Cave and Karst Terminology by J. N. Jennings with additions by others
- see copyright notices and references.
Abb. = abbreviation
Syn. = synonym (word with same meaning)
Cf. = confer (compare) with the following term which is not identical
but related to it.
(n.) = noun
(v.) = verb
A word in brackets in the left-hand column is commonly used in conjunction
with the preceding word without altering the meaning.
Square brackets enclose statements not part of the definition but for
special reasons included in the list.
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ABNEY LEVEL
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A type of clinometer with a bubble tube
used in cave survey to determine vertical angles.
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ABSEIL (n.)
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A controlled descent of a rope using friction obtained by
(1) wrapping the rope around the body in a particular way or
(2) passing the rope through a karabiner or
(3) passing the rope through a descender.
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ABSEIL (v.)
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To do an abseil.
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ACCIDENTAL (n.)
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An animal accidentally living in a cave.
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ACETYLENE
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An inflammable hydrocarbon gas, C2H2, produced by water reacting
with calcium carbide. When burnt, yields carbon dioxide as well
as light.
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ACTIVE CAVE
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A cave which has a stream flowing in it. Cf. live cave.
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ADAPTATION
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An inherited characteristic of an organism instructure, function
or behaviour which makes it better able to survive and reproduce
in a particular environment. Lengthening of appendages, loss of
pigment and modification of eyes are considered adaptations to the
dark zone of caves.
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AGGRESSIVE
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Referring to water which is still capable of dissolving more limestone,
other karst rock, or speleothems.
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ANASTOMOSIS
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A mesh of tubes or half-tubes.
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ANCHOR
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A fixed object used to secure a man whilst operating a safety
rope or for attaching equipment such as ladders or ropes.
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ARAGONITE
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A less common crystalline form of calcium carbonate than calcite,
denser and orthorhombic.
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ARTEFACT
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A product of human manufacture or art, e.g. tools of bone, stone,
etc., paintings, engravings. In caves, tools are often buried in
sediment. [Scientific attention should be drawn to the finding of
artefacts in caves.]
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ARTHROPODS
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The most common group of animals inhabiting caves,including insects,
crustaceans, spiders, millipedes, etc. They have jointed limbs and
external skeletons.
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ASCENDER
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A mechanical device for ascending ropes.
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ASSOCIATION
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A relatively stable community of different species living in a
characteristic habitat.
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AZIMUTH
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The true bearing of a survey line, determined by measurement from
an accurate survey or by observations of sun or stars.
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BARE KARST
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Karst with much exposed bedrock.
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BAT
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A member of the order Chiroptera, the only mammals capable of true
flight as they have membranes between the toes of their forefeet.
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BATHYPHREATIC
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Referring to water moving with some speed through downward looping
passages in the phreatic zone.
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BEARING
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The angle measured clockwise that a line makes withthe north line.
True, magnetic and grid bearings are measured respectively from
true, magnetic and gridnorth.
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BED
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A depositional layer of sedimentary bedrock or unconsolidated sediment.
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BEDDING-GRIKE
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A narrow, rectilinear slot in a karst rock outcrop dueto solution
along a bedding-plane.
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BEDDING-PLANE
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A surface separating two beds, usually planar.
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BEDDING-PLANE CAVE
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A cavity developed along a bedding-plane and elongate in cross-section
as a result.
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BELAY
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(1) To attach to an anchor.
(2) To operate a safety line.
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BIOSPELEOLOGY
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The scientific study of organisms living in caves.
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BLIND SHAFT
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A vertical extension upwards from part of a cave but not reaching
the surface; small in area in relation to its height.
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BLIND VALLEY
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A valley that is closed abruptly at its lower end by a cliff or
slope facing up the valley. It may have a perennial or intermittent
stream which sinks at its lower end or it may be a dry valley.
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BLOWHOLE
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(1) A hole to the surface in the roof of a sea cave through which
waves force air and water.
(2) A hole in the ground through which air blows in and out strongly,
sometimes audibly; common in the Nullarbor Plain.
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BOBBIN
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A decender that opens to enclose the rope around two fixed pulleys.
May have a handle ("STOP") which must be squeezed to allow descent.
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BOLLARD
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A projection of rock over which rope, tape or wire can be placed
to create an anchor.
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BOLT
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A high tensile steel bolt used as an anchor; either a conical bolt
screwed into a metal holder in a hole drilled in rock, causing expansion
for grip, or a bolt with partially filed thread hammered into a
slightly smaller hole.
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BONE BRECCIA
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A breccia containing many bone fragments. [Scientific attention
should be drawn to the finding of such in caves.]
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BRAKE BAR
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A round bar hinged to a karabiner or rappel rack used for abseiling.
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BRANCHWORK
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A dendritic system of underground streams or passages wherein branches
join successively to form a major stream or passage.
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BREAKDOWN
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Fall of rock from roof or wall of a cave.
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BRECCIA
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Angular fragments of rock and/or fossils cemented together or with
a matrix of finer sediment. Cf. bone breccia.
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BRUNTON COMPASS
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A type of compass, with a hinged mirror, which can be held in the
hand or mounted on a tripod and which includes a clinometer. Designed
also for measuring rock dip and strike.
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CALCITE
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The commonest calcium carbonate (CaCO3) mineral and the main constituent
of limestone, with different crystal forms in the rhombohedral subsystem.
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CANOPY
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A compound speleothem consisting of a flowstone cover of a bedrock
projection and of a fringe of stalactites or shawls on the outer
edge.
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CANYON
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(1) A deep valley with steep to vertical walls; in karst frequently
formed by a river rising on impervious rocks outside the karst area.
(2) A deep, elongated cavity cut by running water in the roof or
floor of a cave or forming a cave passage.
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CARBIDE
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Calcium carbide, CaC2, used with water to make acetylene in lamps.
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CAVE
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A natural cavity in rock large enough to be entered by man. It
may be water-filled. If it becomes full of ice or sediment and is
impenetrable, the term applies but will need qualification.
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CAVE BLISTER
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An almost perfect hemisphere of egg-shell calcite.
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CAVE BREATHING
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(1) Movement of air in and out of a cave entrance at intervals.
(2) The associated air currents within the cave.
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CAVE CORAL
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Very small speleothems consisting of short stalks with bulbous
ends, usually occurring in numbers in patches.
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CAVE EARTH
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Clay, silt, fine sand and/or humus deposited in a cave.
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CAVE ECOLOGY
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The study of the interaction between cave organisms and their environment,
e.g. energy input from surface, climatic influences.
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CAVE FILL
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Transported materials such as silt, clay, sand and gravel which
cover the bedrock floor or partially or wholly block some part of
a cave.
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CAVE FLOWER
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Syn. gypsum flower.
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CAVE PEARL
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A smooth, polished and rounded speleothem found in shallow hollows
into which water drips. Internally has concentric layers around
a nucleus.
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CAVE POSTULE
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A white, hemispherical wall and roof deposit of calcite.
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CAVE SPRING
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A natural flow of water from rock or sediment inside a cave.
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CAVE SYSTEM
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A collection of caves interconnected by enterable passages or
linked hydrologically or a cave with an extensive complex of chambers
and passages.
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CAVERNICOLE
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An animal which normally lives in caves for the whole or part of
its life cycle.
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CAVING
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The entering and exploration of caves.
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CAVERN
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A very large chamber within a cave.
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CENOTE
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A partly water-filled, wall-sided doline.
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CHAMBER
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The largest order of cavity in a cave, with considerable width
and length but not necessarily great height.
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CHERT
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A light grey to black or red rock, which fractures irregularly,
composed of extremely fine crystalline silica and often occurring
as nodules or layers in limestone.
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CHIMNEY
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A vertical or nearly vertical opening in a cave, narrow enough
to be climbed by chimneying.
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CHIMNEYING
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Ascending or descending by means of opposed body and/or limb pressures
against two facing walls.
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CHOCK
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A block of metal for use as a chockstone.
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CHOCKSTONE
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A rock wedged between two fixed rock surfaces.
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CHOKE
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Rock debris or cave fill blocking part of a cave.
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CLAUSTROPHOBIA
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An irrational fear of being in a closed space.
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CLINOMETER
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An instrument for measuring vertical angles or anglesof dip.
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CLOGGER
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A type of ascender without a handle; used with a karabiner to keep
it securely on the rope.
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CLOSED TRAVERSE
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A traverse which begins and ends at survey points with known co-ordinates
and orientation or at the same point.
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COCKPIT KARST
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Conekarst in which the residual hills are chiefly hemispheroidal
and the closed depressions often lobate.
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COLUMN
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A speleothem from floor to ceiling, formed by the growth of a stalactite
and a stalagmite to join, or by the growth of either to meet bedrock.
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COMPASS
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An instrument with a magnetic needle which is free to point to
magnetic north. For survey the needle is either attached to a graduated
card or can be read against a graduated circle to measure the angle
in degrees from the north clockwise.
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CONEKARST
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Karst, usually tropical, dominated by its projecting residual relief
rather than by its closed depressions.
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CONDUIT
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An underground stream course completely filled with water and under
hydrostatic pressure or a circular or elliptical passage inferred
to have been such a stream course.
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CONULITES
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The "splash cups" that form on certain cave floors beneath energetic
ceiling drip sites.
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COPROLITE
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Fossilized large excrement of animals, sometimes found in caves,
especially those used as lairs.
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COPROPHAGE
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A scavenger which feeds on animal dung, including guano.
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CORRASION
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The wearing away of bedrock or loose sediment by mechanical action
of moving agents, especially water. i.e. Corrosion and abraison
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CORROSION
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Syn. solution.
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COVERED KARST
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Karst where the bedrock is mainly concealed by soil or superficial
deposits.
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COW'S TAIL
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A length of rope used as a safety when crossing a rebelay.
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CRAWL (WAY)
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A passage which must be negotiated on hands and knees. Cf. flattener.
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CROSS-SECTION
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A section of a cave passage or a chamber across its width.
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CRYPTOZOA
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The assemblage of small terrestrial animals found living in darkness
beneath stones, logs, bark, etc. Potential colonizers of caves.
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CRYSTAL POOL
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A cave pool generally with little or no overflow, containing well-formed
crystals.
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CURRENT MARKING
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Shallow asymmetrical hollows formed by solution by turbulent waterflow
and distributed regularly over karst rock surfaces. Cf. scallop.
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CURTAIN
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A speleothem in the form of a wavy or folded sheet hanging from
the roof or wall of a cave, often translucent and resonant.
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DARK ZONE
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The part of a cave which daylight does not reach.
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DARK ADAPTATION
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A change in the retina of the eye sensitising it to dim light (the
eye 'becomes accustomed to the dark'). Loss of sensitivity on re-exposure
to brighter light is 'light adaptation'.
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DAYLIGHT HOLE
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An opening to the surface in the roof of a cave.
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DEAD CAVE
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A cave without streams or drips of water.
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DECLINATION
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The angle from true (or grid) north to magnetic north for a given
time and place.
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DECOMPOSERS
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Living things, chiefly bacteria and fungi, that live by extracting
energy from tissues of dead animals and plants.
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DECORATION
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Cave features due to secondary mineral precipitation,usually of
calcite. Syn. speleothem.
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DESCENDER
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A mechanical device for descending ropes.
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DEVIATION
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Usually a sling of rope or tape attached to a natural anchor at
one end and clipped to the rope with a karabiner at the other. Used
to avoid rub points on pitches. Syn. Redirection
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DEVELOPED SECTION
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The result of straightening out a section composed of several parts
with differing directions into one common plane. Usually the plane
is vertical and the length of the section equals the plan lengths
of the passages and chambers comprising it.
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DIG
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An excavation made
(1) to discover or extend a cave or
(2) to uncover artefacts or animal bones.
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DIP
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The angle at which beds are inclined from the horizontal. The true
dip is the maximum angle of the bedding planes at right angles to
the strike. Lesser angles in other directions are apparent dips.
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DOG-TOOTH SPAR
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A variety of calcite with acute-pointed crystals.
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DOLINE
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A closed depression draining underground in karst, ofsimple but
variable form, e.g. cylindrical, conical, bowl- or dish-shaped.
From a few to many hundreds of metres in dimensions.
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DOLINE KARST
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Karst dominated by closed depressions, chiefly dolines, perforating
a simple surface.
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DOLOMITE
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(1) A mineral consisting of the double carbonate of magnesium and
calcium, CaMg(CO3)2.
(2) A rock made chiefly of dolomite mineral.
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DOMAIN
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A biological region of the earth's crust.
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DOME
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A large hemispheroidal hollow in the roof of a cave,formed by the
breakdown and/or salt weathering, generally in mechanically weak
rocks, which prevents bedding and joints dominating the form.
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DONGA
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In the Nullarbor Plain a shallow, closed depression, several metres
deep and hundreds of metres across, with a flat clay-loam floor
and very gentle slopes.
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DRIPHOLE
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A hole formed by water dripping onto the cave floor.
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DRIPLINE
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A line on the ground at a cave entrance formed by drips from the
rock above. Useful in cave survey to define the beginning of the
cave.
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DRIPSTONE
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A deposit formed from drops falling from cave roofs or walls, usually
of calcite.
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DRY CAVE
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A cave without a running stream. Cf. dead cave.
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DRY VALLEY
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A valley without a surface stream channel.
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DUCK (-UNDER)
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A place where water is at or close to the cave roof for a short
distance so that it can only be passed by submersion.
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DUNE LIMESTONE
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Syn. eolian calcarenite.
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DYE GAUGING
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Determining stream discharge by inserting a known quantity of dye
and measuring its concentration after mixing.
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DYNAMIC PHREAS
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A phreatic zone or part of a phreatic zone where water moves fast
with turbulence under hydrostatic pressure.
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EASTING
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(1) The distance of a point east of the point of origin of the
grid of a map or some abbreviation of it.
(2) The west-east component of a survey leg, or of a series of legs
or of a complete traverse; east is positive and west is negative.
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ECCENTRIC
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A speleothem of abnormal shape or attitude. Cf. helictite.
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ENDOGEAN
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Pertaining to the domain immediately beneath the ground surface,
i.e. in the soil or plant litter.
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EOLIAN CALCARENITE
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A limestone formed on land by solution and redeposition of calcium
carbonate in coastal dune sands containing a large proportion of
calcareous sand from mollusc shells and other organic remains.
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EPIGEAN
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Pertaining to the biological domain at the surface or above it.
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EPIPHREATIC
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Referring to water moving with some speed in the top of the phreatic
zone or in the zone liable to be temporarily in flood time part
of the phreatic zone.
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EROSION
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The wearing away of bedrock or sediment by mechanical and chemical
actions of all moving agents such as rivers, wind and glaciers at
the surface or in caves.
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EXSURGENCE
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A spring fed only by percolation water.
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FAULT
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A fracture separating two parts of a once continuous rock body
with relative movement along the fault plane.
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FAULT CAVE
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A cave developed along a fault or fault zone, either by movement
of the fault or by preferential solution along it.
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FAULT PLANE
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A plane along which movement of a fault has taken place.
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FISSURE
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An open crack in rock or soil.
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FISSURE CAVE
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A narrow, verical cave passage, often developed along a joint but
not necessarily so. Usually due to solution but sometimes to tension.
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FLATTENER
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A passage, which, though wide, is so low that movement is only
possible in a prone position.
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FLOE CALCITE
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Very thin flakes of calcite floating on the surface of a cave pool
or previously formed in this way.
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FLOWSTONE
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A deposit formed from thin films or trickles of water over floors
or walls, usually of calcite. Cf. travertine.
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FLUORESCEIN
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A reddish-yellow organic dye which gives a green fluorescence to
water. Detectable in very dilute solutions so used in water tracing
and dye gauging in the form of the salt, sodium fluorescein.
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FLUOROMETER
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An instrument for measuring the fluorescence of water; used in
water tracing and dye gauging.
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FORESTRY COMPASS
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A lightweight, compact instrument to be mounted on a tripod, which
functions as a compass and a clinometer, and has a telescopic sight.
Some types facilitate measurement of horizontal angles as well as
bearings.
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FOSSIL
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The remains or traces of animals or plants preserved in rocks or
sediments.
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FREE PITCH
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Where a rope or ladder hangs vertically and free of the walls.
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FREE-SURFACE STREAM
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A cave stream which does not normally fill its passage to the roof.
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FRIEND
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A mechanical caming device used for anchors.
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GARDENING
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Clearing stones or other loose material from a route, usually a
pitch, which might otherwise be dangerous to a caver continuing.
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GIBBS
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An ascender with its cam operated by the weight of the caver.
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GLACIER CAVE
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A cave formed within or beneath a glacier.
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GOUR
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Syn. rimstone dam
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GRADE
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The class of a cave survey on the basis of the precision of the
instruments and the accuracy of the methods.
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GRID
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A system of squares on a map formed by straight lines which represent
progressive distances east and north of a fixed point of origin.
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GRID NORTH
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The direction of a north-south grid line on a map. Except for the
north-south grid line through the point of origin of the grid, it
will differ slightly from true north.
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GRIKE
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A deep, narrow, vertical or steeply inclined, rectilinear slot
in a rock outcrop due to solution along a joint.
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GROTTO
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A room in a cave of moderate dimensions but richly decorated.
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GROUNDWATER
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Syn. phreatic water.
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GUANO
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Large accumulations of dung, often partly mineralized, including
rock fragments, animal skeletal material and products of reactions
between excretions and rock. In caves, derived from bats and to
a lesser extent from birds.
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GUANOBIA
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An animal association feeding on guano. Not considered true cavernicoles
as guano is not confined to caves.
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GYPSUM
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The mineral hydrated calcium sulphate, CaSO4.2H2O.
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GYPSUM FLOWER
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An elongated and curving deposit of gypsum on a cave surface.
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HALF-BLIND VALLEY
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A blind valley which overflows its threshold when the stream sink
cannot accept all the water at a time of flood.
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HALF-TUBE
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A semi-cylindrical, elongate recess in a cave surface, often meandering
or anastomosing.
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HALITE
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The sodium chloride mineral, NaCl, in the cubic crystalline system.
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HALL
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A lofty chamber considerably longer than it is wide.
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HARNESS
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An arrangement of tape for attaching the lower body (seat harness)
or the upper (chest harness) to ascenders or descenders.
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HELICTITE
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A speleothem, which at one or more stages of its growth changes
its axis from the vertical to give a curving or angular form.
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HELMET
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A miner's, climber's or other kind of non-metallic, protective
helmet used in caving.
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HISTOPLASMOSIS
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A lung disease which may be caught from the guano of some caves,
caused by a fungus, Histoplasmosis capsulatum. Usually mild in effect,
it can be fatal in rare cases.
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HORIZONTAL ANGLE
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The difference in direction of two survey lines measured clockwise
in a horizontal plane.
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HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE
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The pressure due to a column of water.
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HYPOGEAN
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Pertaining to the domain below the endogean, including the dark
zone of caves.
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ICE CAVE
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A cave with perennial ice in it.
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INFLOW CAVE
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A cave into which a stream enters or is known to have entered formerly
but which cannot be followed downstream to the surface.
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INTERSTITIAL MEDIUM
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Spaces between grains of sand or fine gravel filled with water
which contains phreatobia.
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INVERTED SIPHON
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A siphon of U-profile.
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JOINT
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A planar or gently-curving crack separating two parts of once continuous
rock without relative movement along its plane.
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JOINT-PLANE CAVE
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A cavity developed along a joint and elongate in cross-section.
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JUMAR
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An ascender with a simple finger-operated safety catch, a handle
and several attachment points.
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KANKAR
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(pronounced kunkar) A deposit, often nodular, of calcium carbonate
formed in soils of semi-arid regions. Sometimes forms cave roofs.
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KARABINER
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A steel or other alloy, oval- or D-shaped link with a spring-loaded
gate on one side to admit a rope or to clip to a ladder, piton,
etc.
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KARREN
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The minor forms of karst due to solution of rock on the surface
or underground.
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KARST
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Terrain with special landforms and drainage characteristics due
to greater solubility of certain rocks in natural waters than is
common. Derived from the geographical name of part of Slovenia.
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KARST WINDOW
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A closed depression, not a polje, which has a stream flowing across
its bottom.
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KERNMANTEL ROPE
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A rope with a plaited sheath around a core of parallel or twisted
strands.
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KEYHOLE (PASSAGE)
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A small passage or opening in a cave, which is round above and
narrow below.
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KRAB
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Colloquial abbreviation of karabiner.
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LADDER
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In caving, a flexible, lightweight ladder of galvanized or stainless
steel wires and aluminium alloy rungs.
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LAKE
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In caving, a body of standing water in a cave, but used for what
would be called a pond or pool on the surface.
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LAVA-CAVE
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A cave in a lava flow; usually a tube or tunnel formed by flow
of liquid lava through a solidified mass, or by roofing of an open
channel of flowing lava. Small caves in lava also form as gas blisters.
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LAY
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The way in which strands of a rope or cable are twisted.
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LEAD
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A passage noticed but as yet unexplored.
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LEAD-ACID CELL
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A rechargeable acid battery for use with an electric cap lamp.
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LEADER
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In caving, the person directing the activities of a caving party,
especially with regard to safety.
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LEG
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A part of a survey traverse between two successive stations.
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LEUCOPHOR
|
A colourless water tracer, which fluoresces blue.
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LIMESTONE
|
A sedimentary rock consisting mainly of calcium carbonate, CaC03.
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LINTEL LINE
|
A line on the ground at a cave entrance perpendicularly beneath
the outer edge of the rock above; may or may not coincide with the
dripline.
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LIQUID MEDIUM
|
Contains the aquatic cavernicoles.
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LIVE CAVE
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A cave containing a stream or active speleothems.
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LONGITUDINAL (or LONG) SECTION
|
A section along the length of a cave passage or chamber or combination
of these, or along a survey traverse in a cave.
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MAGNETIC NORTH
|
The direction to the north magnetic pole at a given place and time.
This differs from the direction towards which the north end of a
compass points by a small individual compass error and by the effect
of any local magnetic attraction.
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MARBLE
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Limestone recrystallized and hardened by pressure and heat.
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MAZE
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Syn. network.
|
|
MEANDER
|
An arcuate curve in a river course due to a stream eroding sideways.
|
|
MEANDER NICHE
|
A hemispherically-roofed part of a cave formed by a stream meandering
and cutting down at the same time.
|
|
MICROCLIMATE
|
The climate (i.e. temperature, humidity, air movements, etc.) of
a restricted area or space, e.g. of a cave or on a lesser scale
of the space beneath stones in a cave.
|
|
MICROGOUR
|
Miniature rimstone dams with associated tiny pools of the order
of 1cm wide and deep on flowstone.
|
|
MOONMILK
|
Syn. Rockmilk. A soft, white plastic speleothem consisting of calcite,
hydrocalcite, hydromagnesite or huntite.
|
|
MUD PENDULITE
|
A pendulite with the knob coated in mud.
|
|
NATURAL ARCH
|
An arch of rock formed by weathering.
|
|
NATURAL BRIDGE
|
A bridge of rock spanning a ravine or valley and formed by erosive
agents.
|
|
NECROPHAGE
|
A scavenger feeding on animal carcasses (not prey).
|
|
NETWORK
|
A complex pattern of repeatedly connecting passages in a cave.
|
|
NIFE CELL
|
A rechargeable alkaline battery for use with an electric cap lamp.
|
|
NORTHING
|
(1) The distance of a point north of the point of origin of the
grid of a map, or some abbreviation of it.
(2) The south-north component of a survey leg, or of a series of
legs, or of a complete traverse; north is positive and south is
negative.
|
|
NOTHEPHREATIC
|
Referring to water moving slowly in cavities in the phreatic zone.
|
|
NUMBERING
|
Assigning an alphanumeric index to a cave entrance.
|
|
OPEN TRAVERSE
|
A traverse which does not close onto a survey point of known co-ordinates
and orientation or onto itself.
|
|
ORIENTATION
|
The relationship of a survey line to true, grid or magnetic north.
|
|
OUTFLOW CAVE
|
A cave from which a stream flows or formerly did so and which cannot
be followed upstream to the surface.
|
|
PALAEOKARST
|
"Fossil" karst - cave or karst features remnant from a previous
period of karstification, characterised by the presence of ancient
(buried) deposits, as lithified cave fills or breccias.
|
|
PASSAGE
|
A cavity which is much longer than it is wide or high and may join
larger cavities.
|
|
PARIETAL(ASSOCIATION)
|
Animals found on walls around cave entrances.
|
|
PENDANT
|
Syn. rock pendant.
|
|
PENDULITE
|
A kind of stalactite which has been partly submerged and the submerged
part covered with dog-tooth spar to give the appearance of a drumstick.
|
|
PERCOLATION WATER
|
Water moving mainly downwards through pores, cracks and tight fissures
in the vadose zone.
|
|
PERMEABILITY
|
The property of rock or soil permitting water to pass through it.
Primary permeability depends on interconnecting pores between the
grains of the material. Secondary permeability depends on solutional
widening of joints and bedding planes and on other solution cavities
in the rock.
|
|
PHREAS
|
Syn. phreatic zone.
|
|
PHREATIC WATER
|
Water below the level at which all voids in the rock are completely
filled with water.
|
|
PHREATIC ZONE
|
Zone where voids in the rock are completely filled with water.
|
|
PHREATOBIA
|
An animal association found in water separating grains of sand
or fine gravel.
|
|
PILLAR
|
A bedrock column from roof to floor left by removal of surrounding
rock.
|
|
PIPE
|
A tubular cavity projecting as much as several metres down from
the surface into karst rocks and often filled with earth, sand,
gravel, breccia, etc.
|
|
PITCH
|
A vertical or nearly vertical part of a cave for which ladders
or ropes are normally used for descent or ascent.
|
|
PITON
|
A solid or folded metal spike, of steel or other alloy, to be driven
into a crack in the rock to form an anchor.
|
|
PLAN
|
A plot of the shape and details of a cave projected vertically
onto a horizontal plane at a reduced scale.
|
|
PLUNGE POOL
|
A swirlhole, generally of large size, occurring at the foot of
a waterfall or rapid, on the surface or underground.
|
|
POLJE
|
A large closed depression draining underground, witha flat floor
across which there may be an intermittent or perennial stream and
which may be liable to flood and become a lake. The floor makes
a sharp break with parts of surrounding slopes.
|
|
POLYGONAL KARST
|
Karst completely pitted by closed depressions so that divides between
them form a crudely polygonal network.
|
|
POOL DEPOSIT
|
(1) Any sediment which accumulated in a pool in a cave.
(2) Crystalline deposits precipitated in a cave pool, usually of
crystalline shape as well as structure.
|
|
POPULATION
|
Individuals of a species in a given locality which potentially
form a single interbreeding group separated by physical barriers
from other such populations (e.g. populations of the same species
in two quite separate caves).
|
|
POROSITY
|
The property of rock or soil of having small voids between the
constituent particles. The voids may not interconnect.
|
|
POT (-HOLE)
|
A vertical or nearly vertical shaft or chimney open to the surface.
|
|
PREDATOR
|
An animal which captures other animals for its food.
|
|
PRISMATIC COMPASS
|
A compass with a prism attached so that the compass card can be
read at the same time as the compass is directed into the line of
sight to a distance point.
|
|
PROJECTED SECTION
|
The result of projecting a section composed of several parts with
differing directions onto a single plane. Usually the plane is vertical
along the general trend of the cave. The horizontal distance apart
of points is not correct, only the vertical, so that slopes are
distorted.
|
|
PRUSIK KNOT
|
A friction knot which will slide along the rope when no weight
is applied but grips when a pull is exerted on it. Used for ascending
ropes.
|
|
PRUSIK SLING
|
A sling fastened by a prusik knot to the rope.
|
|
PRUSIKING
|
Ascent on a rope using prusik knots or ascenders.
|
|
PSEUDOKARST
|
Terrain with landforms which resemble those of karst but which
are not the product of karst processes.
|
|
RAPPEL
|
Syn. abseil.
|
|
RAPPEL RACK
|
A descender consisting of a frame mounting 5 or 6 brake bars.
|
|
REBELAY
|
The reanchoring of a rope, usually to avoid rub points or split
long pitches.
|
|
REDIRECTION
|
Syn. deviation
|
|
RELICT KARST
|
Old cave forms produced by earlier geomorphic processes within
the present cycle of karstification and open to modification by
present day processes such as deposition of speleothems, sediments
or skeletal deposits.
|
|
RESURGENCE
|
A spring where a stream, which has a course on the surface higher
up, reappears at the surface.
|
|
RHODAMINE
|
A red organic dye which gives a red fluorescence to water. Detectable
in very dilute solutions so used in water tracing and dye gauging.
|
|
RIFT
|
A long, narrow, high and straight cave passage controlled by planes
of weakness in the rock. Cf. fissure.
|
|
RIGGING
|
The process of establishing the belays for SRT or laddering.
|
|
RIMSTONE
|
A deposit formed by precipitation from water flowing over the rim
of a pool.
|
|
RIMSTONE DAM
|
A ridge or rib of rimstone, often curved convexly downstream.
|
|
RIMSTONE POOL
|
A pool held up by a rimstone dam.
|
|
RISING
|
Syn. spring.
|
|
ROCK PENDANT
|
A smooth-surfaced projection from the roof of a cave due to solution.
Usually in groups.
|
|
ROCK SHELTER
|
A cave with a more or less level floor reaching only a short way
into a hillside or under a fallen block so that no part is beyond
daylight.
|
|
ROCKHOLE
|
A shallow, small hole in rock outcrops, often rounded in form and
holding water after rains. Well known on the Nullarbor Plain.
|
|
ROCKPILE
|
A heap of blocks in a cave, roughly conical or part-conical in
shape.
|
|
ROOF CRUST
|
Thin speleothem on cave precipitated from water films exuding from
pores or cracks.
|
|
ROOM
|
A wider part of a cave than a passage but not as large as a chamber.
|
|
ROPE PROTECTOR
|
A length of heavy fabric or plastic hose placed around a rope where
it may rub against rock.
|
|
SAFETY LINE
|
A safety rope attached to a caver climbing on a ladder or negotiating
a difficult situation and held by a man above.
|
|
SALT WEATHERING
|
Detachment of particles of various sizes from a rock surface by
the growth of crystals from salt solutions. Forms substantial features
in Nullarbor Plain caves.
|
|
SAPROPHAGE
|
A scavenger feeding on decaying organic material.
|
|
SATURATED
|
(1) Referring to rock with water-filled voids. (2) Referring to
water which has dissolved as much limestone or other karst rock
as it can under normal conditions.
|
|
SCALE
|
The ratio of the length between any two points on a map, plan or
section to the actual distance between the same points on the ground
or in a cave.
|
|
SCALING POLES
|
A lightweight metal alloy pole, in short sections for transport
and fastened together where used, to raise a ladder to points inaccessible
by climbing.
|
|
SCALLOPS
|
Current markings that intersect to form points which are directed
downstream.
|
|
SCAVENGER
|
An animal that eats dead remains and wastes of other animals and
plants (cf. coprophage, necrophage, saprophage).
|
|
SEA CAVE
|
A cave in present-day or emerged sea cliffs, formed by wave attack
or solution.
|
|
SECTION
|
A plot of the shape and details of a cave in a particular intersecting
plane, called the section plane, which is usually vertical.
|
|
SEDIMENT
|
Material recently deposited by water, ice or wind, or precipitated
from water.
|
|
SEEPAGE WATER
|
Syn. percolation water.
|
|
SELENITE
|
A crystalline form of gypsum.
|
|
SHAFT
|
A vertical cavity roughly equal in horizontal dimensions but much
deeper than broad. Wider than a chimney.
|
|
SHAWL
|
A simple triangular shaped curtain.
|
|
SHOW CAVE
|
A cave that has been made accessible to the public for guided visits.
|
|
SINGLE ROPE TECHNIQUE
|
The practice of climbing up and down ropes with the help of ascenders
and descenders. Abb. = SRT.
|
|
SIPHON
|
A waterfilled passage of inverted U-profile which delivers a flow
of water whenever the head of water upstream rises above the top
of the inverted U. SLING A joined loop of rope or tape.
|
|
SOLUTION
|
In karst study, the change of bedrock from the solid state to the
liquid state by combination with water. In physical solution the
ions of the rock go directly into solution without transformation.
In chemical solution acids take part, especially the weak acid formed
by carbon dioxide (CO2).
|
|
SOLUTION FLUTE
|
A solution hollow running down the maximum slope of the rock, of
uniform fingertip width and depth, with sharp ribs between it and
its neighbours.
|
|
SOLUTION PAN
|
A dish-shaped depression on flattish rock; its sides may overhang
and carry solution flutes. Its bottom may have a cover of organic
remains, silt, clay or rock fragments.
|
|
SOLUTION RUNNEL
|
A solution hollow running down the maximum slope of the rock, larger
than a solution flute and increasing in depth and width down its
length. Thick ribs between neighbouring runnels may be sharp and
carry solution flutes.
|
|
SPECIES
|
A group of actually or potentially interbreeding populations which
is reproductively isolated from other such groups by their biology,
not simply by physical barriers.
|
|
SPELEOGEN
|
A cave feature formed erosionally or by weathering in cave enlargement
such as current markings or rock pendants.
|
|
SPELEOLOGY
|
The exploration, description and scientific study of caves and
related phenomena.
|
|
SPELEOTHEM
|
A secondary mineral deposit formed in caves, most commonly calcite.
|
|
SPLASH CUP
|
A shallow cavity in the top of a stalagmite.
|
|
SPONGEWORK
|
A complex of irregular, inter-connecting cavities intricately perforating
the rock. The cavities may range from a few centimetres to more
than a metre across.
|
|
SPRING
|
A natural flow of water from rock or soil onto the land surface
or into a body of surface water.
|
|
SQUEEZE
|
An opening in a cave only passable with effort because of its small
dimensions. Cf. flattener, crawl (way).
|
|
STALACTITE
|
A speleothem hanging downwards from a roof or wall, of cylindrical
or conical form, usually with a central hollow tube.
|
|
STALAGMITE
|
A speleothem projecting vertically upwards from a cave floor and
formed by precipitation from drips.
|
|
STATION
|
A survey point in a chain of such points in a survey.
|
|
STEEPHEAD
|
A steep-sided valley in karst, generally short, ending abruptly
upstream where a stream emerges or formerly did so.
|
|
STEGAMITE
|
A speleothem projecting upwards from a cave floor in the form of
a calcite ridge. A medial crack appears along the top of the ridge
where water is thought to be forced from the speleothem under capillary
action.
|
|
STRAW (STALACTITE)
|
A long, thin-walled tubular stalactite less than about 1cm in diameter.
|
|
STREAMSINK
|
A point at which a surface stream disappears underground.
|
|
STRIKE
|
The direction of a horizontal line in a bedding plane in rocks
inclined from the horizontal. On level ground it is the direction
of outcrop of inclined beds.
|
|
STYLOLITE
|
Suture in rock formed where pressure solution has taken place,
often leaving a thin lamina of insoluble material along it.
|
|
SUBJACENT KARST
|
Karst developed in soluble beds underlying other rock formations;
the surface may or may not be affected by the karst development.
|
|
SUMP
|
A point in a cave passage when the water meets the roof.
|
|
SUPERSATURATED
|
Referring to water that has more limestone or other karst rock
in solution than the maximum corresponding to normal conditions.
|
|
SURVEY
|
In caving, the measurement of directions and distances between
survey points and of cave details from them, and the plotting of
cave plans and sections from these measurements either graphically
or after computation of co-ordinates.
|
|
SUUNTO CLINOMETER
|
A small, handheld pendulum clinometer commonly used in cave survey.
|
|
SUUNTO COMPASS
|
A small, handheld sighting compass commonly used in cave survey.
|
|
SWIRLHOLE
|
A hole in rock in a streambed eroded by eddying water, with or
without sand or pebble tools.
|
|
SYNGENETIC KARST
|
Karst developed in eolian calcarenite when the development of karst
features has taken place at the same time as the lithification of
dune sand.
|
|
TAGGING
|
Affixing a metal tag bearing a cave number near its entrance, normally
by means of rock drill and a small nail.
|
|
TAFONI
|
Roughly hemispherical hollows weathered in rock either at the surface
or in caves.
|
|
TAPE
|
(1) In survey, a graduated tape of steel, plastic, wire-reinforced
cloth, or fibreglass, used for measuring distance.
(2) Strips of woven synthetic fibre used for slings and waist bands.
|
|
TERRA ROSSA
|
Reddish residual clay soil developed on limestone.
|
|
THREAD
|
A natural hole through a rope, tape or wire can be passed to create
an anchor.
|
|
THRESHOLD
|
(1) That part of a cave near the entrance where surface climatic
conditions rapidly grade into cave climatic conditions. Not necessarily
identical with twilight zone.
(2) Slope or cliff facing up a blind or half-blind valley below
a present or former streamsink.
|
|
THROUGH CAVE
|
A cave which may be followed from entrance to exit along a stream
course or along a passage which formerly carried a stream.
|
|
TOPOFIL
|
A mechanical cave survey device that uses a roll of thread and
a distance counter, a protractor to measure inclination and a compass
to measure the bearing.
|
|
TOWERKARST
|
Conekarst in which the residual hills have very steep to overhanging
lower slopes. There my be alluvial plains between the towers and
flat-floored depressions within them.
|
|
TRACE
|
A short length of wire with fasteners used for attaching ladders
and ropes to an anchor.
|
|
TRACER
|
(1) A material introduced into surface or underground water where
it disappears or into soil to determine drainage interconnections
and travel time.
(2) A material introduced into cave air to determine cave interconnections.
|
|
TRAVERSE
|
(1) The commonest form of cave survey in which direction, distance
and vertical angle between successive points are measured.
(2) A way along ledges above the floor of a cave. (3) To move along
such a way.
|
|
TRAVERTINE
|
Compact calcium carbonate deposit, often banded, precipitated from
spring, river or lake water. Cf. tufa.
|
|
TRI-CAM
|
A metallic device placed in holes or cracks for use as an anchor
Cf. chock. Check out the photo
of a tri-cam in action
|
|
TROGLOBITE
|
A cavernicole unable to live outside the cave environment.
|
|
TROGLODYTE
|
A human cave dweller.
|
|
TROGLOPHILE
|
A cavernicole which frequently completes its life cycle in caves
but is not confined to this habitat.
|
|
TROGLOXENE
|
A cavernicole which spends only part of its life cycle in caves
and returns periodically to the epigean domain for food.
|
|
TRUE NORTH
|
The direction of the geographical north pole at a place.
|
|
TUBE
|
A cave passage of smooth surface, and elliptical or nearly circular
in cross-section.
|
|
TUFA
|
Spongy or vesicular calcium carbonate deposited from spring, river
or lake waters. Cf. travertine.
|
|
TUNNEL
|
A nearly horizontal cave open at both ends, fairly straight and
uniform in cross-section.
|
|
TWILIGHT ZONE
|
The part of a cave to which daylight penetrates.
|
|
UVALA
|
A complex closed depression with several lesser depressions within
its rim.
|
|
VADOSE FLOW
|
Water flowing in free-surface streams in caves.
|
|
VADOSE SEEPAGE
|
Syn. percolation water.
|
|
VADOSE WATER
|
Water in the vadose zone.
|
|
VADOSE ZONE
|
The zone where voids in the rock are partly filled with air and
through which water descends under gravity.
|
|
VAUCLUSIAN SPRING
|
A spring rising up a deep, steeply-inclined, water-filled passage
into a small surface pool.
|
|
VERMICULATION
|
Pattern of thin, worm-shaped coatings of clay or silt on cave surfaces.
|
|
VERTICAL ANGLE
|
The angle in a vertical plane between a line of sight and the horizontal,
positive above the horizontal and negative below.
|
|
WATER TRACING
|
Determination of water connection between points of stream disappearance
or of soil water seepage and points of reappearance on the surface
or underground.
|
|
WATERTABLE
|
The surface between phreatic water which completely fills voids
in the rock, and ground air, which partially fills higher voids.
|
|
WATERTRAP
|
A place where a cave roof dips under water but lifts above it farther
on. Cf. duck (-under).
|
|
WELL
|
A deep rounded hole in a cave floor or on the surfacein karst.
|
|
WET SUIT
|
A diving garment of foam neoprene designed to insulate the diver
from the cold but which allows a thin film of water to penetrate
between the suit and the body.
|
|
WHALETAIL
|
A descender consisting of an aluminium block with slots, knobs
and a safety gate.
|
|
WINDOW
|
An irregular opening through a thin rock wall in a cave.
|
Copyright © Australian Speleological Federation. This document may be
freely copied provided that this copyright notice remains with the document.
This list of terms is substantially longer than that included in Speleo
Handbook (1968). The increase reflects the greater depth and breadth of
interest of Australian speleologists in caves and their surroundings.
It remains a highly selective list of terms recommended for use in particular
ways by Australians and it does not purport to gather comprehensively
actual usage, good, bad and indifferent. For more complete collections
of terms the following publications are the most useful:
English equivalents of foreign terms have been preferred except where
the latter have long-established and agreed usage or where there is no
precise counterpart in English. Amongst English words, simple Anglo-Saxon
words are preferred to new inventions from Greek and Latin roots. Some
terms which have markedly conflicting and confusing usages either within
Australia or abroad or between Australia and abroad are omitted as the
best deterrent to their further employment here. A very few terms not
yet in common use have been introduced where these offer the opportunity
of avoiding conflicting usages of other words which need to be retained
despite this. A preliminary list was circulated to the ASF clubs and to
a number of individuals for comment. The final list reflects very much
suggestions from and discussions with the following:
E.G. Anderson, W.J. Counsell, J.R. Dunkley, J M. James, G.S. Hunt, D.C.
Lowry, P.G. Matthews, N. Montgomery, G.J. Middleton, A. Pavey, A.M. Richards,
T.M. Wigley, and the National University Caving Club.
It must not be thought, however, that these helpers agree with the composition
of the list or with every definition. No selection will please everybody,
still less the meanings given to those chosen, but to assemble all terms
and usages would not only result in a volume to itself but might confuse
more cavers than it would assist.