Earth:Bakara Well Cave
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Short description: Cave in South Australia
| Bakara Well Cave | |
|---|---|
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| Location | Murray and Mallee, South Australia, Australia |
| Coordinates | [ ⚑ ] : 34°36′41″S 139°51′50″E / 34.6114°S 139.8639°E |
| Elevation | 60 metres (197 ft) |
| Discovery | 1971 |
| Geology | Limestone |
Bakara Well Cave is a limestone doline cave lying approximately 120 kilometres (75 mi) east-northeast from Adelaide in the District Council of Loxton Waikerie in the Murray and Mallee region of South Australia.[1]
The cave consists of a flat-roofed chamber of standing height with short, low tunnels branching off it.[2]
Following Wayne Goedecke’s discovery of the cave in 1971,[3] members of the Cave Exploration Group of South Australia completed surveying and mapping in 1976.[4]
In a 2024 article for Caves Australia, Karl Brandt proposed the Bakara Well Cave as the lair of Chinny-kinik, the dreaded cannibal giant from Australian Aboriginal mythology.[5]
References
- ↑ "Search result for 'Bakara Well Cave'". Government of South Australia. http://location.sa.gov.au/viewer/.
- ↑ Lewis, Ian D. (1976). South Australian Cave Reference Book. Cave Exploration Group of South Australia. p. 60.
- ↑ Annual Report 1975-1976. Adelaide: Cave Exploration Group of South Australia. 25 February 1976. p. 14. http://st1.asflib.net/JNS/SA/CEGSA/CEGSA-AnReports/CEGSA-AnRpt-1975-1976.pdf.
- ↑ Annual Report 1976-1977. Adelaide: Cave Exploration Group of South Australia. 23 February 1977. p. 9. http://st1.asflib.net/JNS/SA/CEGSA/CEGSA-AnReports/CEGSA-AnRpt-1976-1977.pdf.
- ↑ Brandt, Karl (November 2024). "In Search of the Cannibal's Cave". Caves Australia (230): 18–19. https://cavesaustralia.caves.org.au/ca/ca-230.pdf.
