My
tour was a captivating
half-mile walk through
a myriad of chambers
and rooms with fascinating
formations. And, of
course, there are plenty
of names - the Imagination
Room, soda straw stalagmites,
the Petrified Forest
room, the Banana Grove,
the River Stix, Paradise
Lost, the massive Ghost
Room and more.
Tour
interpretor Julie Anderson
says the caves are 3
million to 5 million
years old. Each person
who visit finds something
special. "People
are fascinated by it,"
Julie says. "It's
human interest. A cave
can tell us about ecology.
It brings a tells us
all so much about the
underground world and
it's all knew to most
people.".
Life
in the Cave
Julie enjoys telling
the story of a fossil
find near the Ghost
Room here in 1996. The
fossilized remains of
a jaquar were found
to be about 8,000 years
old. Fossils of a nearby
girrzly bear, however,
were much older. Carbon
dating placed the fossils
at about 50,000 years
old. That makes this
cave bear the oldest
known grizzly on the
North American continent.
"I
once saw a deer's antler
covered by calite,"
Julie adds. "There's
so much beneath the
ground to see and explore."
'It's
Magic'
Betsey Wittick and Guy
Sidora of Bainbridge
Island, WA, took the
tour and found it an
easy walk to the deep
beyond.
"It
was wonderful,"
Betsey says. "It
was not difficult to
do, but it was thrilling.
Learning about how long
things take to form
and the effects of the
environment were fascinating.
It's so expansiveness
yet it's so fragile."
It's
a little bit out of
this world. It was unlike
anything else,"
Guy adds. "It's
magic."
Facts
and Figures