@@superduperspaceship Yes, and you should try some sometime. If crawling through water and mud in the cold and dark is not your thing, there are quite a few commercial caves that give a good taste of what caves are like, without the discomfort. BTW, caves aren’t rare. Where they exist they may be everywhere underground. It is entrances that are sometimes hard to come by!
@@yankee2yankee It depends on the bedrock of the area. If you live in an area with limestone bedrock (especially if there is sandstone above the limestone) there will be caves everywhere. Most places they are few and far between though. The Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia region where we are is the most cave dense region in the world. Over 20,000 caves, and many more yet to be discovered.
Who needs movies anymore, that was more exciting than any movie from the last 20 years! I realise that the caving I've done is nothing like this! Awesome dudes!
Carlsbad Caverns has the largest room in the U.S. Your Tennessee cave has the largest east of the Mississippi River. The world's largest are in Vietnam and then Borneo.
I have been to Carlsbad, and yes it is technically bigger. It isn't near as open like this though. It kind of snakes around and is more of a giant hall room, with pillars dropping down all over. You could fit things like an order of magnitude larger in this room. Carlsbad's big room is 8 acres this one is 5 acres. This one feels a lot bigger though. This is definitely the most open of the large cave rooms.
@@CaveChronicles The Miao Room in China is the world's largest cave chamber by volume, the Sarawak Chamber is the largest by area. Y'all should explore them someday. :) Also the room y'all explored here is called the "Rumble Room". Not sure why you wouldn't give credit to that in your description.
I like to consider myself a brave enough person, I've done things that have made people say "wow, that looked really scary!" But you say to me "we're going 8 hours deep into the Earth" and my brain just goes 'nnnnnnnnnnnnope'. So much respect to y'all for having the sand to make the trip, and for documenting it and making it available to the rest of us. So cool
Stumbled on to your channel a few days ago and have been watching like an addict. This particular one is truly intense and had me on the edge of my seat! Outstanding, and sorry I can only give a single thumbs-up.
Appreciate it brother! I definitely need to go back and film this one better. I had my Gopro pointed too far up and missed a lot of great shots. I also swore a lot, and was a bit loopy. I went into this cave with very little sleep the days prior and was running on pure caffeine haha.
25:41 that's called Caustics . Optical phenomenon In optics and rendering, caustics refer to the optical phenomenon of light refracting and converging to form curved sheets of light. This can be seen in the shifting patterns of light and color on the surface of water, such as in a Mediterranean sea.
Honestly, this doesn't look as big as the main chamber in Carlsbad Caverns. It might be taller but when you consider the debris pile in the middle (identical as in Silver Dollar City's Marvel cave) you loose a lot of volume. The overall dimensions of Carlsbad Caverns is monstrous.
I wished you guys would bring more prepped equipment to each level just in case. You guys are awesome just be smart tell me your bringing at least 5 or more lights
We had way more lights than you think than lol. Since we record we had more than any other caver probably ever has in there tbh. We all had at least 3 headlamps on top of other lights with a lot of batteries. We also only drain our batteries about half way because they dim, so we had weeks worth of light each on lower modes. The big lights are only for the camera we can still see, you can't.
This is amazingly cool, but I have a few questions: what is the name of this cave system, and what is the name of the chamber? I would love to read any research on it or see if they have any scans or dimensions for it!
Okay this is terrifying, im a large guy and watching this do this is filling me with anxiety, also if no one else has done the math, at 7:01 the rock impacted... something, and it took 5 seconds to do that... that is an almost 800 foot drop... *insert sid* "no thanks i choose life"
That room is breathtaking. When you were way up on the cliff it seemed scary and foreboding but once y'all got down there and lit up the whole thing it became absolutely awe inspiring. Like you're walking around inside the belly of god.
If you guys use a Sony A7S you would be able to see everything. The A7S has a huge sensor with giant photosites.. it can make nighttime look like high noon. It can see blue sky at night.
I need to get better camera equipment for sure, but also would be hard to use a full DSLR in a cave and keep it protected. Also a hassle to take it out and clean my hands every time to use it. Would be great for a cave like this though.
@@CaveChronicles Yes please get a better camera this channel would blow up even more because on a 65" tv it doesnt look as good as i know it can we love the videos though take care
oh man... what if that freaking rope breaks?! are there "backup-ropes" ?? I would be WAY to scared to go through those absolutely tiny spaces and try to squeeze myself through there - already WATCHING gives me anxiety hahaha - and also I hope I will not get nightmares form this. Yeah I am definately a "flat-land" and "above ground" type of guy! mountains, caves, all beautiful to watch, but nothing for me to step foot onto or into...
As long as it's rigged well, that rope will not break - it would hold up all of them and the car they drove to get there. Caving ropes are strong - it's bad rigging or abrasion that you have to watch out for. Or falling rocks.
This is amazing, I’d like to know a bit more about the dimensions of the room, it’s height and width, what can fit in it. Who ever first discovered this is a legend.
Just curious: Looks like you're using dynamic rope (stretchy to absorb climber fall impact). Wouldn't it be easier to use static rope for abseiling/ rappelling and especially for ascending?
The first time I went skydiving, a group of retiring/retired ladies all were in the same class. There was 8 of them ranging from 64 to 74. They all said they felt the same way... until they did it. Some of them said it was life changing and they wished they had made the choice to do it sooner... wondering how much their life may have been different had they taken the chance. It's been 20 yrs since then and I always wonder about them all. They seemed different after their jump, almost like their eyes were fiery, even younger.
You guys do NOT get enough credit for this. Holy crap. I could never do that. I think I would panik and die. But I enjoy your videos from the couch 😅 love from Denmark 🇩🇰
honestly ive been waiting for one of the caving/exploration youtubers i watch to get one of the super bright flashlights, cool to see this vid!! subbed for sure !
Glad to see you talk about the deep time represented in these caves. The cave itself likely took on the order of millions of years to form, but caves like this are only possible in rock that is made from tiny sea creatures, which makes the amount of time leading up to this moment completely incomprehensible.
It's weird to think that even if we nuke ourselves into oblivion that giant chamber will just still be there, untouched. I don't know why but I find that thought strangely comforting.
Ya who needs a multi million dollar end of the world pod? Just find a near by cave and store shit down there. In a few months odds are things will have settled down and you can thaw out and see if ur eyes still work.
Depending on how close a nuke hits to that cave, possibly not. All of those boulders on the ground are bits of the ceiling that collapsed, it's relatively stable but that doesn't mean it'll stay that way if it's subjected to enough shock. That's why actual bunkers are suspended from shock absorbers in tunnels with heavily reinforced walls...not even miles of stone above you is a guarantee. Chances are, a few bits of the ceiling will fall and the cave will still be there, just a few feet taller and not quite as deep. Best case, a few boulders fall on your head; more likely, you'll be buried under a dozen feet of stone. Those huge rooms form by repeated vertical cave-ins, along with an underground river to erode and carry away the remains of the former ceiling (and your bones!). Over the years, the cycle continues, until one day the ceiling will inevitably break through to the surface, and the chamber will just be an opening that unceremoniously erodes away while water and sediments readily fill the cave system until it plugs the underground river. Eventually the cave fills in entirely and leaves no externally visible trace, aside from the petrified remains locked away deep in the geological record. It's the death of a cave, in a way.
guy's, did you ever go to the cave with light bugs? --> New Zealand’s Glow Worm Caves Glimmer Naturally With Countless Dots Of Blue Lights this one should be on the list in my opinnion :)
Man, this is a really cool cave. I love the layout of it with some challenging stuff to work thru and then the big drop into a massive chamber. That room is huge! And then just endless large spaces and river following. I could watch journeys into this cave until its all been explored on video. I've been watching you guys for a while and somehow hadn't yet subscribed to Cave Chronicles but have watched a ot, now I can go and see whatever I had been missing. I also have to say this squd right here seem to be a real good arrangement and everyone in it seemed to be in tune and enjoying each others company? I'm probably not hitting the right words to describe the nuonce of the vibe being positive with the blend of personalities which always varies and isn't always predictable as far as working in harmony and also coming thru in video as everyone feeling good about the camaraderie. That stuff can make a difference in the moral and the decisions about weather to push on and things like that. It seems to be a solid group here. I prefer to see about 4 people go in. If it were me I'd e thinking if someone was injured 2 could go for help leaving any extra supplies and one person to stay with injured because being hurt and left alone deep in a cave would suck to wait alone. Also to wait for help depending on one person if something happened and that one person didn't make it and it seemed too long the decision to start moving toward the exit by the injured would start becoming an idea sooner if the injured were waiting on the success of one person so two is much better to go for help. Thanks again for a really entertaining and mind opening experience watching these guys doin what they clearly love doing. Much respect, appreciation, and always best wishes. Also I'm one viewer that doesn't miss or give a shit about the fading of "dang" and "snip" or whatever that was. Never came off as genuine to me anyway. Nobody watches these to determine your spiritual beliefs and word usage doesn't reflect them anyway. Much prefer realism. Wasn't complaining before but don't miss it either.
Watching this video gave me so much anxiety. Personally, I think the cave system is really cool and I would love to see it and experience it in person. The part that I would have the problem with is where they're forcing themselves through tiny little areas on their belly while they're pushing the bag in front. Because it's such a small space. It's not the small space that gives me anxiety. It's the fact that if it caved in I would be trapped or if I was too big and got myself wedged. I don't know if that makes any sense or not but when I watch them go through those tight spaces I got so much anxiety just watching it. Very enjoyable and very interesting!
@@BrickBoyzLego To answer your questions, those small spaces from the entrance to the large room are very stable and the water carved those passages out of solid limestone, almost zero risk of collapse. Also unless gravity is pulling you into a wedge it’s usually pretty easy to get out. Glad you enjoyed the video mate!
Where the heck is this? i can't find anything like it looking online. I'm interested to know how the heck a cave like that even forms, it looks so crazy!
There’s a cave in Branson, Missouri at Silverdollar city amusement park that is big enough to fit the Statue of Liberty inside. So I think that one would be bigger than this one.
This channel should have millions of subscribers! These caves look unreal and the friendly banter is fun.
@@superduperspaceship Yes, and you should try some sometime. If crawling through water and mud in the cold and dark is not your thing, there are quite a few commercial caves that give a good taste of what caves are like, without the discomfort. BTW, caves aren’t rare. Where they exist they may be everywhere underground. It is entrances that are sometimes hard to come by!
@@yankee2yankee It depends on the bedrock of the area. If you live in an area with limestone bedrock (especially if there is sandstone above the limestone) there will be caves everywhere. Most places they are few and far between though. The Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia region where we are is the most cave dense region in the world. Over 20,000 caves, and many more yet to be discovered.
@@CaveChronicles Noice!
14:05 I'm not missing the irony of a Yodel UNDER the ground and yet still somehow on top of a mountain at the same time
literal Undermountain
Couldn't pay me to go in there. I'm glad you guys did, so I can experience vicariously. Amazing place! Thanks!
im only mildly claustrophobic, as long as i dont have to crawl or squeeze more than a foot or two im good
Who needs movies anymore, that was more exciting than any movie from the last 20 years! I realise that the caving I've done is nothing like this! Awesome dudes!
Thanks so much!
Carlsbad Caverns has the largest room in the U.S. Your Tennessee cave has the largest east of the Mississippi River. The world's largest are in Vietnam and then Borneo.
I was about to post the same comment regarding Carlsbad Caverns.
I have been to Carlsbad, and yes it is technically bigger. It isn't near as open like this though. It kind of snakes around and is more of a giant hall room, with pillars dropping down all over. You could fit things like an order of magnitude larger in this room.
Carlsbad's big room is 8 acres this one is 5 acres.
This one feels a lot bigger though. This is definitely the most open of the large cave rooms.
I said the same thing
@@CaveChronicles The Miao Room in China is the world's largest cave chamber by volume, the Sarawak Chamber is the largest by area. Y'all should explore them someday. :) Also the room y'all explored here is called the "Rumble Room". Not sure why you wouldn't give credit to that in your description.
@@taipoxin They can't claim it's the "largest room in the country" if they tell you which one it is.
A gang of cave explores. This is better watching any Hollywood movie. 😊
@@philipwichman2075 absolutely! I’m totally obsessed!
Explorers
I would love to hear a geologist talk about the many different rock layers we see here and describe the eons each layer represents.
I'll bet a geologist wouldn't avoid mentioning what cave this is.
Yeah, this is awesome. I am 76 now used to go caving when I was younger. So great to see this with you guys.
Thanks a ton! I love it. Wish I got better footage of this one, will definitely be going back once the Tennessee caving season starts again.
I like to consider myself a brave enough person, I've done things that have made people say "wow, that looked really scary!" But you say to me "we're going 8 hours deep into the Earth" and my brain just goes 'nnnnnnnnnnnnope'. So much respect to y'all for having the sand to make the trip, and for documenting it and making it available to the rest of us. So cool
Seriously, they're too dumb to appreciate the risk 🫤
I've never watched a video of a bigger group of bro's go caving 🤡🙄
The masculine urge to sing the halo theme in here
👑
I don't even know what that means but perfect 😂
@@NickMirro which part, the masculine urge part or the halo theme part?
@@Grooveworthy I get the first part but what is the Halo theme? Is it a reference to the giant ceiling?
@@NickMirro 🤦♂
Stumbled on to your channel a few days ago and have been watching like an addict. This particular one is truly intense and had me on the edge of my seat! Outstanding, and sorry I can only give a single thumbs-up.
Appreciate it brother! I definitely need to go back and film this one better. I had my Gopro pointed too far up and missed a lot of great shots. I also swore a lot, and was a bit loopy. I went into this cave with very little sleep the days prior and was running on pure caffeine haha.
The Perfect place to store frozen Megatron!
Never ceases to amaze at what's under the ground we walk on. You just never know. Beautiful different worlds
That crawfish could be a species undiscovered to man
Amazing how they can live down there.
Nádhera . Když jsem byl mladší, prolezl jsem co se dalo .Čas dole utíká jinak než na povrchu země. Díky , skvělé .😊🇨🇿
It sure does, and thanks!
Our. Amazing.Planet.
Very cool, looked like the rings on Jupiter.
the thumbnail legit looks like they are standing on one of Jupiter's moon
25:41 that's called Caustics .
Optical phenomenon
In optics and rendering, caustics refer to the optical phenomenon of light refracting and converging to form curved sheets of light. This can be seen in the shifting patterns of light and color on the surface of water, such as in a Mediterranean sea.
Honestly, this doesn't look as big as the main chamber in Carlsbad Caverns. It might be taller but when you consider the debris pile in the middle (identical as in Silver Dollar City's Marvel cave) you loose a lot of volume. The overall dimensions of Carlsbad Caverns is monstrous.
Totally insane and amazing. I could never make it to the room with how narrow. the entry is. I almost needed to medicate just watching you guys.
I agree was loosing my crap just watching
This was fantastic!!!!!!
4:48 “This is what separates the boys from the men”
“well, yeah, the men would be bigger”😂😂
I wasn’t claustrophobic until I watched this 😳😂 Great video 👏👏👏
after splurging caving incidents gone wrong its nice to see positive and fun vibes on a trip :D
2:50… is it possible to guesstimate the age of the waterfall by looking at the type and smoothness of the stone?
i assume yes
It's all fun and games until you disturb the balrog!
The delved too deep
I wished you guys would bring more prepped equipment to each level just in case. You guys are awesome just be smart tell me your bringing at least 5 or more lights
We had way more lights than you think than lol. Since we record we had more than any other caver probably ever has in there tbh. We all had at least 3 headlamps on top of other lights with a lot of batteries. We also only drain our batteries about half way because they dim, so we had weeks worth of light each on lower modes. The big lights are only for the camera we can still see, you can't.
This is amazingly cool, but I have a few questions: what is the name of this cave system, and what is the name of the chamber? I would love to read any research on it or see if they have any scans or dimensions for it!
That is going to be a very big sinkhole in the near future.. would be interesting to see where peak of that roof is on the outside
Look at all that stuff they're breathing in.
Tread lightly
those crawdads were blind and then got blinded
awesome, though, boating down there would be sick!
"Have yall seen The Descent?" 🤣
Okay this is terrifying, im a large guy and watching this do this is filling me with anxiety, also if no one else has done the math, at 7:01 the rock impacted... something, and it took 5 seconds to do that... that is an almost 800 foot drop... *insert sid* "no thanks i choose life"
That room is breathtaking. When you were way up on the cliff it seemed scary and foreboding but once y'all got down there and lit up the whole thing it became absolutely awe inspiring. Like you're walking around inside the belly of god.
I would love to experience this in VR, since you'll never find me there in person
amazing video! Had a very great time watching
Incredible video, i have headphones on and i could hear the camera mans heartbeat starting at 12:37
6:35… love the reverb!
If you guys use a Sony A7S you would be able to see everything. The A7S has a huge sensor with giant photosites.. it can make nighttime look like high noon. It can see blue sky at night.
I need to get better camera equipment for sure, but also would be hard to use a full DSLR in a cave and keep it protected. Also a hassle to take it out and clean my hands every time to use it. Would be great for a cave like this though.
@@CaveChronicles Yes please get a better camera this channel would blow up even more because on a 65" tv it doesnt look as good as i know it can we love the videos though take care
🎤🎶 blinded by the light
🎶it over comes the tormeent🎶🤘
Wow that entrance gave me a good puckering.
Great job! And great Footage.
You just enter the Dwarven world
this i the kinda cave you bring a stereo in and play the final count down at full blast . the reverb would be amazing
oh man... what if that freaking rope breaks?! are there "backup-ropes" ?? I would be WAY to scared to go through those absolutely tiny spaces and try to squeeze myself through there - already WATCHING gives me anxiety hahaha - and also I hope I will not get nightmares form this. Yeah I am definately a "flat-land" and "above ground" type of guy! mountains, caves, all beautiful to watch, but nothing for me to step foot onto or into...
As long as it's rigged well, that rope will not break - it would hold up all of them and the car they drove to get there. Caving ropes are strong - it's bad rigging or abrasion that you have to watch out for. Or falling rocks.
This is amazing, I’d like to know a bit more about the dimensions of the room, it’s height and width, what can fit in it. Who ever first discovered this is a legend.
The Rumble Room baby! Yahooooo 😎 I'd love to visit that one someday.
The shadow really gave perspective on the size
Thank You for an Awesome Adventure to tag along with. May You's all have Safe Travels.
Great job!
NUTS! and Mine tighten so much watching this! WELL DONE!
It's crazy that structures like this exist under the earth.
The acoustics in this cave is SOOO FASCINATING
Just curious:
Looks like you're using dynamic rope (stretchy to absorb climber fall impact). Wouldn't it be easier to use static rope for abseiling/ rappelling and especially for ascending?
They were static ropes, which still stretch pretty good when dangling on 200ft of it.
I believe they were PMI Pit rope, and PMI extreme pro.
Thanks for taking us along, fellas. Most of us probably never would have seen anything like this.I know i'm too old.
The first time I went skydiving, a group of retiring/retired ladies all were in the same class. There was 8 of them ranging from 64 to 74. They all said they felt the same way... until they did it. Some of them said it was life changing and they wished they had made the choice to do it sooner... wondering how much their life may have been different had they taken the chance. It's been 20 yrs since then and I always wonder about them all. They seemed different after their jump, almost like their eyes were fiery, even younger.
dope, excited to watch this
You guys do NOT get enough credit for this. Holy crap. I could never do that. I think I would panik and die.
But I enjoy your videos from the couch 😅 love from Denmark 🇩🇰
How do you find these amazing places? It’s like another world!
Join the NSS and a local grotto if you want to cave :)
Thanks for showing this off. It's pretty but I get claustrophobic so better you than me. lol.
Do you guys get creeped out by what may be in the water?
I do sometimes, specifically chemicals and contaminates that might be in the water.
Bro, the caves and cliffs update just dropped
thanks for sharing gentlemen
Can’t help but wonder what you’d ba able to find if panning some of this sand bars
What’s all the dust floating around in the cave?
I would pay money to NOT do this. Absolutely terrifying to me. But fun to watch!
honestly ive been waiting for one of the caving/exploration youtubers i watch to get one of the super bright flashlights, cool to see this vid!! subbed for sure !
its time to take a drone into the cave!
I would get so frustrated trying to crawl through those tiny spaces
Cool video. Glad you guys got back safe
You guys should start bringing equipment to map these caves. Those features hold the answers to how earth operates. How deep you think you are?
Good job, guys
Come up to Banff sometime
We have a lot to explore
Seems like a DSLR might provide some gorgeous long exposure photos.
Glad to see you talk about the deep time represented in these caves. The cave itself likely took on the order of millions of years to form, but caves like this are only possible in rock that is made from tiny sea creatures, which makes the amount of time leading up to this moment completely incomprehensible.
That was so cool, but so terrifying as well.
You guys are in unbelievable shape to beable to climb back up all that after hours of exploring
Does that flashlight got a fan cooling it down? I hear it when it turns on
Caves are pretty dang big
So how was that created?
Millions of years of erosion, and rock dissolving.
It's weird to think that even if we nuke ourselves into oblivion that giant chamber will just still be there, untouched. I don't know why but I find that thought strangely comforting.
Ya who needs a multi million dollar end of the world pod? Just find a near by cave and store shit down there. In a few months odds are things will have settled down and you can thaw out and see if ur eyes still work.
Depending on how close a nuke hits to that cave, possibly not. All of those boulders on the ground are bits of the ceiling that collapsed, it's relatively stable but that doesn't mean it'll stay that way if it's subjected to enough shock. That's why actual bunkers are suspended from shock absorbers in tunnels with heavily reinforced walls...not even miles of stone above you is a guarantee. Chances are, a few bits of the ceiling will fall and the cave will still be there, just a few feet taller and not quite as deep. Best case, a few boulders fall on your head; more likely, you'll be buried under a dozen feet of stone. Those huge rooms form by repeated vertical cave-ins, along with an underground river to erode and carry away the remains of the former ceiling (and your bones!). Over the years, the cycle continues, until one day the ceiling will inevitably break through to the surface, and the chamber will just be an opening that unceremoniously erodes away while water and sediments readily fill the cave system until it plugs the underground river. Eventually the cave fills in entirely and leaves no externally visible trace, aside from the petrified remains locked away deep in the geological record. It's the death of a cave, in a way.
@@Skinflaps_Meatslapperwow you put some thought into that book lol
@@JamieMcKinsey I got carried away. It's a problem of mine lol
So cool to tag-along on this trip from my couch 😅
guy's, did you ever go to the cave with light bugs? --> New Zealand’s Glow Worm Caves Glimmer Naturally With Countless Dots Of Blue Lights
this one should be on the list in my opinnion :)
They aren't native here sadly. Though even with very good low light cameras I doubt you'd be able to see them in a place this large.
Hate to be in confined cave during a thunderstorm.
at 35:33 your spider friend was waiting for you on the rock LOL
Thank you, fascinating!
Wow! Seems the cave crayfish feed on microscopic life that washes in from the surface. What a sparse existence! I feel kind of sorry for them 😢
Nah they chillin
Man, this is a really cool cave. I love the layout of it with some challenging stuff to work thru and then the big drop into a massive chamber. That room is huge! And then just endless large spaces and river following. I could watch journeys into this cave until its all been explored on video. I've been watching you guys for a while and somehow hadn't yet subscribed to Cave Chronicles but have watched a ot, now I can go and see whatever I had been missing. I also have to say this squd right here seem to be a real good arrangement and everyone in it seemed to be in tune and enjoying each others company? I'm probably not hitting the right words to describe the nuonce of the vibe being positive with the blend of personalities which always varies and isn't always predictable as far as working in harmony and also coming thru in video as everyone feeling good about the camaraderie. That stuff can make a difference in the moral and the decisions about weather to push on and things like that. It seems to be a solid group here. I prefer to see about 4 people go in. If it were me I'd e thinking if someone was injured 2 could go for help leaving any extra supplies and one person to stay with injured because being hurt and left alone deep in a cave would suck to wait alone. Also to wait for help depending on one person if something happened and that one person didn't make it and it seemed too long the decision to start moving toward the exit by the injured would start becoming an idea sooner if the injured were waiting on the success of one person so two is much better to go for help. Thanks again for a really entertaining and mind opening experience watching these guys doin what they clearly love doing. Much respect, appreciation, and always best wishes. Also I'm one viewer that doesn't miss or give a shit about the fading of "dang" and "snip" or whatever that was. Never came off as genuine to me anyway. Nobody watches these to determine your spiritual beliefs and word usage doesn't reflect them anyway. Much prefer realism. Wasn't complaining before but don't miss it either.
awesome big thanks.
It's all fun and games until you hear an Armsy come up behind you
Where is this.
Watching this video gave me so much anxiety. Personally, I think the cave system is really cool and I would love to see it and experience it in person. The part that I would have the problem with is where they're forcing themselves through tiny little areas on their belly while they're pushing the bag in front. Because it's such a small space. It's not the small space that gives me anxiety. It's the fact that if it caved in I would be trapped or if I was too big and got myself wedged. I don't know if that makes any sense or not but when I watch them go through those tight spaces I got so much anxiety just watching it. Very enjoyable and very interesting!
@@BrickBoyzLego To answer your questions, those small spaces from the entrance to the large room are very stable and the water carved those passages out of solid limestone, almost zero risk of collapse. Also unless gravity is pulling you into a wedge it’s usually pretty easy to get out.
Glad you enjoyed the video mate!
Incredible!
Perfect place for the Minecraft base
What has been the crew members biggest scare? Goonies never say die! The grayfish shed their hardshell as they grow.
How far is the drop? need to get a laser distance measurer
201 feet to be exact for the rope length. Has been measured. Over 350 ft to the top of the room from the bottom.
Where the heck is this? i can't find anything like it looking online. I'm interested to know how the heck a cave like that even forms, it looks so crazy!
My sense of scale is totally broken now
The camera does not do it justice at all.
I felt that shoulder pop from here.
Wow how strong are your kit bags being dragged over all that rock!? Amazing adventure 🙌🏽
There’s a cave in Branson, Missouri at Silverdollar city amusement park that is big enough to fit the Statue of Liberty inside. So I think that one would be bigger than this one.
This is so wild! 🤯