Canadian team confirms presence of huge unexplored cave in British Columbia
19 replies, posted
It just keeps going and going.
https://youtu.be/m0zCbxYravM
The cave “has a number of features that when combined indicate a cave of national significance” and constitutes “a major new find in Western Canada, and promises a dramatic new chapter in the story of Canadian cave exploration,” say John Pollack and Chas Yonge in a document they co-wrote that summarizes the significance of the find.
Pollack, who is a archeological surveyor, further explained the significance of the cave in an exclusive interview with Canadian Geographic. “I’ve been in some of the biggest caves in the world, and this thing has an entrance that is truly immense, and not just by Canadian standards,” he said.
“The opening is 100 metres long by 60 metres wide, and when you’re standing on the edge looking down into it, your line of sight is nearly 600 feet [183 metres]. You don’t get lines of sight of 600 feet in Canadian caves — it just doesn’t happen. And this is a shaft. It goes down quite precipitously, it had a large amount of water flowing into it and is wide open for as far down it that we’ve gone. The scale of this thing is just huge, and about as big as they come in Canada.”
Source
I live for this shit.
We've been discovered! Quickly, disperse!
It's amazing we still find stuff like this.
We’ve found one of the secret entrances to the hollow earth, globalists eat your heart out!
I always suspected Lithuania wasn't a real country!
I wanna fuck it.
It's so difficult to really process scale in this. I keep looking to the trees to try and gauge just how huge this is, and I still don't think I'm grasping it fully.
I want to go there.
What is it with virgins and huge holes in the Earth this week?
It is the ever present force that drives man to make new discoveries.
Caves scare the fuck out of me
Looks like an opening for a giant monster den or something, I would love to explore it
The most interesting element of the video to me is the fact that water is running into the cave, along a path that it has clearly been taking for some time.
Judging by that and the fact that there is no visible pooling water in the bottom of the cave, this may be a truly tremendous network. Assuming the region is non water soluble (granite and not limestone for instance), this could be one of the biggest granite caves in North America.
his thing is getting pounded by a large volume of water in the spring,”
said Pollack. “We don’t know how much, but it could be something along
the order of five to 15 cubic metres per second
This thing is huge.
In the near future
You think Atlas just lifted the Earth?
Kinda difficult for the Earth to be hollow when it's flat though!
Flat Earth is a psyop meant to distract the public from Hollow Earth.
Checkmate Globalist!
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