Wonder
Speleothems |
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A speleothem, a word from the Greek that stands for "cave deposit",
it’s an addition mineral deposit formed in a cave.
Like
all the most solution caves, Wonder Caves at Aracena was dissolved
while they are below the water table. All the amazing variety of
these features that we can appreciate at this place only started to
be formed after the cave drained and exposed to air where the
deposition of secondary mineral features or speleothems may
begin.
Please, take a good look to all you want, but don't touch them.
These are fragile things formed over thousands of years and just
one simple touch of your fingers can, and will, compromise the rest
of its process. Enjoy them but leave them intact for the next
visitor! Take nothing but good memories and leave no trace of your
visit. | |
Where they came from?
Water seeping through cracks in a cave's surrounding bedrock
dissolves certain compounds like aragonite, calcite and gypsum in
which its rate depends on temperature on the amount of carbon
dioxide held in solution among other factors. When the solution
reaches an air-filled cave, a discharge of carbon dioxide may alter
the water's ability to hold these minerals in solution, causing its
solutes to precipitate. Over time, which may span tens of thousands
of years, the accumulation of these precipitates forms speleothems
like those you can appreciate at these caves.
Depending on whether the water drips, seeps, condenses, flows, or
ponds, speleothems take various forms some of them well like
stalactites well know to all of us and other ones less known but
also spectacular like Coralloids. Almost all speleothems are named
for their resemblance to man-made or natural
objects. | |
Why are they so different?
Like all the things in the nature, many factors impact the shape
and color of speleothem formations. Temperature and humidity inside
the cave, the amount or rainfall, the density of plant cover on the
surface, the rate and direction of water seepage, the amount of
acid in the water, air currents, the above ground climate; all of
this factors influences on speleothem shape and color formation.
Like almost others caves, Aracena Wonder Cave chemistry revolves
around the primary mineral in limestone; calcite (CaCO3). This
mineral is slightly soluble and its solubility increases with the
amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) and unlike the vast majority of
solids, its solubility decreases as the temperature increases due
to interactions with the carbon dioxide, whose solubility is
diminished by elevated temperatures; as the carbon dioxide is
released, the calcium carbonate is precipitated.
Below we’ll describe you some of the speleothems that you’ll find
on these caves. Please remember that they are extremely fragile and
you should in any, what’s or ever touch
them. | |
Stalactites
Most anyone that's ever heard of caves knows what stalactites are,
even if they can't keep them straight from stalagmites. (Some
useful associations are that stalactites hang "tite" while
stalagmites hold "mite", or that stalactites are on the ceiling,
stalagmites on the ground.) What most people probably haven't
thought about is the birth of stalactites. Actually it's more a
coming of age, the natural evolution of a special type of
stalactite and also another speleothem: the soda straw.
Crystals of calcite in a soda straw are oriented longitudinally and
grow downward, so lengthening the straw. Most soda straws, however,
eventually conduct water along their external surface, as well, and
there deposit radially oriented calcite crystals perpendicular to
their outer surface. This leads to thickening of the soda straw
into the classical "icicle" shape most people associate with
stalactites. Internal flow may continue, but often ceases as
external growth envelopes the former drip canal |
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Stalagmites
Stalagmites, another one familiar cave formations, are best known
as upward-growing, massive calcite mounds deposited from drip
water. As with all speleothems, stalagmites are identified not by
their mineral composition, but by their outward form and internal
structure. Thus, cavers also refer to aragonite and gypsum
stalagmites, when we are lucky enough to come across them.
Stalagmites are built up from many successive growth layers. Each
layer is made up of tiny, elongate calcite crystals oriented
roughly perpendicular to the growing surface. If drip water
evaporates from the stalagmite surface, layers of minute aragonite
crystals may also develop. Darkly stained layers attest to the
episodic influx of impurities, usually organics.
If
you ever get a photo of stalactites and stalagmites and you forgot
which way was up, look at the tips of the formations. Stalactites
almost always have pointed tips, whereas stalagmites are usually
rounded, or even flat.
When
one stalagmite joins itself to a stalactite, or vice-versa, we’ve
one column formed. | |
Flowstone
Flowstone is perhaps the most common of all cave deposits, and is
almost always composed of calcite or other carbonate minerals. It
forms in thin layers which initially take on the shape of the
underlying floor or wall bedrock beneath, but tends to become
rounded as it gets thicker. Flowstone masses are often fluted with
draperies at their lower end, such as the area above the caver's
head. Impurities in the calcite may give a variety of colors to
flowstone, such as the reddish areas on the right (likely due to
iron).
Flowstone forms from actively flowing water (rather than water
squeezed through cracks) in which carbon dioxide is lost and
carbonate material is deposited. This is the basic mechanism
forming stalagmites as well, and the two often form
together. |
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Baldacchino canopies
Baldacchino canopies form where the surface of a cave pool has
receded beneath a growing stalagmite or flowstone mound. Prior to
lowering of the pool, pool spar is deposited on the underside of
the flowstone. Under these conditions, pool spar tends to grow most
rapidly close to the water surface, where diffusion of the incoming
supersaturated solution within the pool is least and diffusion of
carbon dioxide into the overlying air is greatest. The result is an
overhanging belly of calcite, which has its widest girth at the
pool surface. Such a belly can be seen at left in the upper photo,
where the flanking pool of blue, calcite-rich water has receded,
but only after the overlying stalagmite has ceased growing.
The
classic "canopy", however, is formed when seep water calcite
envelopes the overhung spar following a drop in pool level.
Rivulets of water that cascade along the overhanging surface then
deposit fluted draperies. In the lower photo, we see that these
draperies formed strictly below the level an old, stable pool
surface, which is marked by a rim of shelfstone to the right of the
canopy. | |
Draperies
Draperies are deposited from calcite-rich solutions flowing along
an overhung surface. Surface tension allows these solutions to
cling to a wall or sloping ceiling as they stream slowly downward.
Loss of carbon dioxide to the cave atmosphere then causes the
solutions to become supersaturated with respect to calcite, which
is deposited in a thin trail. Initial calcite trails, hanging
slightly lower than the surrounding surface, become preferential
routes for continued flow, and so develop into slender, delicate
sheets.
Ripples and folds in cave draperies, which reflect the erratic path
of pioneer flow routes, are reminiscent of 'drapes' of supple
cloth, and the likeness provided an obvious name for these
formations. Another fitting name, however, is sometimes given to
the multi-colored, translucent draperies seen in the photo below.
The dark and light bands, generally a product of the waxing and
waning supply of organic acids to the seep solution, remind many
cavers of "bacon". |
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Coralloids
Coralloids are one of the most common form of cave formation, and
can take a a variety of forms. The term encompasses all manner of
knobby, globular, button-like, coral-like, or botryoidal type
formations that can form either above or below water. One of the
most common resembles popcorn and is often given that name, so we
have a whole separate description devoted to
it | |
Popcorn
Popcorn is a common name for a very common type of coralloid. It
can be recognized by its gregarious nature and knob-like shape, the
latter of which it owes to its concentric layering of
microcrystalline calcite. Though one of the most common of all cave
formations, the origin of popcorn has been one of the more
difficult to explain. Perhaps both the abundance and ambiguity of
cave popcorn arise because it forms under so many conditions.
Popcorn forms either in air (subaerially) or within still cave
pools (subaqueously). In air, it is deposited from thin, evenly
distributed solution films, but these films may be products of
direct seepage, surface flow, drip water splash, capillary action,
or condensation. Seepage, however, is probably the most common
solution supply mechanism. Moisture within the underlying bedrock
or cave calcite is wicked through the relatively porous matrix of a
popcorn knob to its outer surface, where it feeds an array of
growing crystal faces. The validity of this mechanism has been
shown by laboratory experiments in which popcorn knobs have
deposited precipitates from various solutions in which their bases
are submerged. Unlike many forms of cave calcite, which grow
chiefly due to the loss of carbon dioxide from their depositing
solution, subaerial popcorn is largely the product of evaporation.
As such, popcorn is often an excellent indicator of the subtle air
currents that waft through even the deepest reaches of many caves.
Evaporation will be fastest on surfaces that face 'upwind', and the
observant caver comes to read popcorn's bushy growth on one side of
a stalagmite not unlike the way a backpacker reads moss on one side
of a tree trunk. Even more important to the cave explorer is the
fact that where there is wind, there must be cave! Popcorn may not
make tight crawling leads very comfortable, but it does make them
more encouraging! |
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How can you
log the cache?
To log this
Earthcache as a find, you have to answer correctly this questions
and send them to the owners before you log it:
- Inside the cave
you’ll see the “Nude Room”. How do you classify this speleothems.
Why?
- In your opinion,
what are the two major threat of Aracena Cave. Why?
- Inside the cave,
you’ll find something that it’s not supposed to be there. How that
appears? Is it a good sign,
why?
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ano internacional do planeta terra
international year of planet earth |
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