http://www.cnn.com/2005/TRAVEL/DESTINATIONS/08/26/lost.sea.ap/index.html
 
Cave tours offer science, history, humor
Friday, August 26, 2005; Posted: 12:11 p.m. EDT (16:11 GMT) 
 
 
Guests board glass-bottom boats to tour the Lost Sea.
SWEETWATER, Tennessee (AP) -- When a 13-year-old boy discovered what is now the 
world's second-largest underground lake, he had to crawl through a muddy hole 
deep inside a cave and throw balls of dirt into the dark to discern how big the 
room of water was.
 
All he heard was the plop of mud into the water.
 
That was 100 years ago. The 41/2-acre pool of water he found about 300 feet 
below the cave entrance is now known as the Lost Sea, a curiosity that averages 
150,000 visitors a year.
 
Ben Sands, the boy discoverer, returned about 60 years afterward and rode in a 
glass-bottom boat 
across it like tourists can today.
 
The Lost Sea has mostly been unchanged since 1965 when a group of private 
owners opened it as a tourist attraction. Before that it served all sorts of 
purposes -- refrigerator, moonshine operation, meeting room, tavern, mushroom 
farm and saltpeter mine.
 
The attraction, located off Interstate 75 about 40 miles south of Knoxville, is 
what's known as a show cave, meaning it's open to the public for admission and 
generally has lighting and handrails. One of the most famous is Carlsbad 
Caverns in New Mexico, and the biggest is Mammoth Cave National Park in 
Kentucky.
 
The Lost Sea is just one of at least 20 show caves in the southern Appalachians 
from Alabama to West Virginia.
 
"All caves are uniquely individual just as we all have unique fingerprints and 
facial features. They all have their own personalities and geologic stories," 
said Gary Berdeaux, a regional director of the National Caves Association based 
in Park City, Kentucky.
 
The Lost Sea had to drop its claim as the world's biggest underground lake when 
a larger one was found in Africa.
Scientific significance
There is more to the Lost Sea than the public can see. Divers have mapped at 
least 9 more acres in underwater chambers leading away from the lake, but no 
one has found the end even with sonar. There are no current plans to continue 
researching.
 
Seeing the lake is just part of a trip to the Lost Sea. A tour meandering 
through the cave and eventually reaching the lake for a boat ride lasts a 
little over one hour.
 
Visitors walk through the lighted cave on a slightly sloping path while a guide 
discusses the cave's hodgepodge of history and throws in a few jokes and 
made-up stories to keep visitors on their toes.
 
It has scientific significance as a U.S. Registered Natural Landmark and 
contains rare spiky crystal formations called anthodites, also known as cave 
flowers.
 
The American Museum of Natural History in New York displays some 
20,000-year-old bones and plaster molds of tracks left by an ancient jaguar 
that were discovered in the cave in 1939.
 
The attraction is part of a system of caves called Craighead Caverns, named for 
an American Indian chief who lived in the early 1800s.
 
A cave owner had lighting installed in the 1920s and gave what one guide 
described as nickel tours. They didn't last long during the Depression because 
"no one wanted to pay to see dirt and lights," guide Joseph Crofts said as 
visitors laughed during a recent tour.
 
Now there are lights cleverly placed to accentuate the formations.
 
Unlike Sands' first look at the lake in the dark in 1905, there are underwater 
lights along the edges of the 
water, casting an eerie glow onto the rock walls and around the rainbow trout 
in the water. The lake's depth ranges from 30 feet to 75 feet.
 
The fish were brought in and tagged years ago with the hopes they would help 
determine how far the water goes. It didn't work, and now the fish are just 
another part of the attraction.
 
Several people have owned the cave through the years, and most of the early 
history had nothing to do with the lake. For instance, one owner built a dance 
floor in a chamber and created the Cavern Tavern in 1947. But once inside the 
cool air of the cave -- it remains a constant 58 degrees -- people couldn't 
tell they were getting drunk until they started to climb out of the cave and 
ended up stumbling or passing out.
 
There are few hazards in the cave now with bright yellow metal around the 
tunnel entrance and only a few rocks hanging low over the path. All of the bats 
are gone, but they were plentiful during the Civil War when soldiers collected 
bat guano to get potassium nitrate, or saltpeter, to make gunpowder.
"So basically the Civil War was fought with bat poop," the guide deadpanned.
 
During one part of the tour, visitors experience total darkness when the guide 
turns off the lights.
With everyone standing in pitch black, where you can't see the person standing 
next to you, the guide announces, "We'll be leaving the same way we came in," 
he said, his voice trailing off down the path.
 
IF YOU GO ...
Lost Sea: 140 Lost Sea Road, Sweetwater, Tennessee; http://www.thelostsea.com 
or (423) 337-6616. Located off Interstate 75 between Chattanooga and Knoxville. 
Take Exit 60 on State Highway 68 and follow the signs for six miles east. Open 
9 a.m. to dusk daily; closed Christmas. Adults: $12.95; children ages 6-12, 
$5.95; children under 6, free. 
 
 
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not 
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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