Greetings.
This thread is aimed at geologists, explorers; cavers; divers, hydrologists, and the merely curious amongst us.
I've had a near obsession with first-magnitude springs for decades. There is something fundamentally alluring about huge gushings of fresh water. Springs are one of the few, obvious 'gifts' to mankind. So many ancient civilizations, and more modern ones as well, have 'sprung up near fresh water springs.
The largest of these; the first magnitude springs, are quite rare, and are defined by output of more than 100 cu.ft/second. I have explored at least 30 of them; mostly in the U.S., but a few in the Mexican Yucatan.
In the U.S., Northern Florida has the most; the south east Missouri Ozarks has a bunch; the rest are mostly in Idaho. The ones in the Ozarks have provided the extra gift of emerging with enough force to power mills to cut wood and grind grain.
In an attempt to locate the oldest, continually flowing source of fresh water on our planet, I've failed to find a consensus of opinion. perhaps we don't know, or don't find the matter significantly relevant. Or, I've missed something obvious.
I have a hypothesis for what i suspect may be the largest cave system on the planet, yet it is unexplored.
Before continuing, do we have any cavers or cave divers on these forums?
This thread is aimed at geologists, explorers; cavers; divers, hydrologists, and the merely curious amongst us.
I've had a near obsession with first-magnitude springs for decades. There is something fundamentally alluring about huge gushings of fresh water. Springs are one of the few, obvious 'gifts' to mankind. So many ancient civilizations, and more modern ones as well, have 'sprung up near fresh water springs.
The largest of these; the first magnitude springs, are quite rare, and are defined by output of more than 100 cu.ft/second. I have explored at least 30 of them; mostly in the U.S., but a few in the Mexican Yucatan.
In the U.S., Northern Florida has the most; the south east Missouri Ozarks has a bunch; the rest are mostly in Idaho. The ones in the Ozarks have provided the extra gift of emerging with enough force to power mills to cut wood and grind grain.
In an attempt to locate the oldest, continually flowing source of fresh water on our planet, I've failed to find a consensus of opinion. perhaps we don't know, or don't find the matter significantly relevant. Or, I've missed something obvious.
I have a hypothesis for what i suspect may be the largest cave system on the planet, yet it is unexplored.
Before continuing, do we have any cavers or cave divers on these forums?