Earth:Gypsum cave

From HandWiki

A gypsum cave is a natural karstic formation in gypsum.[1] Gypsum karst is very rare. It depends on deposits of gypsum or anhydrite, often also called alabaster. Chemically it is calcium sulfate, CaSO4.

Gypsum caves can be found in several places on earth, including:

  • Optymistychna Cave in Ukraine, considered the longest gypsum cave at 232 km[1]
  • Orda Cave underneath the Western Ural Mountains, with 5.1 km length, including 4.8 km underwater[2]
  • Cuevas de Sorbas in Almeria, Spain

Caves noted for large scale gypsum speleothems include:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Alexander Klimchouk, Ukraine gypsum caves and karst, Researchgate.net, January 2012
  2. Floro Mercene, The world's greatest underwater gypsum cave, Pressreader.com, 12 June 2017

Related pages

External links