked round a corner they would have seen it! Eeh, they felt proper daft when we pointed it out!
They are both cave paintings
Physical description of Alemania
the cave man just to bite the belly
The well known cave paintings are in Lascaux, France.
Sculptures and cave paintings were a development of Paleolithic period.
It us the biggest
If a description of the cave is not given then the author has left it to your imagination.
Ann Estella Cave Cave has written: 'Three journeys' -- subject(s): Description and travel
Henry Cave has written: 'Henry Hobbs Alien' 'Picturesque Ceylon' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Description and travel
Albert Sallet has written: 'Les Montagnes de Marbre (Tourane)' -- subject(s): Buddhist cave temples, Description and travel 'Les Montagnes de Marbre (Tourane)' -- subject(s): Buddhist Cave temples, Description and travel
Caves are cataloged by people affiliated with speleological organizations. Often in a remote area with numerous caves, the people cataloging the caves are unsure if a cave is correctly identified. The cave could be one cave with 2 different names, or the survey data doesn't match the description of the cave. The cave location could have become forgotten, or the cave became covered up with vegetation or a cement, etc. Once the caves in an area have been fully explored and mapped and catalogued, the next best place to find a new cave is to go look at the list of "unconfirmed caves." Often it is more common to hear an explorer say, "we have a lead on a cave." meaning there is an unconfirmed cave in the area he or she is looking.
No, a cave is a natural underground cavity formed in rock by erosion or other geological processes. It may contain water if there is seepage from the surrounding rock layers, but caves themselves are not layers of permeable rock.
Krystyn Lach-Szyrma has written: 'London observed' -- subject(s): Travel, Translations into English, Description and travel, Travelers' writings, Polish 'Letters, Literary and Political, on Poland: Comprising Observations on Russia and Other ..' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'Anglia i Szkocja' -- subject(s): Description and travel 'From Charlotte Square to Fingal's Cave' -- subject(s): Description and travel, Social life and customs, Travel 'FROM CHARLOTTE SQUARE TO FINGAL'S CAVE: REMINISCENCES OF A JOURNEY THROUGH...; ED. BY MONA KEDSLIE MCLEOD'
Filippo Silvestri has written: 'Description of a new species of Japyx (Thysanura) from Potter Creek cave, Shasta County, California' -- subject(s): Thysanura
Not very, judging by the very sparse information I could find, and devoted really to publicising it as a show-cave. The cave swallows a river that resurges only 1km away in a straight line (ignoring any underground meandering), and since Belgium is notever so hilly, I doubt the cave's vertical range is much more than a few tens of metres. We'd need to see a survey or technical description of the cave to find out!
Cave entrances are typically called cave mouths, cave openings, or cave portals.
Good question! I assume you mean how deep is Desoto Caverns (actually one cave as far as I can make out), not how thick is the rock above its roof. For some reason such statistics are rare in show-cave publicity. Short of an intensive trawl of speleological literature I'll leave to you, it's hard to find such details. The show-cave web-site is dreadful - just a playground ad. There must be a survey and description somewhere! Wikipedia doesn't give much more beyond revealing the cave to be notable for a very large chamber rich in active speleothems, so it sounds worth seeing. The description then reports the cave ending not far further in a pool and blank wall, and mentions no diving attempts. Are there any TAG cavers here who can supply the cave's vital statistics?