Caves of Meghalaya
The Caves of Meghalaya comprise a large number of caves in the Jaintia, Khasi Hills and Garo Hills districts in the Indian state of Meghalaya, and are amongst the longest caves in the world. Of the ten longest and deepest caves in India, the first nine are in Meghalaya, while the tenth is in Mizoram. The longest is Krem Liat Prah in the Jaintia Hills, which is 30,957 m (101,600 ft).[1][2][3] The word "Krem" means cave in the local Khasi language.[4]
The exploration of the Caves of Meghalaya is currently undertaken for both scientific and recreational pursuits,[5]) and there are still many unexplored and partially explored caves in the state.[6] The annual caving expeditions organized by Meghalaya Adventurers Association (MAA) are known as "Caving in the Abode of the Clouds Project".[6][7] The caves, because they are located primarily in limestone formations, continue to come under threat from the limestone mining industry.[4]
History
According to the Bengal gazette, Krem Mawmluh was the first cave to be explored by a British subject, Lt. Yule, in 1844.[8] Siju Cave in Garo Hills was studied in 1922 when 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) was explored and four species of cave life forms were identified.[9] After the British Raj period extensive interest has been generated in caving as an adventure sport in the state. Since the 1990s, an exclusive organization known as the Meghalaya Adventurers Association (MAA) (located in Shillong) has been carrying out annual explorations in association with European speleologists, cavers from India, experts from other regions of the world, the Indian Army and the Indian Navy,[2][6][10] bringing to light a large number and length of caves in Meghalaya, relative to other known karst regions of the country.[10]
Numbers and size of caves
As of March 2015, 1,580 caves and cave locations have been identified in Meghalaya, of which 980 caves have been fully or partially explored, for a total length of 427 kilometres (265 mi) caves explored.[11] With an explored length of 30,957 metres (101,565 ft), Krem Liat Prah in Jaintia Hills is the longest cave in Meghalaya, as well as India, and is listed among the longest caves in the world.[3][12] Krem Liat Prah contains a huge passage called the "Aircraft Hangar."[1] Since the MAA was established in 1994, the explored caves account for only about 5% of the total underground passages in the state of Meghalaya.[13]
Conservation
Limestone mining for the cement industry is a major threat to the Caves of Meghalaya,[4] causing a major collapse of the Krem Mawmluh cave, the seventh longest cave in the state of Meghalaya. The "cave-in" stimulated public awareness of the potential threat mining places to the rich scientific, tourism and ecological heritage. Ecologists and speleologists pressured the Government of Meghalaya to take effective steps to stop limestone mining in the vicinity of the limestone caves in the state.[4] During the mid 1990s, a cement plant was planned close to the Siju Cave (called the Bat Cave), near Balphakram National Park in the Garo Hills. This project generated strong opposition from the local community, supported by international scientists, as the cave hosts many rare species of bats. After considerable public pressure was applied, the Ministry of Environment and Forests finally withheld clearance for the project.[14]
List of twenty longest caves in Meghalaya
System | Length | Location | Formation | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Krem Liat Prah | 30,957 m (101,600 ft)[3][12] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | In the Shnongrim Ridge. Huge trunk passage called the Aircraft Hangar. Longest cave in the Indian Subcontinent.[1] |
|
21,530 m (70,640 ft)[3] | Lumshnong village, Jaintia Hills | Limestone | 24 entrances, both horizontal and vertical. Needs to swim to enter the caves[1] |
|
21,250 m (69,720 ft)[15] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | Near Sammasi village. many side passages and very impressive.[3] |
|
18,181 m (59,650 ft)[3] | Chiehruphi village, on NH 44, Jaintia Hills | Limestone | Dendritic pattern of stream cave passage. Many entrances. "Titanic Hall" chamber with coloured formations in orange, red, black, grey, blue, green and white.[1] |
|
12,434 m (40,790 ft)[5] | From village Khaddum to Sielkan, Jaintia Hills | Limestone | A river cave. 50 natural dams or gours, 6–8 metres (20–26 ft) high. Large colony of bats.[1] |
|
8,862 m (29,070 ft)[1] | Tangnub village, Jaintia Hills | Limestone | Also known as Very large vertical entrance shaft of 97 metres (318 ft) depth leads to fine stream passage and plethora of high fossil passages.[1] |
Krem Tyngheng | 8,671 m (28,450 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
|
7,194 m (23,600 ft)[5] | Khasi Hills | Limestone | Filled with water needs wading, ceiling is 2.5 feet (0.76 m), formations of stalactite, stalagmite, and rock fossils. Also large number of bats.[16] A speleothem in Mawmluh cave indicates a dramatic worldwide climate event around 2250 BC, and has been selected by the International Commission on Stratigraphy as the boundary stratotype of the Meghalayan stage/age of the late Holocene.[17] |
|
6,641 m (21,790 ft)[5] | Nongjri village, Khasi Hills | Limestone | Attraction is from a small entrance leads to 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) passage called "Way to Heaven," and further to a Mughal Room (more than 25 metres (82 ft) wide, 25 metres (82 ft) high, and 75 metres (246 ft) long).[1] |
Krem Rongdangngai Mondil Kol | 5,831 m (19,130 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
|
5,715 m (18,750 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
Tetengkil Balwakol | 5,681 m (18,640 ft)[5] | Nengkhong village, Garo Hills | Limestone | two circular entrances of 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) dia expanding to walking height passages with dendric river flow.[1] |
Krem Umsynrang | 5,612 m (18,410 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
|
4,772 m (15,660 ft)[5] | Siju village, Garo Hills | Limestone | It is in the vertical side of the Simsang River.[18] Also known as "bat cave". Has attractive stalagmites and stalactites. It has a Di's chamber.[1] The cave has been extensively researched and is well known.[19] |
Krem Risang | 4,565 m (14,980 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
Krem Synrang Ngap | 4,172 m (13,690 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | Initial reaches consist of calcite bosses to reach a major junction leading to an inlet tunnel converging to a smaller section of passage beyond which are potholed galleries with cave pearl-like sandstone pebbles in the floor[20] |
Krem Synrang Labbit | 3,933 m (12,900 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
Krem Wah Ryngo – Khongrang | 3,416 m (11,210 ft)[5] | Jaintia Hills | Limestone | |
Krem Iawe | 3,398 m (11,150 ft)[5] | Shnongrim-Tangnub Ridge, Jaintia Hills | Limestone | Daylight lit very wide pothole entrance. A number of attractive fossil passages.[1] |
Krem Mawshun | 3,339 m (10,950 ft)[5] | Near church Lelad, Khasi Hills | Limestone | Dendritic master river cave. Has many decorated high level passages.[1] |
See also
References
- "Caves". Tourism Department, Government of Meghalaya.
- Kaur, Preetinder (9 April 2014). "Subject Matter: Speleology:Explorers' delight". The Tribune India.
- Daly 2013, p. 123.
- "Cave-in proves ecologists right- Limestone mining causes part of India's seventh longest cave to collapse". The Telegraph India. 28 April 2008.
- "Caves in Meghalaya (As on February 2006)". Meghalaya Daily. February 2006.
- "What is Caving". Adventure & Nature Network Pvt. Ltd. Archived from the original on 4 July 2015.
- "Exploration 2000: Caving in the Abode of the Clouds Project". Indian caving Organization.
- "The biodiversity of Krem Mawkhyrdop of Meghalaya, India, on the verge of extinction" (pdf).
- Daly 2013, p. 40.
- "Scuttle Flies (Diptera: Phoridae) from Caves in Meghalaya, India" (pdf). Journal of Cave and Karst Studies.
- "2015 Meghalaya Caving Expedition Continues to Find New Caves". cavingnews.com. 30 March 2015.
- "Worlds Longest Caves". caverbob.com. 4 June 2015.
- "Longest/Deepest Limestone Caves of Indian Subcontinent" (pdf). Ambient Science. 2014.
- Bengt G. Karlsson (15 May 2011). Unruly Hills: A Political Ecology of India's Northeast. Berghahn Books. pp. 182–. ISBN 978-0-85745-105-7.
- Daly 2013, p. 71.
- "Caving for beginners – Meghalaya". The Outdoor Journal. 20 August 2013.
- Formal subdivision of the Holocene Series/Epoch
- Kamal Ramprit Dikshit; Jutta K Dikshit (21 October 2013). North-East India: Land, People and Economy. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 124–. ISBN 978-94-007-7055-3.
- Brian D. Kharpran Daly (January 2013). Caves for the Uninitiated. Strategic Book Publishing. pp. 40–. ISBN 978-1-61897-470-9.
- "Meghalaya". Bristol Exploration Club.
Bibliography
- Daly, Brian D. Kharpran (January 2013). Caves for the Uninitiated. Strategic Book Publishing. ISBN 978-1-61897-470-9.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)