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The Arabika Massif has four of the world's deepest caves: Krubera-Voronja, Veryovkina, Sarma, and Snezhnaja. Water starts to flow through the passages of the cave. Photo: Petr Lyubimov ...
The Arabika massif region in Abkhazia, where this cave is found, is biogeographically a very interesting area. Altitudes fluctuate between 1,900 and 2,500 metres and the cave is composed of lower ...
The Arabika Massif is one of the largest high-mountain limestone karst massifs (the main mass of an exposed structure) in the Western Caucasus, which is an area of southern Russia.
The Arabika massif region in Abkhazia, where this cave is found, is biogeographically a very interesting area. Altitudes fluctuate between 1,900 and 2,500 metres and the cave is composed of lower ...
At 2,197 meters (7,208 feet) the Krubera cave is the deepest on Earth. Located in the Arabika Massif, of the Western Caucasus in Abkhazia, Georgia, it extends for 13.432 kilometers (8,346 miles ...
They are found in the French and Austrian Alps, for example, or in southern Mexico, some regions in Spain, in Turkey -- and, of course, in northwest Georgia. The Arabika Massif in Abkhazia is riddled.
A Descent into the Unknown Located in the Arabika Massif of the Western Caucasus, Veryovkina Cave was first discovered in 1968, but its full depth remained unknown for decades. Only after nearly ...
It took 50 years and 30 expeditions for Russian cavers to reach its record depth in 2018 - but they think there is more to be discovered. Veryovkina is buried in the Arabika Massif in Abkhazia - a ...
An 11-person team of Ukrainian cavers were wading through the snow on the way down from the Arabika massif in the western Caucasus on a January night. They had just descended the Krubera Cave to a ...
The Arabika Massif has four of the world's deepest caves: Krubera-Voronja, Veryovkina, Sarma, and Snezhnaja. It wasn't until 2018 that the cave really started to make waves in the spelunking ...