Interesting Caves and Caverns of the World Aggtelek Altamira Cave Antiparos On island of same name in the Grecian Archipelago. Some stalactites are 20 ft. long. Brilliant colors and fantastic shapes. Blue Grotto Carlsbad Caverns Fingal's Cave On island of Staffa off coast of western Scotland. Penetrates about 200 ft. inland. Contains basaltic columns almost 40 ft. high. Jenolan Caves In Blue Mountain plateau, New South Wales, Australia. Beautiful stalactitic formations. Kent's Cavern Near Torquay, England. Source of much information on Paleolithic humans. Lascaux Cave Lubang Nasib Bagus Sarawak, Malaysia. World's largest cave chamber: 2,300 ft. long, 1,480 ft. wide, and everywhere at least 230 ft. high. Luray Caverns Mogao Caves Mammoth Cave Peak Cavern or Devil's Hole. Derbyshire, England. About 2,250 ft. into a mountain. Lowest part is about 600 ft. below the surface. Postojna Grotto Postojna, Slovenia. Largest cavern in Europe; numerous beautiful stalactites. Famous example of a karst cave—grooved and irregularly eroded limestone formations carved out by underground streams. Pivka River flows through part of it. Singing Cave Iceland. A lava cave; name derived from echoes of people singing in it. Waitomo Cave North Island, New Zealand. Glowworms on cave ceiling look like thousands of stars in the night sky. Wind Cave In Black Hills of South Dakota. Limestone caverns with stalactites and stalagmites almost entirely missing. Variety of crystal formations called “boxwork.” Wyandotte Cave In Crawford County, southern Indiana. A limestone cavern with five levels of passages; one of the largest in North America. “Monumental Mountain,” approximately 135 ft. high, is believed to be one of the world's largest underground “mountains.” Fact Monster/Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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