China's immense Miao Room cavern is announced as the world's largest cave chamber.
The
photographer’s lights illuminate the green-hued Getu He river in the
Miao Room—considered the world’s second largest cave chamber by area.
China's immense Miao Room cavern, hidden beneath rolling
hills and reachable only by an underground stream, is the world's
biggest cave chamber, an international mapping team reported on Sunday.
A laser-mapping expedition funded by the National Geographic Society reported the new measurement at the United Kingdom's national caving conference in Leek this weekend.
Richard "Roo" Walters, a British co-leader of the 2013 international caving expedition conducted under the auspices of China's Institute of Karst Geology
in Guilin, reported that the Miao Room Chamber measures some 380.7
million cubic feet (10.78 million cubic meters) in volume.
"To me this is like discovering that K2 is larger than Everest!" said Tim Allen, an expedition co-leader, in an email. The Miao Room volume measurement exceeds Sarawak Chamber
in Malaysia, the past title-holder, by about 10 percent. But the
Malaysian cavern is still the world’s largest by surface area, with some
1.66 million square feet (154,500 square meters) of expanse.
Sizing Up a Supercave
Documented by a Chinese-European geology team in 1989,
the Miao Room Chamber resides within the immense Gebihe cave system
underneath China's Ziyun Getu He Chuandong National Park. (See: "Amazing 3-D Tour of a Chinese Supercave.")
The expedition first mapped the chamber with extensive
laser scanning surveys in 2013. To make the new size estimate, the team
reprocessed the results with experts from the U.K.'s University of
Lancaster to yield more precise measurements of the cavern.
The team also presented new laser scanning measurements of
two other large cave chambers in southern China, Titan Chamber and Hong
Meigui Chamber, as well as the Sarawak Chamber, at the meeting.
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