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  • It all begins with water and rock.

  • As water seeks its level, it becomes acidic.

  • And when it flows over limestone, it etches a path into the rock.

  • Given eons of time, water will burrow and carve,

  • with incredible force, the veins and arteries of planet Earth

  • So the underworld of caves is born.

  • And after torrents have done their work,

  • patient drops do more wonders in a million years or so.

  • Look now on a landscape no one dreamed existed just a few years ago.

  • Here are bizarre and fantastic treasures that stun the eye

  • and strain the imagination.

  • Here is discovery and danger.

  • Here is adventure.

  • In New Mexico, members of a National Geographic Society expedition

  • explore the world's newest and most exotic major cave.

  • They are following one of man's most ancient imperatives

  • to see and understand the unknown.

  • Join us now as we embark on

  • an extraordinary journey deep into the earth

  • to confront MYSTERIES UNDERGROUND.

  • In the Guadalupe Mountains of southern New Mexico,

  • an awesome giant has lain hidden for a million years.

  • Sometimes, in the desert silence,

  • the monster could be heard breathing.

  • The sound came from a yawning chasm in the rocks.

  • In 1986 a trio of weekend explorers broke through a layer of rubble

  • and discovered a new cave only a few miles

  • from famous Carlsbad Cavern.

  • Although the cave entrance lay inside Carlsbad Caverns National Park,

  • park officials allowed qualified cavers to explore it.

  • One of them was Rick Bridges, an oil and gas prospector.

  • Now Bridges leads a hand-picked team of experts,

  • like rock climber Dave Jones, on the 25th expedition to Lechuguilla.

  • You got the survey gear, Anne?

  • Research geologist kiym Cunningham

  • will handle the science studies for the expedition.

  • Nuclear test engineer Anne Strait is an expert

  • in surveying and mapping caves.

  • And specialist cameraman from England, Sid Perou,

  • will be the first to document Lechuguilla on motion picture film.

  • The journey begins with a deceptively ordinary hike.

  • The cave is named after a desert plant that grows in this harsh,

  • dry environment-Lechuguilla-Spanish for little lettuce.

  • Forty people will support the venture,

  • including two support teams to pack in supplies

  • and batteries for photographic lights.

  • On high rope.

  • We tend to have this feeling that

  • the surface of the earth is the life of the earth.

  • But we're just this small,

  • thin little shell that we choose to call our world,

  • and beneath it there's an entire realm that we know very little about.

  • And we can, if we choose,

  • enter that realm and we can learn something from it.

  • I will never go to the moon,

  • but I can go to a cave the nobody else has been to

  • and have the same elation of exploration in the sense

  • that I have gone where no one's gone before.

  • Bombs away.

  • I would like to think that had I lived in another time

  • I would have been an explorer.

  • You know, had I lived in the late 1700s,

  • I would have wanted to know what was across the Appalachian Mountains.

  • If I'd been around when Lewis and Clark went to the coast,

  • I'd liked to have gone with them, you know.

  • And I think most people that cave

  • at this level and do this kind of exploration feel that way.

  • Here, Bridges and his companions

  • excavated to break into Lechuguilla for the first time.

  • Now the entrance is protected by a lockable hatchway.

  • Through this tiny aperture the cave breathes

  • blowing air out or sucking

  • it in to equalize with the barometric pressure above ground.

  • Winds up to 60 miles an hour howl out of here,

  • hinting at the vast underworld below.

  • Today, this is Lechuguilla's only known entrance,

  • and there may have never been another.

  • For a million years this place has lain undisturbed.

  • In a real sense, it is a primordial world,

  • untouched by all but microscopic forms of life.

  • On rope!

  • It's a long ways down.

  • See you guys on the bottom.

  • Dave Jones starts down

  • the 150 foot pit called Boulder Falls

  • It was here that the first explorers realized

  • what a vast place they had discovered.

  • As you progress down,

  • it gets steeper and steeper and pretty soon you're free hanging,

  • but your feet are still against the rock

  • And all of a sudden you rappel

  • by this little ledge

  • and there's no more rock. There's nothing in any direction.

  • Beyond the base of the pit

  • the cave branches off in all directions.

  • Only computer imagery can portray this labyrinth.

  • After the May 1986 exploration

  • the cave was known to be 700 feet deep

  • and more than half a mile long.

  • Today the system totals 60 miles and plummets more than 1,600 feet.

  • Twisting capillaries and veins pierce the earth in all directions.

  • This is a gigantic maze in three dimensions,

  • defying conventional ideas of direction and scale.

  • Footprints remain forever in this fragile environment.

  • Plastic ribbons keep cavers on main trails.

  • Expeditions into Lechuguilla have been likened to exploring Everest

  • only in reverse.

  • The team is headed for Base Camp still hours away.

  • The trail leads on into inky blackness

  • Often they traverse chambers so vast

  • the cave walls are barely discernible.

  • Gypsum crystals sparkle along the route.

  • Now, cavers encounter Lechuguilla's fantastic decorations

  • for the first time.

  • Helictites and gypsum flowers extrude from the walls

  • fragile gardens that have taken centuries to blossom,

  • as minerals have been squeezed from the rocks like toothpaste from a tube.

  • Beauty abounds.

  • These jewels of the underground

  • are exquisitely delicate needles of selenite.

  • With the constant maneuvering up down

  • and through the cave's difficult terrain,

  • 50 pound backpacks become painful burdens.

  • Always, in Lechuguills, danger is not far away.

  • Okay, on three. One, two, three.

  • In 1991 seasoned caver Emily Mobley slipped and broke her leg

  • while working on a surveying expedition in the cave's western sector.

  • A mile and a half from the entrance,

  • 900 feet below the surface,

  • this accident would trigger the largest and most publicized cave rescue

  • in U.S. History.

  • A hundred experienced cavers

  • summoned to the scene would labor four arduous days

  • to bring her to safety.

  • The bond of comradeship that unites

  • the caving community was seldommore evident than during this emergency.

  • Every caver knows and instinctively responds to the code of the underground

  • that only cavers can save and protect each other.

  • After almost four hours, the expedition reaches Lake Lebarge,

  • the first sizeable body of water to be discovered inthis branch of Lechuguilla.

  • Beautiful!

  • One of the greatest sights in caving, isn't it?

  • Yes. Fantastic. Is this Lake Lebarge?

  • Yeah. Lebarge Borehole looks easier now.

  • Beautiful!

  • On rope!

  • The lake completely blocks the way ahead.

  • Cavers had to wade it until they found a detour

  • tricky, but possible.

  • Well, I think of particular moves like dancing around the edge of Lebarge

  • as almost a ballet, an underground ballet.

  • I know where my footholds are; I know where my handholds are.

  • I know if I hit them just right and move just right

  • some of them are kind of dynamic in so much as you leave one handhold

  • while you're going for the next foothold.

  • And if you do that just right and you have your pack balanced

  • just right, you flow through it real smoothly.

  • And so I think it's very much like doing a dance,

  • a very intricate dance.

  • And you want to do it perfectly,

  • you know, and it's very beautiful when you do.

  • Deeper into the cave,

  • mineral formations become more fantastic and delicate.

  • Cavers must move among them with great care.

  • Spikes of aragonite,

  • one form of calcium carbonate, grow in fragile bushes.

  • The gentlest touch could damage them.

  • There is infinite contrast here.

  • The now famous Chandelier Ballroom is one of caving's classic beauty spots

  • Plumes of gypsum sprout from the ceiling,

  • some as long as 20 feet

  • the most dazzing examples of their type ever found.

  • Utter silence pervades Lechuguilla.

  • The only sound is made by the intruder

  • In the constant 68-degree temperature and high humidity,

  • dehydration is always a threat.

  • Anybody else need any hot water?

  • For some, the notion of life

  • with almost a quarter mile of rock overhead

  • can be oppressive, even terrifying.

  • But cavers like Bridges relish the experience.

  • It's almost like coming back to home after you've been gone for a while.

  • It's a very comfortable feeling to me, particularly in that particular cave.

  • And you know it's a sense of isolation

  • The world becomes very simple

  • Here there is no day or night.

  • If they ignore the time, cavers tend to stay awake,

  • and sleep, for longer and longer periods.

  • In Lechuguilla Cave,

  • there is little evidence of life.

  • But this is rare.

  • Many caves harbor a hidden kingdom of creatures, dominated by bats.

  • Bats thrive in darkness.

  • They navigate not by sight,

  • but by subtle patterns of reflected sound.

  • Some caves are home to millions of bats,

  • the greatest concentration of mammals anywhere.

  • Their nitrogen-rich droppings, or guano,

  • are harvested as a fertilizer.

  • Large deposits produce a toxic gas, which can be lethal.

  • Mountains of bat guano support the intricate food chain underground.

  • Sometimes, an injured bat, or a baby,

  • falls into the guano and itself becomes food.

  • Within minutes the bat is reduced to a skeleton.

  • Abundant underground, the cave cricket

  • Crickets spend much of their time gathering food outside their caves,

  • but inside they perform a vital role as scavengers.

  • In mute testament to their environment fish have evolved here without eyes.

  • The salamander has dispensed with eyes, too,

  • and has no need of skin pigment in a world without sunlight.

  • People have probably always found shelter in aves.

  • Thousands of years ago,

  • as much of the world still lay in the grip of the last Ice Age,

  • prehistoric hunters left spectacular evidence behind them.

  • The human spirit was born and nurtured here,

  • its expression etched on walls of stone.

  • By the early 20th century most people lived elsewhere.

  • But science and curiosity drove some to explore deeper underground.

  • Magnesium flares lit the way, filling dark voids with light.

  • Geologists squeezed into subterranean chambers

  • seeking to understand their origin and structure.

  • And soon the ancient lure of caves turned to profit.

  • Tourists went underground.

  • Then and now,

  • humans have been compelled to seek out caves,

  • and to combat the gloom with gay defiance.

  • In the United States, New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns

  • was declared a national park in 1930.

  • But natural wonders were not enough.

  • Carlsbad and other caves promoted all sorts of attractions,

  • some a bit farfetched.

  • The time will come when some master musician

  • in the Carlsbad Cavern will be able to create s symphony in stone

  • Many parts of the world are known for caves.

  • Because most lie on limestone bedrock,

  • the soil is often thin and life is hard

  • So it has often been in the remote uplands of Kentucky.

  • But the automobile brought a new source of wealth

  • city folks, eager for amusement.

  • Everyone who owned a cave hung up a sign.

  • Each was touted as being bigger and better than the others.

  • The so-called Cave Wars spurred bitter feuds and even violence

  • Crystal Cave belonged to the Collins family,

  • but it was too far from the beaten path to prosper.

  • Thirty-seven-year-old Floyd, one of the Collins boys,

  • was determined to find a cave closer to the highway.

  • He set off alone on a cold winter morning in January 1925

  • and squeezed into a narrow, twisting crack in the earth,

  • never before explored.

  • A hundred feet or so into the tight passageway

  • Floyd dislodges a rock that falls on his leg and pins his left foot.

  • Every detail of this fateful mishap will soon be known throughout the world

  • Struggling to free himself, Floyed becomes more tightly wedged.

  • His arms are pinned at his sides.

  • He can do nothing but shout for help.

  • Twenty-four hours later Floyd's cries are heard.

  • A younger brother, Homer, manages to reach him.

  • Coffee and sandwiches revive Floyd,

  • but no amount of tugging or pulling will set him free.

  • Would-be rescuers knock down more dirt and rocks.

  • Soon more help arrives,

  • but rescue efforts are clumsy and disorganized.

  • Curious onlookers begin to gather.

  • They become restive and quarrelsome.

  • A week goes by.

  • Floyd is still alive and the crowed swells to thousand.

  • It becomes a carnival.

  • Souvenirs are sold and moonshiners arrive on the scene.

  • It's hard to maintain order and the National Guard is summoned.

  • Skeets Miller a 21-year-old newspaper reporter,

  • braves the tortuous passage seven times to comfort Floyd

  • and describe his plight.

  • Miller takes down food and drink

  • and an electric light bulb to keep Floyd warm.

  • In bitter cold and rain, little more can be done for him.

  • When a cave-in blocks the passage, a rescue shaft is begun.

  • People all over the country join Floyd's family in prayer.

  • Floyd's brothers expect the worst.

  • Rescuers finally reach him on the 18th day.

  • It is too late.

  • Floyd has been dead for some time.

  • The crowd goes home.

  • The public is soon interested in other things.

  • It takes two months to recover the body.

  • The rock that trapped Floyd was not a boulder,

  • but a mere 27-pound stone, shaped like a leg of lamb.

  • His death left a legacy of fear of the dark,

  • mysterious underground that haunts many to this day.

  • Today, there are about 16,000 devotees of caving in the U.S.

  • Here, where Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia meet,

  • the countryside is studded by deep pits

  • vertical caves the delight of weekend enthusiasts.

  • Nine-year-old Leah Brown

  • holds a world speed record for rope climbing.

  • Her partner, Avis Van Swearingen,

  • also holds a climbing record for women over the age of 60.

  • With skill and courage

  • they suspend their lives on a slender thread.

  • We call that rope the nylon highway

  • because it takes us to wonderful places

  • and new parts of the cave, and it's the only way you can get there

  • If I'm the first one down a drop, and I have been the first,

  • the very first person to ever go down a drop...

  • if we can't really tell if the rope reaches the bottom,

  • the person who goes down first wears their climbing gear, too,

  • so that you can put your climbing gear on the rope and come up.

  • Also, we put a knot at the bottom of that rope

  • so we can't rappel off the end of it,

  • which has happened to people.

  • I like the deep pits,

  • because when they're deep, you get to go fast more.

  • That's why I like the deep pits,

  • because the short ones you don't get to go fast very long.

  • The first time I did it in a pit,

  • it was only a 90-foot pit and I didn't get scared.

  • I don't get scared very easily.

  • I like going fast.

  • When I go down fast,

  • the floor is real tiny and then it starts getting bigger and bigger,

  • and I like to watch that.

  • An unfettered commitment to their sport

  • compels cavers to seek new thrills in undiscovered places.

  • For some, the quest for adventure knows no boundary.

  • The Austrian Apls.

  • A fifth of the world's deepest caves are located here, high in the mountains

  • These ice caves are 5,000 feet above sea level.

  • They are natural deep freezes where ice remains, even in hot summers

  • Here, geological time is condensed.

  • We can witness the growth of ice formations

  • in short periods of months or years,

  • which in their stone counterparts would take centuries.

  • From year to year these caves are never the same.

  • As they thaw and freeze again,

  • the fantastic ice formations are ever changing.

  • Few places on earth are more beautiful or more treacherous,

  • with perhaps one exception.

  • Some cavers have merged their love of the unknown with a passion for diving,

  • venturing into a bizarre world underground and under water.

  • Originally formed above sea level,

  • these caves became submerged about 10,000 years ago

  • as the last Ice Age retreated.

  • They are now 70 feet beneath the surface.

  • Underwater caves are deathtraps for the inexperienced.

  • But, from time to time,

  • tempting fate can have astounding rewards.

  • In 1990, when exploring a submerged tunnel off

  • the Mediterranean coast of France,

  • a professional diver surfaced in a hidden chamber.

  • He found a treasure chest of art, perhaps 18,000 years old.

  • Paintings and engravings depict animals that roamed southern Europe

  • before the last great ice sheets melted

  • Some experts question the authenticity of the art,

  • but close examination is impossible.

  • Cosquer Cave is a place of haunting mystery.

  • To protect it, the cave is now sealed by order of the French government.

  • In time a new entrance may be built and the truth known.

  • An expanse of sinkholes and depressions pockmark

  • south central Kentucky

  • where, beneath the surface, the limestone is riddled with caves.

  • They are everywhere, an integral part of the landscape.

  • This is Floyd Collins country,

  • and the contest to attract the tourist dollar still rages on.

  • The star attraction is Mammoth the world's longest cave.

  • A national park since 1941,

  • the cave now draws more than half a million visitors a year.

  • Back in the 1800s

  • tour guides here were often black slaves.

  • One of them, Stephen Bishop,

  • became perhaps the greatest caver of them all.

  • On his own, with little more than a lamp,

  • a rope, and a sketchbook,

  • Bishop explores the depths of Mammoth Cave.

  • He creates a surprisingly accurate map of this complex underground maze.

  • Deep in the cave

  • Bishop is confronted by a gaping void

  • that came to be known as Bottomless Pit.

  • Beyond, Bishop explores regions that had never been visited in his time

  • But in these remote reaches he hinds evidence

  • that someone has preceded him.

  • Some archaeologists believe that Stephen Bishop

  • may have also encountered one of Mammoth's most compelling mysteries

  • Trapped under a boulder

  • are the ancient remains of a human being.

  • Not for another century would the mummified body be rediscovered

  • and then as the technology became available,

  • removed from beneath the six-ton boulder.

  • A sensation in its time,

  • the mysterious body would be on public display for years

  • and given the name Lost John.

  • Two to three thousand years ago

  • this man was digging around the base of a heavy rock

  • when it dislodged and crushed him.

  • What was he doing here?

  • How did he get here?

  • No one believed that ancient humans could have ventured this far

  • into the forbidding depths of Mammoth Cave.

  • Today, new evidence helps to answer these questions.

  • Archaeologist Ken Tankersley has spent years

  • investigating the traces of ancient humans in Mammoth.

  • Armed with cane reeds collected near the park,

  • Tankersley simulates the methods prehistoric

  • explorers would have used here.

  • We have long known that human beings lived near the entrance of caves.

  • But Lost John suggested that prehistoric people

  • had gone far into Mammoth

  • perhaps two day's travel.

  • Was this possible?

  • At first Tankersley himself had doubts

  • I'm always amazed when I think about

  • what it takes for us to go into a cave.

  • We wear a hard hat; we wear out caving lamp,

  • whether it's electric or carbide;

  • and we carry two sources of back-up light.

  • We wear enough clothing to ward off hypothermia.

  • These people wore virtually nothing

  • loin cloths at best.

  • Probably most frequently,

  • based on what we've seen in the cave in terms of human remains,

  • these people were naked, carrying nothing but cane reed torches

  • The reed torches were the only light source available to ancient humans.

  • They produce surprisingly efficient illumination

  • and conjure ghosts from the heavy shadows.

  • Their daring was incredible.

  • For humans, light is life in a cave.

  • But these explorers traveled up to 12 miles

  • with nothing but reed torches between them and a horrible fate.

  • Their pathway can be followed even now

  • A trail of burned torch fragments leads Tankersley and his companions

  • to a cavity in the rock face.

  • Digging marks and a crude implement

  • are evidence of some kind of activity here.

  • That's magnificent. Notice the cut edge.

  • A primitive tool,

  • one of dozens found deep in the cave.

  • What was it used for?

  • Another clue:

  • A rich seam of selenite crystal courses through the rock face nearby.

  • These findings prove that prehistoric people were engaged

  • in widespread mining of crystals throughout the cave.

  • The scale of the operation was staggering.

  • Tons of material were removed.

  • The mining continued without interruption for over a thousand years

  • The ancient miners took selenite and other minerals from the cave.

  • But what they were used for remains a mystery

  • as medicines, or ornaments,

  • or for use in rituals? Perhaps all three.

  • Just as mysteriously, around the time of the birth of Christ

  • the mining suddenly ceased.

  • As yet no one knows why.

  • All that remains is abundant evidence that they once were here,

  • driven by needs and desires we may never understand.

  • To our right, down below, is the famous Bottomless Pit.

  • For many, many years lights were not sufficient to reach the bottom.

  • Visiting Mammoth today is a journey through time.

  • But as they are guided along comfortable tourist trails,

  • few visitors can imagine the tortuous passageways that lie beyond them.

  • Not knowing the true depth of the pit or what lay on the other side.

  • Reaching the other side,

  • they were surprised to find an avenue over there and more cave.

  • This opened up the doorway to the vast

  • unknown mileage that we all Mammoth Cave.

  • Mammoth Cave Ridge skirts the Houchins Valley.

  • On the other side, beneath Flint Ridge

  • lies another cave network, once shrouded in mystery.

  • Here, 40 years ago,

  • one of the great exploits of cave exploration began.

  • In the 1950s a group of weekend adventurers began an intensive probe

  • into the secrets of Flint Ridge.

  • There had long been talk of a vast underground system

  • that might link all the caves in the area.

  • It began as an exciting pastime. It became a grueling obsession.

  • Over the years hundreds of men and women took part.

  • There were untold yards of muddy crawlways.

  • There were pits and crevices and mazes from which there seemed no escape.

  • Flint ridge developed its own colorful place names: The Corkscrew,

  • Shower Shaft, Agony Avenue.

  • But the cave grew,

  • until Flint Ridge alone was pushed to nearly 90 miles.

  • And if it could be connected to Mammoth,

  • then this was the underground Everest

  • by far the longest cave in the world.

  • In the summer of 1972

  • a team entered Flint Ridge to probe a tantalizing passage

  • that led toward Mammoth.

  • It took seven hours to reach the end of the known passage.

  • Then they tackled what would be called the Tight Spot.

  • It seemed impenetrable.

  • But one of the team had a knack for narrow places

  • Pat Crowther a computer programmer and mother of two.

  • Well, it never occurred to anyone to try to go through that place.

  • It was a crazy place to even think that you could get your body into.

  • The 'Tight Sport was a very tiny,

  • vertical crevice out the bottom of a small indentation in the floor.

  • And if you just casually looked down into the hole and saw that crack,

  • you would say no one could possibly fit in there.

  • Somehow Crowther squirmed through.

  • Six weeks later,

  • miles beyond where anyone had gone before,

  • a chilling but significant discovery was made.

  • In a mud bank were the initials P.H.,

  • scratched there by Pete Hanson, a long-dead tour guide.

  • He could have come here only from the Mammoth Cave side.

  • Carpenter Richard Zopf was in the group

  • and recalls the impact of the discovery.

  • We had the feeling that we had found

  • ...the passage that was going to take us into Mammoth Cave,

  • but we hadn't done it.

  • We seen virtually a mile of passage

  • but we didn't know exactly where it went.

  • And we plugged along and we plodded along

  • and we surveyed and we surveyed and we surveyed.

  • Ten days later the group tried again,

  • reaching what they now called Hanson's Lost River in nine hours.

  • Excitement and exhaustion dominated the thoughts of leader John Wilcox.

  • The worst thing we feared was that the passage would descent

  • so that the water would come clear to the ceiling,

  • and it sure looked like that was what was happening.

  • The water was getting deeper and deeper

  • and the ceiling was coming down.

  • We're getting bent over,

  • scrunching our backs up against the ceiling,

  • trying to keep from getting our chests wet.

  • And it was getting so wet that I told the rest of the party to wait here...

  • I'm going to look ahead a little bit.

  • Because I know if I get completely wet

  • I can get out of the cave, but I wasn't sure everybody else could

  • And just go as far as I can and trying very carefully

  • not to get my chest wet and not to put my light out and so forth.

  • I don't have a good sense of the time

  • but John only went a few feet, went ahead for 30 seconds.

  • And then there was a pause and it's like:

  • What's happening, John?

  • And John says:

  • You know the passage is opening up!

  • And, well, you know: Should we come ahead? '

  • From that low point the passage just immediately opens

  • into the huge Echo River passage...

  • and eventually my eyes adjusted enough

  • I could begin to see a wall clear across the passage,

  • a hundred feet away perhaps.

  • And there was a bright, shining,

  • horizontal line along the wall,

  • which is something you don't see in a cave.

  • You don't see any straight lines.

  • And it had these vertical lines underneath

  • and I realized that was a handrail.

  • We had come out on a tourist trail!

  • All of sudden John shouted: I see a tourist trail!

  • And those words just electrified the party.

  • It was kind of like someone yelling Fire! In a theater.

  • Everybody just surged forward...

  • ...and we realized that we had made the connection.

  • Achieving the dream of decades,

  • they had connected two great subterranean systems.

  • Today, it is a cave with 340 miles of passageways.

  • It's one of these, you know,

  • complete victories that you don't often achieve in life.

  • Usually things are shades of gray in your professional work

  • or your personal relations with other people or whatever.

  • In climbing a mountain, sometimes you have a clear-cut victory

  • Either you reached the top or you didn't.

  • And this was one clear-cut victory in my life where,

  • by golly, we went in the Flint Ridge side

  • and we came out the Mammoth Cave side

  • It was a strange and lonely victory.

  • After a grim struggle in the dark, subterranean river,

  • they emerged in Mammoth Cave at one in the morning.

  • Not even a watchman was there to greet them

  • as they trudged into one of the most famous

  • tourist landmarks underground the Snowball Dining Room.

  • And they would complete their historic trek

  • with sublime ease riding to the surface in an elevator.

  • There was no fanfare, no waiting reporters.

  • But they were still overjoyed.

  • Like all cavers, in victory or defeat,

  • they were used to being on their own.

  • Beneath the New Mexican desert,

  • the National Geographic expedition to Lechuguilla

  • Begins its second week underground.

  • The cave's beauty is now legendary,

  • but there is more to discover here.

  • High on a hill deep within the heart of the cave, a mystery unfolds.

  • Sulfur is prevalent here and in other regions of the cave.

  • And tiny bacteria are found in these deposits along

  • with fungi that feed on them.

  • In turn, the bacteria may feed on the sulfur,

  • thriving in eternal darkness.

  • Evidence indicates an unusual genesis for Lechuguilla.

  • As hydrogen sulfide rose from below,

  • it mixed with oxygen in water or air, forming sulfuric acid.

  • This potent chemistry gradually ate through the limestone,

  • creating the cave from the bottom up.

  • Lechuguilla's vulnerability to human impact

  • may preclude it from ever becoming a public show cave.

  • A profound respect for the cave is shared by most cavers

  • and severely enforced.

  • Special shoes are worn for traversing formations where boots

  • may mar exquisite flowstone.

  • Stalagmites of calcite line the shores of the Pearlsian Gulf,

  • so called because of the thousands of pearl-like formations found here.

  • Looking like fried eggs,

  • this kind of cave pearl is built up from calcite in the water.

  • Another variety of cave pearl forms when a single grain of sand

  • becomes coated with calcite.

  • Over time the relentless dripping of water swivels the grain

  • and the coating becomes thicker,

  • like the creation of a pearl in an oyster.

  • Lake Castrovalva guards a remote corner of the cave.

  • The only way across is to swim.

  • But the conservation creed demands that no dirty clothing soil its purity

  • The air and water temperatures are the same year round 68 degrees.

  • Intricate stone formations border the edge of the lake,

  • slowly deposited by waters rich in calcite.

  • For eons these exotic shores have been still and silent

  • calm until now.

  • Light on the station.

  • The primary function of any expedition is to explore and survey the cave

  • to produce a detailed map.

  • Keeping accurate records is virtually a religion for modern cavers.

  • Two thirty-nine, point five.

  • It's what separates them from earlier, less responsible explorers underground

  • Plus four.

  • Plus four.

  • Finding something new is the first great thrill of caving.

  • The second comes later finding the way out.

  • Each night the latest survey date are typed into the computer

  • to produce an updated map.

  • The ancient skeleton of a ring-tailed cat.

  • Kiym Cunningham examines one of the riddles of Lechuguilla.

  • It's a mystery. I mean, altogether it's a mystery how he got down here.

  • We're a thousand feet below the surface.

  • Many vertical pits and long passages to get here.

  • So, he was a heck of a caver!

  • He evidently died right on the margin of this old pool system here,

  • so I would imagine possibly he was alive when he was down here,

  • came to the pool to drink.

  • Only source of water he could find.

  • And maybe the mineral content was very high.

  • It was not a good pool to drink from and that may have been what killed him

  • The amount of carbon dioxide in the cave atmosphere is measured.

  • If the level down here is the same as on the surface,

  • it could indicate other openings yet to be discovered.

  • Somewhere within the cave's vast system

  • the air is being disturbed. There is noticeable movement.

  • Still, Lechuguilla refuses to yield its secrets easily.

  • It remains alien and strangely beautiful,

  • a landscape from another world.

  • Lechugulla's wonder is a fragile thing

  • What man can discover, he can easily destroy.

  • Most of us may never see these enchanting caverns

  • and others that lie still undiscovered.

  • But perhaps it will be enough to know that they are there.

  • Lechuguilla now consists of almost 60 miles

  • of breathtaking passageways.

  • New discoveries continue and there is no end in sight.

It all begins with water and rock.

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