Pridhamsleigh Cavern | |
---|---|
Location | Ashburton, Devon, UK |
Coordinates | 50°29′51″N 3°45′57″W / 50.4975215°N 3.76587°W |
Depth | 55 metres (180 ft) |
Length | 1,100 metres (3,600 ft) |
Geology | Limestone |
Access | Open |
Pridhamsleigh Cavern is a cave on the outskirts of Ashburton, Devon, England. It is approximately 1.1 kilometres in length with a total depth of just over 50 metres including Prid II.
Pridhamsleigh is a good site for novice cavers, making it quite muddy throughout. It has a large variety of passages which lends itself to longer explorations. Due to the nature of the connecting and unconnecting overlapping phreatic passages in the cave, surveys (maps) of the cave are hard to interpret.
The cave contains 'Bishops Chamber', a wide chamber close to the entrance from where most routes lead, and 'The Lake'. This elongated pool is over 100 feet deep. In the early 1970s divers with SCUBA gear discovered, at a depth of about 80 feet, a window into second partially air-filled chamber, with no passages leading off it.[1] This chamber is the biggest in Devon and is named Gerry's Chamber after its discoverer, the late Gerry Pritchard.
An accurate, hand-drawn, plan of the cave is held in the reference section of Plymouth Library. Although not requiring great skill to explore, the cave is quite complex, there being three distinct routes from 'Bishop's Chamber' to the lake. First-timers should note their route carefully as it is easy to get disorientated.
The cave is the type locality for the 3mm-long, blind white cave shrimp endemic to the south-west of England, Niphargus glenniei (Spooner, 1952).[2]
References
- ↑ "Diving an Azure Lake". Retrieved 17 October 2015.
- ↑ "Species | Hypogean Crustacea Recording Scheme". hcrs.freshwaterlife.org. Archived from the original on 31 March 2013.