Kartchner Caverns State Park

Kartchner Caverns State Park
Arizona State Park
The Big Room of Kartchner Caverns
Country United States
State Arizona
County Cochise
Location Benson
 - elevation 4,734 ft (1,443 m) [1]
 - coordinates 31°50′15″N 110°20′50″W / 31.83750°N 110.34722°W / 31.83750; -110.34722Coordinates: 31°50′15″N 110°20′50″W / 31.83750°N 110.34722°W / 31.83750; -110.34722
Biome Chihuahuan Desert
and Madrean Sky Islands
Founded 1988
Management Arizona State Parks
Location of Kartchner Caverns State Park in Arizona

Kartchner Caverns State Park is a state park of Arizona, United States, featuring a show cave with 2.4 miles (3.9 km) of passages.[1] The park is located 9 miles (14 km) south of the town of Benson and west of the north-flowing San Pedro River. Long hidden from view, the caverns were discovered in 1974 by local cavers, assisted by a state biologist who helped in its preservation.

The park encompasses most of a down-dropped block of Palaeozoic rocks on the east flank of the Whetstone Mountains.

The caverns are carved out of limestone and filled with spectacular speleothems which have been growing for 50,000 years or longer, and are still growing. Careful and technical cave state park development and maintenance are designed to preserve the natural cave system.[2]

History

The caverns were discovered in 1974, when cavers Gary Tenen and Randy Tufts found a narrow crack in the bottom of a sinkhole, and followed the source of warm, moist air toward what ended up being more than 2.5 miles (4.0 km) of pristine cave passages.

Randy Tufts, PhD, who at the time of his death was a geologist and lunar and planetary scientist for NASA, was first introduced to caving as a young boy by his maternal uncle, also a geologist. His uncle showed him caves in Arizona that had been vandalized in various ways including graffiti, litter, and the theft of stalactites and stalagmites. At the age of 13, Randy read an English children's adventure book entitled, "Five Boys in a Cave," and inspired, he decided that he wanted to find a cave that had not ever been vandalized and protect it. For years, Randy would take his friends out to the Whetstone limestone mountain range looking for caves, walking a grid, with no success until they asked a local minor if he had ever heard of a local cave. The minor pointed to the foothills below them. There they found, nearly fell into, a deep sink hole. At the time, although they had found a sink hole and a small cave chamber, they did not think that the cave "went" anywhere. It was years later when Randy was on a picnic luncheon date, that he found another sink hole. He went home to get his caving gear and to asked Gary Tenen to join him to explore the new sink hole. That new sink hole was also disappointing, but Randy and Gary decided upon a whim to return to the prior sink hole. This time they could smell bat guano, a hint that the cave might be much larger than they had originally thought. It was after crawling about the length of a football field, sometimes on their bellies, with only carbide lamps for light, that they came to a very small bat hole. After chipping away at the hole for hours they entered the "Big Room". While there they realized that this discovery could place the caverns at risk. [3][4] Hoping to protect the cave from vandalism, they kept the location a secret for fourteen years, deciding that the best way to preserve the cavern — which was near a freeway — was to develop it as a tour cave. After gaining the cooperation of the Kartchner family and working with them for ten years, together they decided that the best way to achieve the goal of protection through development as a tour cave was to approach Arizona State Parks.[5] In 1985, The Nature Conservancy acquired an option to purchase the land.[6] The discovery of the cave was finally made public in 1988 when the landowners sold the area to the state for development as a park and show cavern. Prior to its grand opening in 1999, the state spent $28 million on a high-tech system of air-lock doors, misting machines and other equipment designed to preserve the cave.[4]

Tourism Information

The two major features of the caverns currently available to the public are the Throne Room and the Big Room. The Throne Room contains one of the world's longest (21 ft 2 in (6.45 m))[4] soda straw stalactites and a 58-foot (18 m) high column called Kubla Khan, after the poem. The Big Room contains the world's most extensive formation of brushite moonmilk. Big Room cave tours are closed during the summer for several months (April 15 to October 15) each year because it is a nursery roost for cave bats, however the Throne Room tours remain open year around.[7]

Other features publicly accessible within the caverns include Mud Flats, Rotunda Room, Strawberry Room, and Cul-de-sac Passage. Approximately 60% of the cave system is not regularly explored.[8]

The park also includes hiking trails above the caverns for public use. The longest trail, the Guindani Trail, is 4.2 miles, while the shorter trail, the Foothills Loop Trail, measures 2.5 miles.[9]

Walking trails on the Whetstone Mountains above Kartchner Caverns State Park
A view from the walking trails above Kartchner Caverns State Park

Animal life

Although the cave is largely uninhabited, as many as 2000 Myotis velifer bats nest in the cave during late spring.[10]

Cave formations and vegetation

Fossil crinoid casts at Kartchner Caverns State Park

Many different cave formations can be found within the caves and the surrounding park. These include cave bacon, helictites, soda straws, stalactites, stalagmites and others.[11] Cave formations like the stalactites and stalagmites grow approximately a 16th of an inch every 100 years.[12]

Along the Foothills Loop Trail hike the following plants may be observed: ocotillo, creosote bush, mesquite, desert broom, acacia, wait-a-minute bush, scrub oak, barrel cactus, prickly pear, buckhorn cholla, and hackberry.[9]

Sister caves

References

  1. 1 2 "Kartchner Caverns State Park". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. 2001-02-27. Retrieved 2011-03-12.
  2. Arizona State Parks. "Kartchner Caverns State Park: Science".
  3. Tufts, Randy; Tenen, Gary (August 1999). "Discovery and History of Kartchner Caverns, Arizona" (PDF). Journal of Cave and Karst Studies. 61 (2): 44–8. ISSN 1090-6924.
  4. 1 2 3 Rivenburg, Roy (November 14, 1999). "Arizona's Deep, Dark Secret". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
  5. Yost, Barbara (2006-07-30). "Underground fantasy". Arizona Republic. pp. T1, T8–9.
  6. Grove, Noel (December 1988). "Quietly Conserving Nature". National Geographic. 174 (6): 827.
  7. Arizona State Parks. "Cave Tour Information".
  8. Dungan, Ron (2010-01-13). "The science behind Kartchner Caverns". The Arizona Republic. Retrieved 2015-02-27.
  9. 1 2 "Hiking Trails". azstateparks.com. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  10. Buecher, Debbie C.; Sidner, Ronnie M. (August 1999). "Bats of Kartchner Caverns State Park, Arizona" (PDF). Journal of Cave and Karst Studies. 61 (2): 102–7. ISSN 1090-6924.
  11. Naylor, Roger (December 5, 2014). "New helmet & headland tour at Kartchner Caverns". The Republic. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  12. Grimes, Thelma (February 12, 2002). "Big room showcased at Karchner Caverns". Benson News-Sun. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  13. "Grotte di Frasassi: Grotte Gemellate". Archived from the original on 2009-08-31.

Further reading

  • Miller, Neil. Kartchner Caverns: How Two Cavers Discovered and Saved One of the Wonders of the Natural World, 2008, University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-2516-4
  • Larkin, Bruce. Kartchner Caverns, 2009, Wilbooks. ISBN 978-1-60867-258-5.
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