I like Senator Cornyn but suspect that this article was written by one of his 
aids, probably from the DC area, who obtained this partially correct 
information from the internet or some other reference material. Hey, at least 
they tried and basically endorsed Texas and caving.
Fritz

________________________________
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 30, 2008 2:21 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Texascavers] An essay on Texas caves by Senator Cornyn :

Underground Texas
By U.S. Sen. John Cornyn
[http://woodlandsonline.com/images/newsimage/CornynTexasTimes1.jpg]


Texas Times

>From the High Plains to the Big Bend, the Hill Country to the Piney Woods and 
>places in between, Texas's natural beauty has always been part of its broad 
>appeal. But Texas also has a less familiar attraction: some 3,000 caves that 
>make up a vast expanse of underground wonder.

Texas has more caves than any other state. For generations they have provided 
utility, historic fascination and scientific insight into life below and above 
the surface. Underground Texas yields information for scientists and students 
in biology, geology, paleontology, anthropology, archaeology and speleology-the 
study of caves.

"Because things may be preserved in a cave that would be destroyed almost 
anywhere else, caves add greatly to our knowledge of the past," a geologist 
writes in Geo-Texas. More than 1,200 animal species have been found in Texas 
caves.

Several caves are National Natural Landmarks, but many are on private land. I 
co-sponsored the Endangered Species Recovery Act of 2007 to provide tax 
incentives to private landowners who voluntarily protect habitat of endangered 
or threatened species. This approach respects property rights of Texas 
landowners.

Texas has both "wild caves" and "show caves." Wild caves exist in their natural 
state, with no lighting or public paths. Honey Creek Cave is the longest cave 
in Texas, stretching more than 20 miles underneath Comal and Kendall counties.

Exploration of a wild cave may involve crawling through water, mud, insects and 
other distractions, or descending into total darkness on a rope. It has been 
compared to mountain climbing, "only backwards."

The state's seven show caves provide easier access, and welcome thousands of 
visitors every year. Most are in the Texas Hill Country, with several between 
Austin and San Antonio. The westernmost show cave is the Caverns of Sonora, 
about 170 miles northwest of San Antonio.

Show caves often feature translucent, icicle-shaped stalactites, stalagmites, 
crystalline walls and mirror-like pools. The remarkable formations in caves 
result from the continual dripping of mineral-rich water over millions of 
years, and the flow of underground streams.

Caves figured prominently in Texas history. Analysis of arrow points and other 
artifacts indicate some Native Americans lived in Texas caves, beginning 
thousands of years ago.

Comanche Indians once used Longhorn Cavern, near Burnet, for shelter. The 
cavern went on to become a gunpowder factory for the Confederacy and later a 
nightclub during the Roaring Twenties. In an ironic conversion, Longhorn Cavern 
once even housed church services. The State of Texas bought Longhorn Cavern and 
opened it to the public as part of a state park in 1932.

In one tale, Texas Rangers followed Comanches into Longhorn Cavern in search of 
a kidnapped young woman. The Geologic Story of Longhorn Cavern recounts the 
story: "There by the dancing firelight they saw Miss King against the wall with 
her hands bound behind her ... the Rangers rushed in, freed the girl, and were 
climbing out of the cavern when the Indians, seeing there were only three of 
them, attacked ... Keeping between Miss King and the Indians, the Rangers were 
able to fight their way to freedom."

Even without embellishment, Texas caves can offer a great adventure for young 
people-particularly in the summer, when they also provide an escape from summer 
heat. When temperatures above ground soar into the 90s or higher, most caves 
have constant temperatures around 70.

There is no substitute for visiting caves in person and learning more about 
life under the ground of Texas. They're a little-noticed part of what makes our 
state great.

Sen. Cornyn serves on the Armed Services, Judiciary and Budget Committees. In 
addition, he is Vice Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Ethics. He 
serves as the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee's Immigration, Border 
Security and Refugees subcommittee and the Armed Services Committee's Airland 
subcommittee. Cornyn served previously as Texas Attorney General, Texas Supreme 
Court Justice and Bexar County District Judge.

http://woodlandsonline.com/npps/story.cfm?nppage=25038


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