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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Spring time Adventure part 1 - Spring Creek Cave

In March of 2007 a few friends and I went on an adventure. This is part one of three from the trip which took us to the depths of the earth and to some of the highest reaches of the mountain tops.



Part 1 Spring Creek Cave aka Spring Canyon Cave


Located on the walls of the Stratobowl near rockerville on Hwy 16.





Click here for a satellite image



Perched on the edge of a cliff in the Stratobowl, this cave is formed in the
Paha Sapa Limestone.


spring creek cave 01




Spring Creek Cave I ~ Collapsed


Here the cave has collapsed. This can be common in this the middle section of
the formation were the limestone is blocky and fragile. That makes this cave especially dangerous. 3 years ago when I last ventured here this is were I entered the cave.


Spring Creek Cave II ~ Boxwork


The rocks at the surface exhibit beautiful boxwork and dogtooth spar crystal
formations.


Spring Creek Cave III ~ Main Entrance


This is were we enter the cave. Located near the bottom of the upper part of
the formation, it is common in this unit of the limestone for passageways to
have low ceilings with wide rooms. This generality held true here with the passageway being an average of 2 feet high by 12 feet wide.


spring creek cave 03




spring creek cave 02


Pauly! About 25 feet into the cave.


spring creek cave 04




spring creek cave 05


This is the typical low ceiling with wide room passageway. The entire cave was
a belly crawl.


spring creek cave 06


Fracturing plains in the limestone.


spring creek cave 07




spring creek cave 08




spring creek cave 09


The long thin passageway leads to this 12 foot drop. No way I would fit through
there. That and it leads to the area that colapsed.


spring creek cave 10


Turning around....


spring creek cave 11


....is not an option it is just way to tight. You have to back out.


spring creek cave 12




spring creek cave 13


Yes those are fresh pine needles 30 feet into the cave. Brought in by
porcupines. Pulling the porcupine quills out of ourselves was not fun.


You can see Pauly in the back. A good example of how thin the passageway is. Remember the whole cave is this way.


spring creek cave 15


Leaving the cave you can see the green mold growing near the entrance


spring creek cave 16




spring creek cave 17



spring creek cave 17


Jamie working her way out of the cave.


spring creek cave 18


I was small, it was dirty, but it was fun!


Stay tuned for part 2 of our adventure as we hike down teepee gultch for lunch.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Mike,
Good job on the cave find! It looks like a tight little bugger,but aren't all Black Hills caves tight?
There are lots of caves in that area,so if you go back,keep an eye out for new ones!

Carter

Anonymous said...

Is this cave on public land? Is it worth visiting? Is it to dangerous to continue on, or just too small?

-Mike said...

black hills has some of the largest caves.. 2nd and 4th largest in the world..

and while they have very large passages this cave is extremly tight and small. there is no more cave beyond the few hunderad feet we explored however it is posable that some more tunnels could be excavated