Sistema Huautla

Sistema Huautla
LocationSierra Mazateca, Oaxaca, Mexico
Coordinates18°07′16″N 96°48′00″W / 18.121214°N 96.800008°W / 18.121214; -96.800008
Depth1,560 metres (5,120 ft) deep.
Length100,242 metres (62.287 mi) total length.

Sistema Huautla is a cave system in the Sierra Mazateca mountains of the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. As of April 2021 it is the deepest cave system in the Western Hemisphere, 1,560 metres (5,120 ft) from top to bottom, with over 55 miles of mapped passageways. It is the tenth deepest cave in the world. It is also the 26th longest cave system with over 100 km length.

Location

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Sistema Huautla is a cave system in the Sierra Mazateca mountains in the Teotitlán District of the Cañada region in the southern Mexico state of Oaxaca. It is below the municipalities of Huautla de Jimenez, Huautepec and Mazatlan Villa de Flores.[1]: 713  As of April 2021 it was 100.2 kilometres (62.3 mi) long (end to end) with 25 distinct entrances and a depth measurement of 1,560 metres (5,120 ft) from its highest known entrance to its lowest reached point. System Huautla is the deepest cave in the Western Hemisphere and the tenth deepest cave in the world; it is listed as the twenty-eighth longest at about 55.3 miles surveyed passage compared to the Mammoth Cave complex at 420+ miles.[2]

History

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Waterfall in Sistema Huautla.

In 1965 cavers from Austin, Texas exploring the Sierra Mazateca mountains found several large caves; During the 1960s North American cavers subsequently gathered survey data and generated maps which showed their proximity to each other. Over time the Sótano de San Agustin was found to be connected to La Grieta and Nita Nanta, and eight more cave entrances were discovered. It became clear that they belonged to one cave system, Sistema Huautla.[3] As of 2015 it is known to have 20 entrances.

In an expedition in 1977, the deepest point of the cave system was discovered after staging multiple underground camps, a flooded tunnel at 1325 meters, known as the San Agustín sump. Subsequent scuba diving expeditions in 1979 and 1981 proved logistically insufficient to transport equipment to explore it further. In 1994, during a 135-day expedition of 44 people, mostly from the UK and the US, 11 were cave diving using closed cycle life support systems called rebreathers. They explored three parts of the sump system and discovered an upstream tunnel leading to the only known exit for the water that enters the Huautla caves, the spring of Peña Colorada.[4] During a two-month expedition in 2013 involving 40 team members from the UK, USA, Canada, Poland and Mexico, cavers entered through Sótano de San Agustin; it took divers three weeks to reach "what looked like a calm, rock-enclosed lake about 100 feet wide", the San Agustín sump.[3] One of them established a new record depth when stopping at 1545 meters. The new survey data gave the cave a total length of 64.2 kilometers. A navigable connection between where water enters Sistema Huautla and where it exits at Peña Colorada has yet to be found.[5]

Since then consecutive annual expeditions have been launched as part of the Proyecto Espeleológico Sistema Huautla (PESH). In 2018, an international team of 24 cavers could not find a connection of the nearby Cueva de La Peña Colorada Sump VII with Sistema Huautla during their two-month long expedition.[6]

In 2022, the development of 100 kilometers is reached.[7][8]

Geology

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Sistema Huautla is a karst groundwater basin.[1] In 1994, dye tracing established Nita He and Nita Nashi as tributary caves via 1,100-meter-deep flow paths. The western hydrological boundary is the Huautla Santa Rosa Fault, in the East it is the Agua de Cerro Fault and in the North the Plan de Escoba Fault.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b C. William Steele; James H. Smith Jr. (2012). "Sistema Huautla, Mexico". In William B. White; David C. Culver (eds.). Encyclopedia of Caves. Academic Press. pp. 712–718. ISBN 9780123838322.
  2. ^ Article title[usurped] The NSS Geo2 Long & Deep Caves Web Site, April 2021
  3. ^ a b David Browne. "Reaching a New Low in the Western Hemisphere's Deepest Cave". Men's Journal. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  4. ^ Bill Stone (n.d.). "1994 San Agustín Expedition". U.S. Deep Caving Team, Inc. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  5. ^ "Sistema Huautla Becomes Deepest Cave in the Western Hemisphere". Caving News. 3 April 2013. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  6. ^ Gourlay, Graeme (2018). "Cave divers trapped for 69 hours". Dive Magazine.
  7. ^ "The PESH Mission". 30 September 2024.
  8. ^ Mark Minton. "Long Caves of Mexico February 2024" (PDF). Retrieved 2024-05-06.
  9. ^ James H. Smith, Jr."Hydrogeology of the Sistema Huautla karst groudwater basin." Bulletin of Association for Mexican Cave Studies (AMCS) n°9, 2002, 154 pages.

Further reading

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  • Sides, A. G., and Sides, H., "Journey Toward the Center of the Earth," The Washington Post Magazine, August 28, 1994, pp. 14–18, 25-27,
  • Robert Forrest Burgess. The Cave Divers. Chapter 11 Deepest Quest Aqua Quest Publications, Inc., 1999, 351 pages, ISBN, 1881652114. p 125-153.
  • Stone, W. C., am Ende, B., and Paulsen, M., "Beyond the Deep", 2002, Grand Central Publishing, New York, NY, 368 pp, ISBN 0446527092
  • C. William Steele, Paul Steward (Editor), and Elizabeth Winkler. "Huautla: Thirty Years in One of the World's Deepest Caves" cavebooks.com/Huautla, 305 pages, ISBN 0939748703
  • Tabor, James M. Blind descent : the quest to discover the deepest place on earth. 2010 Random House. 304 pages. ISBN 0812979494
  • Jewell, Chris. 2013 "Huautla expedition, San Agustin, Mexico." National Speleological Society News 72.6 (June 2014).p 13-19.
  • Jewell, Chris. 2013 "San Agustin 2013 expédition." Bulletin of Association for Mexican Cave Studies (AMCS) n°25 (2014), 41 pages .
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