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Spanish magazine spotlights ‘Great Wall of Vietnam’
Spanish writer Mark Jenkin has extolled the
wonderful beauty of Son Doong (Mountain River Cave) in Quang Binh central
province.
In a reportage entitled “Vietnam Cave” published in the National Geographic
magazine in January, M. Jenkin wrote “There is a jungle inside Vietnam’s mammoth
cavern.”
M. Jenkin cited his teammate Jonathan Sims, who was a member of the first
expedition to enter the cave, as saying that his team could explore two and a
half miles of Son Doong before a 200-foot wall of muddy calcite stopped them.
They named it the Great Wall of Vietnam.
The passage to Son Doong is perhaps 300 feet wide, the ceiling nearly 800 feet
tall: room enough for an entire New York City block of 40-storey buildings, he
wrote, adding that “And the end is out of sight.”
Located in Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park recognized as a world natural
heritage site by UNESCO in 2003, the cave, 200m high and 150m wide, is believed
to be almost twice the size of the current record holder, Deer Cave in Sarawak
Malaysia.
The massive cavern currently said to be the largest-known cave on Earth was
discovered by a local man named Ho Khanh in 1991.
However, not until 2009 was it made known to the public when a group of British
scientists from the British Cave Research Association, led by Howard and Deb
Limbert, conducted a survey in Phong Nha-Ke Bang.
Source: Tuoi Tre |
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