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| Because they’re there! Sir Edmund Hillary—first to climb Mt. Everest—said he did it “Because it’s there.” One might think that all caves have already been documented, but that would be wrong, wrong, WRONG. Seven decades of the NSS, 50 years of the MSS, and a generation of organized caving in southwestern Missouri, and the job still isn’t done? Yep. Fact is, new caves are being found faster than they are being documented. With over 6,000 caves recorded in Missouri, less than half have been mapped and even fewer have detailed reports in the files! And no matter how much documentation there is, more is ALWAYS needed, so the opportunities for Joe and Jill Caver to make real contributions to the science of speleology are virtually unlimited. |
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| After all, documentation is really about saving caves and what’s in them. Who is going to care about a hole in the ground if no one has ever cared enough to write something—anything—about it? Fact is, the majority of landowners probably have never been in caves that they own, so it’s important to them to know that someone besides themselves think enough about their cave(s) to document them. | |||
| Can documentation really SAVE caves? You bet! Riverbluff Cave was discovered during road construction, and likely would have been blasted shut had cavers not gone inside, and said, “Hey, wait a minute, this is an amazing place, and we need to save it!” Of course, caves as significant as Riverbluff are exceedingly rare, but we go caving because we love the thrill of discovery, of maybe pushing that grim, wet lead into something really incredible, a place never seen before. | |||
| Unfortunately, most of the places we’ll visit are just ordinary, already seen by who knows how many people. Nevertheless, they’ll be interesting, and if they’re worth our time to visit, they are worth spending a little more time to document. Documentation can save caves in many ways. The presence of known, documented caves has saved many of them from destruction by road building, sewage lagoon and landfill siting, and just plain “development.” What’s more, if endangered species are found in caves, they will qualify for protection under federal law. | |||
| Yes, documentation is not just a chore one has to do, but A LABOR OF LOVE FOR THE CAVES. | |||
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DOCUMENTATION is a scary word. People look at it and say, “Oh, I can’t do that—I’m not a scientist!” But the good news is, you don’t have to be a scientist—or engineer, or technical person of any kind. You just have to be willing to visit a cave and write down what you see. Now what could be so hard about that? |
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START WITH THE LOCATION: Say you’ve found a new cave, and you want to tell where it is. If you have a GPS unit (and know how to use it) you’re home free. Or maybe you have a topographic map and know how to mark the exact spot where the cave entrance is, and then use one of the location systems to describe it—latitude/longitude, section, township and range, or UTM. But these systems can be tricky, so if you’re not comfortable using them, just tell where the cave is by the “pirate” system: “Follow the gravel road to a sharp curve, climb the red gate, and walk downhill toward a big oak tree…” You get the idea; just tell as clearly as you can, how to find the cave. |
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You can be as brief or as verbose as you like, depending on your personality and training. It’s important to remember that you are who you are, not someone you might like to be, so your cave documentation will naturally be different from others who may visit and write about the same cave. Different, but just as important! Very few cavers are like the legendary Lang Brod, who wrote long, elegant, and highly detailed cave reports. Yet even his reports are not the final words about a cave; it will change over time, and other people will see things that Lang missed. So don’t be intimidated—describe a cave as YOU see it, and I guarantee that your work will be appreciated! |
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So DOCUMENTATION, in a real sense, becomes a part of your immortality. If you do a decent job of documenting a cave, years and years from now someone will read what you wrote and view what you drew, and think, “I wish I had known __________________ (insert your name); he/she must have been a great caver!” |
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