Outline of caves

Overview of and topical guide to caves From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following outline provides an overview of and topical guide to natural caves. The word "cave" is loosely defined, but most commonly refers to a natural opening large enough to be entered by a human.[1] These landforms are common around the world, and have even been detected on the Moon and Mars. This outline's scope is limited to these natural formations, specifically excluding the rock-cut features which are often referred to as caves in Eastern Asia.

People in flooded backlit against the sky at the entrance
Tourists in a sea cave in the Galápagos Islands

Types of cave

Worldwide, lava tubes, karst caves, and rock shelters are the most common varieties of cave. Karst caves typically form through dissolution of limestone by carbonic acid, but some caves, such as Lechuguilla, have instead been formed from the bottom up via sulfuric acid released from oil reservoirs.[2] Wherever exposed limestone is present these karst caves are likely to form. Lava tubes are common in volcanic areas, and form during effusive volcanic eruptions, serving as a conduit for lava to flow through. Both types can reach great lengths. Kazumra Cave, the longest known lava tube, has nearly 41 miles or 66 kilometers of mapped passage, and the longest known cave, Mammoth Cave, has over 426 miles of mapped passage as of 2024.[3][4][5] Many rock shelters are important scientific and archeological sites. As sheltered areas, they often served as temporary and more permanent homes for early humans and other members of the Homo genus, many of whom left behind both artifacts and remains.[6]

Many other types of caves exist, but are significantly less prevalent and require rarer environments to form.[7][8]

Caves by speleogenesis

Large cave room with many stalactites, stalagmites, and horizontal spines of rock
Karst cave in Brazil

Caves by contents

Cave geology

Caves are commonly linked to karstic or volcanic environments, and as such, much of their geology is linked to these geologic contexts. Subterranean features and surface features are both highly dependent on geology. Karst caves tend to have water-based features, like waterfalls and rivers, while lava tubes contain their own set of features, many of which resemble igneous versions of karstic counterparts. Some are shared, like moonmilk and other calcite-based speleothems.[28][29]

Huge open-air cave partially filled with water
Cenote Zaci, in Yucatan

Surface features

Karst surface features

Large hole in the ground revealing an underground tunnel carrying a river of lava
View into a forming lava tube

Volcanic surface features

  • Lava field – large and flat area covered in lava, common site of lava tubes.[37]

Other surface features

Subterranean features

Karst

Volcanic

Cave formations

Cave formations can take on two major forms, speleothems and speleogens. Speleothems are deposits of minerals that form after the initial cave passage is formed, and are often composed of calcite or other types of calcium carbonate.[46] Speleogens are exposed structures that have been eroded out of the rock, or patterns cut into the rock by the formation of the cave.[47]

Speleothems

refer to caption
Cave labeled with the six most common types of speleothems: flowstone, columns, drapery, stalagmites, stalactites and straws

Speleogens

Human use of caves

The archeological record shows that humans have used caves for various purposes for hundreds of thousands of years. They have served as homes, refuges, and religious sites for many cultures across the world.[56] Because of this, they have had tremendous impacts on the understanding of humanity's past.[56] Today, caves are one of the few incompletely explored parts of the Earth, and offer unique challenges to both cavers and speleologists.[57]

Non-caving uses

Caves have been used as religious sites, and often hold spiritual significance.[58] While this makes up a significant amount of non-caving use, show caves are also popular.

Many painted hand imprints on a rock face in a cave, overlapping
Hands at the Cuevas de las Manos upon Río Pinturas, near the town of Perito Moreno in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina.

Caving, also known as spelunking or potholing, is the recreational pastime of exploring wild cave systems. It is distinguished from speleology by lack of scientific intent, with a greater emphasis being placed on sightseeing and enjoyment.[64]

Caving

Notable cavers

Old drawn portrait of a Black man, wearing a suit, with a mustache
Stephen Bishop

This is an incomplete list of well known cavers, both historical and modern.

Caving incidents

Although caving is a fairly safe activity compared to other activities that are sometimes classified as "extreme sports", accidents do occur.[89] These tend to be related to flooding, hypothermia, rock falls, falls, single rope technique accidents, or some combination of these.[90] This is an incomplete collection of high-profile caving incidents.

Speleology

Speleology is the scientific study of caves and their formation.[64]

Two olms, pinkish swimming creatures resembling eels with legs and triangle-shaped heads and no eyes.
Two olms (Proteus anguinus), in Postojna Cave, Slovenia.

Notable caves and cave rooms

These caves are the longest, biggest, and deepest known as of 2025.

Caves

Cave rooms

  • Miao Room – world's largest known room by volume, at 10,780,000 cubic meters.[106]
  • Sarawak Chamber – largest known room by surface area, at 154,500 square meters.[107]

Media related to caves and caving.

References

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