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Krubera Cave is a special and terrifying cave, one that is so deep and expansive, we still haven’t reached the bottom. Cave exploring doesn’t usually go hand-in-hand with claustrophobia, ...
The Big Cascade, the largest pit in Krubera Cave, plunges 499 feet (152 meters), but spans less than a tenth of the distance to the cave's unknown bottom.
Ruhi Çenet, a Turkish YouTuber, successfully completed an eight-day expedition into Krubera Cave, the world's deepest cave. He and his team discovered a potentially new fish species, confirming ...
For that, you must travel to the Republic of Georgia, where the Krubera Cave plunges at least 7,208 feet below the surface — that’s nearly one and a half miles.
The Krubera cave is the deepest cave on Earth and is located in the Arabika Massif of the Gagrinsky Range in Abkhazia. It is the only cave on Earth deeper than 6,561ft (2,000metres).
At 2,197 meters (7,208 feet) the Krubera cave is the deepest on Earth. Located in the Arabika Massif, of the Western Caucasus in Abkhazia, Georgia, it extends for 13.432 kilometers (8,346 miles ...
The Krubera Cave at 6,500 feet (1,980 meters) where scientists discovered the deepest land animal, a springtail (Plutomurus ortobalaganensis). (Image credit: Denis Provalov) ...
Bragging rights have bounced from cave to cave, but since 2004 the record has been 2191 metres, held by the Krubera Cave in the western Caucasus mountains, which is also home to the world’s ...
The unusual habitat of the Krubera cave in the Western Caucasus remains a mystery. Researchers from two Spanish universities have discovered a new species of beetle in the depths of this cave.