Exploring the Caves of National Parks
Rock&Gem Magazine|Rockhound Roadtrip 2024
Where to Go & What to Expect
STEVE VOYNICK
Exploring the Caves of National Parks

Some of the world's biggest and most interesting caves are found in America's national parks. Within its 189 national parks and monuments, the National Park Service (NPS) has documented more than 4,700 caves. Some are smaller than a basketball court, while others have hundreds of miles of twisting passageways. Here's our list of caves by their origin; solution, lava, talus, sea or lake or ice.

SOLUTION CAVES

Solution caves, the most abundant type of cave, are formed by the dissolution of rocks such as limestone and marble. The solvent is usually carbonic acid, a weak acid that forms when atmospheric carbon dioxide dissolves in surface water and then percolates downward through bedrock fissures.

Most solution caves form in limestone, a sedimentary rock consisting largely of calcite (calcium carbonate, CaCO3). Because limestone dissolution and cave formation progress at an average rate of just one millimeter per year, the development of a cave can take hundreds or thousands of years or more.

Mammoth Cave

A solution cave in south-central Kentucky’s Mammoth Cave National Park, Mammoth Cave is the world’s largest cave, with 430 miles of surveyed passages. Natural development continues today on the cave’s lowest level 350 feet below the surface.

Over thousands of years, this cave’s thriving bat population has deposited large quantities of guano rich in nitrates that are easily converted to saltpeter (potassium nitrate), the key component of black gunpowder. During the War of 1812, Mammoth Cave provided much of the nation’s saltpeter, which was mined by enslaved African Americans. When Mammoth Cave began attracting tourists after the war, these same African Americans became the nation’s first underground tour guides.

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