Shatter Cave

Coordinates: 51°13′33″N 2°29′32″W / 51.2259°N 2.4921°W / 51.2259; -2.4921
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Shatter Cave
Potholler standing by pillar in limestone cave
Pillar Chamber, Shatter Cave
LocationStoke St Michael, UK
OS gridST65734753
GeologyLimestone
RegistryMendip Cave Registry[1]

Shatter Cave is a cave in

St. Dunstan's Well Catchment Site of Special Scientific Interest.[2]

The name commemorates the damage, done by blasting in the quarry, to some of the decoration within the cave.[3]

Description

Shatter Cave has been described as being one of the finest decorated caves in Britain in terms of their sheer abundance of pure white and translucent calcite deposits.[2][4] The floor of Diesel Chamber includes some fine gours, Helicite Rift contains heligmites and a stalactite curtain, and Pillar Chamber contains a 3 metres (10 ft) high white pillar as well as one of the finest crystalline gour floors in Great Britain. Tor Chamber, Portcullis Grottoes and Pisa Passage are also highly decorated.[5]

Access

The Fairy Caves Management Committee administers the access to this cave on behalf of the quarry owners. In order to protect the calcite formations, novices are not allowed to enter Shatter Cave.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Shatter Cave". Mendip Cave Registry & Archive.
  2. ^ a b "St. Dunstan's Well Catchment" (PDF). English Nature. Retrieved 20 July 2006.
  3. .
  4. ^ Moseley, Gina (2005), A Study into the Microclimatology of Shatter Cave, southwest England with comparison to Uamh an Tartair, northwest Scotland, presented to the British Cave Research Association.
  5. ^ . – which also contains a detailed description of the cave.

External links

51°13′33″N 2°29′32″W / 51.2259°N 2.4921°W / 51.2259; -2.4921