March 21, 2007: Giant crystal cave in Mexico
http://backup.cellar.org/naica1.jpg
(c) Javier Trueba / Madrid Scientific Films / madridsf@gmail.com Yes, it's another of those images too wide for your browser. But I had to keep these sized like this, because you wanted to see the large version. You know you did. It's another axlrosen submittal, which was also Boing Boing'd. The shots at the site BB links to have extreme JPEG compression issues. Snooping around for better ones, only Snopes message board had clearer original photos. http://backup.cellar.org/naica2.jpg (c) Javier Trueba / Madrid Scientific Films / madridsf@gmail.com The complete explanation comes from here. Quote:
They're working to document this place, but it's difficult, because it stays 125-150 degrees F (50-65 degrees C) and stays at 100% humidity. So, just when you thought this place was eerie enough, back to the explanation: Quote:
(c) Javier Trueba / Madrid Scientific Films / madridsf@gmail.com |
Looks like a scene from "Journey To The Center Of The Earth".
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Seeing the man in the second pic completely surprised me, I thought that I was looking at a macro-shot of some crystals.
Beautiful place BTW, another one I'll ad to the "someday I need to go there wishlist" sigh. |
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Very nice find, axl, ut! |
Awesome! I'd seen pics of this cave a few years ago, but nothing like these. Thanks for posting the full sized ones.
I want to visit, but 150 is hot. I could only handle that for a few minutes. And I bet it gets gradually warmer as you get closer, so it's not like you could just step into this hot room and then step out again. |
At first I was like "cool?" then I saw the dude and exclamated "HOLY SHIT!"
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Wonder how big the meth is?
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now...cover the Maserati with those crystals, and THAT would be art!
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That's what I imagine Stevie Nicks' jewelry box looks like.
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looks like a close up of someone's scalp with "visitors". *shudder*
or the surface of a pretzel. perhaps I've been watching too much Magic Schoolbus. |
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articl...57/ai_66681236
Found a better explanation of gypsum crystal formation for a similar site in Spain. Geologists think the gigantic geode was formed 6 million years ago, when mineral-saturated water flowed through a rock hole. As water slowly evaporated, minerals clung to the rock's surface, forming a lattice of smooth-faced, geometrical shapes. "When minerals separate from water they stick to solids, just like sugar from a solution sticks to a piece of string," says Paul Burger, a geologist at New Mexico's Carlsbad Caverns. "Crystal formation uses the same process that makes rock candy." I'm not sure if the subject pictures qualify as a geode, but the mineral deposit and crystallization process would be the same. |
Your name is Kal-El. You are the only survivor of the planet Krypton. Even though you've been raised as a human being, you are not one of them. You have great powers, only some of which you have as yet discovered.
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The Fortress of Solitude needs a home makeover. |
It's so hot that guy's head is bursting into flames!
I hate those papparazzi who take pictures of people in trouble rather than helping them. |
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Hippie heaven!
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Gypsum? Grind 'em up and make drywall. ;)
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They probably don't do that in school anymore--I bet there were a few kids who decided to taste it. |
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Admitting on the internet to snorting coke can be a career limiting move, melidasaur.... I'm just sayin...
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If somebody sings at excatly the right pitch will the whole cavern begin resonating and then collapse, or will you just find the lost chord?
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Frankly, I don't believe that this place exists. This is obviously the result of some secret Mexican government miniaturization program. The subject has clearly stumbled into some salt spilled on a table...
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When entering the cave our group is issued helmets, lanterns, rubber boots, and gloves. We are then driven by truck into the main mining tunnel called Rampa Sn. Francisco. While the vertical drop is approximately 1000 feet, the drive is almost a half mile long. The heat steadily increases and the ladies could be observed to begin "glowing". The truck stops in front of a concrete wall with a steel door. I start working frantically to put the final touches on my pre-prepared camera outfit. I usually have four separate camera units, but they must be padded for the trip and then receive a last minute detail check. Every single item is preset before entering the cavern, as every moment inside is precious and concentration must be focused strictly on the crystals and people. The photographic machinery must work perfectly as the heat almost immediately begins to impair brain function.
At the end of the tunnel there are three or four steps into the aperture of the cavern itself. It is in this short tunnel that I move very quickly and concentrate on focusing my mind and that of my group on the task of photography. In this short distance the temperature and humidity goes from being uncomfortably warm to literally a blast furnace. Almost immediately our clothing is so soaked in sweat that it becomes heavy and starts to slide off our bodies. On my first trip it was really hard to keep my pants up, which was a new and unexpected experience. Momentarily, the penetrating heat is forgotten as the crystals pop into view on the other side of the newly named "Eye of the Queen". The entire panorama is now lighted and the cavern has a depth and impressive cathedral-like appearance that was not visible on earlier trips with just our headlamps. When inside the great cathedral of crystals, the pressure of intense heat makes my feelings run up and down the emotional scale from shear religious awe to outright panic. The ladies are no longer "glowing" and indeed are "red hot". When I'm done working after three trips into the great cavern, my friends almost have to carry me out. We want to see more, but physically cannot. When the experience is over there is a great relief, but all we can think about is when can we go back in. When I talk to professional geologists about crystals they tell me that these natural forms are incredibly complex, yet so simple. They have a magical or metaphysical personality independent of their chemical structures. These geologists have explained to me that there is a magma chamber two to three miles below the mountain and that heat from this compressed lava travels through the faults up into the area of the mine. Super heated fluids carry the minerals the miners are seeking as well as form the crystals. The mine is ventilated; otherwise, it could not be worked. Some parts, however, are not air-conditioned, such as the Cave of the Crystals, and there you feel the heat from the magma deep below. |
Jacquelita: Why is it so hot?
UT: *shrug* It must be, like, geothermical. Jacquelita: Geothermical? That's not a word! |
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Wow...
That is so freaking AWESOME! I wasn't really impressed until I saw the guy in the seconde picture, but WOW!
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Welcome to the cellar, MayMayTheDancer. :D |
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I'm talking about a field geologist making the statement, "They have a magical or metaphysical personality independent of their chemical structures." What's wrong with that?
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Because that's new-age woo. Nothing to do with soulless or personal observations.
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Not new age, old age. Crystals, all of them right up to diamonds, have had an effect over and above scientific data, since forever. History shows that over and over. It's not just for wealth, the wealth springs from the desire caused in (wo)men by the crystals, not the other way 'round.
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Yes, they're quite pretty.
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What for? You souless people wouldn't understand anyway. You'd probably even deny people for eons have coveted these crystals for the effect they have on the human spirit. Pity.
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125K visits for this post???
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Yes, because.
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nvm
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'splain, please?
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awesome photos!
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Welcome to the Cellar, paranoid87.:D
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Hoping you might know the answer? |
I assume bringing plastic bags full of fresh air into the cave isnt a half baked idea?
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