diff --git a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
index bc179f2ae..9284dfcb5 100644
--- a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
+++ b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
@@ -29,8 +29,8 @@
 28,"2/t/S +",,,,"noinfo/smkridge/28.htm",,,"Augsteckh&ouml;hle",,,"2b","LVHK Wien, 1974 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1630m",,,"Next to St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) just beyond <a href=""../../egglgrub/index.htm"">Egglgrube</a> and the branch path to <a href=""../../kratzer/index.htm"">the Kratzer valley</a>. ie. we pass it on the way to <a href=""../../smkridge/41.htm"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>. It is marked by a red-painted omega in the path, just where the junction path leading to The Nipple and the German bivouac leaves the main path, at which point there is also a laser-rangefound <a href=""../../handbook/survey/lasers.htm"">fixed point</a>.",,,,
 29,"1/S x",,,,"noinfo/br-alm/29.htm",,,"Schwarzmoosloch",,,3,"Schauberger, 1921 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1560m",,,"NE of huts in Br&auml;uning Alm ",,,,
 30,"1/S x",,,,"noinfo/br-alm/30.htm",,,"Grundloses Loch",,,3,"LVHK Ober&ouml;sterreich, 1966 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1570m",,,"Next to path towards Br&auml;uning Alm from Egglgrube junction. (I think this may be the first walled open shaft on the true left of the valley below Br&auml;uning Alm) ",,,,
-31,"2/T +",,,,"noinfo/smkridge/31.htm",,,"Elchh&ouml;hle","Megalodontenh&ouml;hle",,"2b","LVHK Wien, 1974","Mainly horizontal and going northish under the path. A large phreatic tube in horizontally bedded limestone. Visited by Andy Waddington, Doug Florence with Karl Gaisberger on August 12th, 1978. Latter person collected a rare cave beetle from it (only the second specimen of this species collected in Austria, if we understood Karl correctly), which I think is now in the Natural History Museum in Vienna, having been pickled in Vodka borrowed from an expedition member. Name comes from discovery of Elk bones when first explored. ",,,,,"In dataset",,"caves/31/31.svx","263m","+9/-18m","85m",,,,,,"p31","No idea",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Next to St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) somewhat beyond <a href=""28.htm"">Augsteckh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 28).  Located very near laser point 0/9.",,,,
-32,"1/S +",,,,"noinfo/smkridge/32.htm",,,"Windloch am St&ouml;gerweg",,,"2b","LVHK Ober&ouml;sterreich, 1966 ",,,,,,,,,,"25m",,,,,,,"p032","drilled hole above 1623/32 entrance (next to path)","p032x","Nils",,,81126,35771,"1567m",,,"Obvious horizontal entrance right next to path 201 shortly before you hack off to Stellerwegh&ouml;hle. ",,"A major landmark for CUCC navigation, and also very useful for storing beer, this obvious 2m high entrance is right next to the path and blows a lot of cold air in summer. Unfortunately, it doesn't go anywhere. It does, however, have a permanent survey station.",,"drilled hole"
+31,"2/T +",,,,"noinfo/smkridge/31.htm",,,"Elchh&ouml;hle","Megalodontenh&ouml;hle",,"2b","LVHK Wien, 1974","Mainly horizontal and going northish under the path. A large phreatic tube in horizontally bedded limestone. Visited by Andy Waddington, Doug Florence with Karl Gaisberger on August 12th, 1978. Latter person collected a rare cave beetle from it (only the second specimen of this species collected in Austria, if we understood Karl correctly), which I think is now in the Natural History Museum in Vienna, having been pickled in Vodka borrowed from an expedition member. Name comes from discovery of Elk bones when first explored. ",,,,,"In dataset",,"caves/31/31.svx","263m","+9/-18m","85m",,,,,,"p31","No idea",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Next to St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) somewhat beyond <a href=""28.htm"">Augsteckh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 28).  Located very near laser point 0/9.",,,,"Red number - next to main path"
+32,"1/S +",,,,"noinfo/smkridge/32.htm",,,"Windloch am St&ouml;gerweg",,,"2b","LVHK Ober&ouml;sterreich, 1966 ",,,,,,,,,,"25m",,,,,,,"p032","drilled hole above 1623/32 entrance (next to path)","p032x","Nils",,,81126,35771,"1567m",,,"Obvious horizontal entrance right next to path 201 shortly before you hack off to Stellerwegh&ouml;hle. ",,"A major landmark for CUCC navigation, and also very useful for storing beer, this obvious 2m high entrance is right next to the path and blows a lot of cold air in summer. Unfortunately, it doesn't go anywhere. It does, however, have a permanent survey station.",,"CUCC drilled hole and small red-painted pre-1981 number"
 33,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/br-alm/33.htm",,,"Schichtgrenzenh&ouml;hle",,,3,"Sektion Ausseerland, 1975 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1570m",,,"South of Br&auml;uning Alm. I think this is another of the fenced off shafts near the path north from the junction at Egglgrube. ",,,,
 34,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/34.htm",,,"H&ouml;hle am Kratzer I",,,4,"Sektion Ausseerland, 1973 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1590m",,,"Quite a way east of Br&auml;uning Alm in the top end of the Kratzer valley.",,,,
 35,"2/S/T x",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/35.htm",,,"Dr. Kerschner H&ouml;hle",,,4,"</p><ul><li>Found by Othmar Schauberger, 1921.</li><li>Looked at for some years by F H&uuml;tter, but always blocked by snow.</li><li>In October 1976, G Graf managed to descend 30m in the shaft, the uppermost part of which was snow and ice free. The continuation of the way could not be found.</li><li>In August 1977, 5kg of salt was dumped onto the snow blockage. In October 1977, after a long walk over the plateau, it was looked at again and successfully explored.</li></ul><p>","Now, the Austrian's exploration details suggest that the cave was substantially unblocked in 1976 (to -30m in October), while CUCC's find was choked at -10m. Also, the description given of this cave in the local Climbing Guide (Krenmayr) sounds nothing like B5 at all, (he says, already explored in 1921, but today almost forgotten. Need Ice equipment) so the Austrian writing in the caver's magazine who said it was B5 may have been mistaken. Krenmayr gives length 250m, depth 100m.</p><p>This description by Karl Gaisberger is from the 1977 Exploration:</p><p>After climbing down 8m to where the shaft appeared blocked by snow, progress did not seem likely. I [translator] think ""there was a spiralling way in the snow to a wall of ice columns"". A very steep descent led into a passage with a snow cone. (This was still in the previous year's snow-free climb !). Pushing through a thin snow-wall through which the light glimmered, a direct way was established. Through a hole in the snow in a rubble-filled passage, the way soon branched. Both branches ended blind.</p><p>The lower level of the cave, described by O Schauberger, must be found on the opposite side of the snow-cone from the [Schluf?]. One now comes to a chamber complex where a sloping 10m shaft climbs down into the <b>Kristallhalle</b>. The walls here are covered with admittedly large, but superficially weathered calcite somethings (Kalzitdrusen).</p><p>From the Kristallhalle, through a narrow bit to a side-something with a pile of rubble, the <b>Tropfsteinhalle</b>. There is a single 60cm high stalagmite here. It shows a corroded appearance, indicating aggressive ground water. Tropfsteinhalle contains, so far, the most beautiful flowstone decorations in the Loser area. These include [plenty dictionary failure here] Sinterfahnen, Boden- und Deckenzapfen, sogar Excentriques.</p><p>In the area of the stalagmites, several dead pseudoscorpions (<i>Neobisium aueri</i>) were found. <i>There is some more description of the floor of the chamber (I think), but I can't make head nor tail of it.</i>",,,,,,,,"250m","Given 100m in 1980.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1630m",,,"Just SW of the col (Schwarzmoossattel), SE of Br&auml;uning Nase. ",,"Surface shaft often blocked with snow",,"This hole supposedly has a CUCC painted number ""B5"" of 1976 vintage, which will probably be pretty faded.  But the cave descriptions do not agree."
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@
 68,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/aaussee/68.htm",,,"Kleine B&auml;renh&ouml;hle",,,10,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1370m",,,"At foot of Wei&szlig;e Wand west of Hochklapfsattel, just NNE of Kat.51",,,,
 69,"1/S +",,,,"noinfo/loser/69.htm",,,"Schacht am Gschirr",,,"8d",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1690m",,,"Text says West of Augstsee. Map shows it above Dimmelwand. ",,,,
 70,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/loser/70.htm",,,"Schneckenloch",,,"8d",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1660m",,,"Above Dimmelwand. ",,,,
-71,"2/S/W +","a b",,,"kratzer/71.htm",,,"Fledermaush&ouml;hle",,,4,"Discovered by Karl Gaisberger in October 1975, but prevented from continuing by start of winter snows, so shared exploration with CUCC, 1976.  ","Initial hands and knees crawl for 20m soon enlarges and descends past a couple of oxbows (one leading to within sight of daylight up an aven) to reach twin climbs of 8m, the easier being through a hole to the right. Soon afterwards is the first pitch, a sloping 8m. Below this, a pleasant passage with occasional bat-droppings leads to a short muddy crawl, an earth bank and a sizeable chamber. The next pitch, of 7m, is reached after more muddy passage, and may be climbed/jumped by a rift to one side, but is best rigged for the return.</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""l/ca7.htm""><img alt=""Photo - 34k"" src=""t/ca7.jpg"" width=""178"" height=""134"" /></a>&nbsp;<a href=""l/ca4.htm""><img alt=""Photo - 22k"" src=""t/ca4.jpg"" width=""200"" height=""150"" /></a></div><p>Easy going continues past a right turn to a complex junction at several levels. The water can be followed down a rift to a drop into an impenetrable fissure. Back at the junction, a traverse and thrutch through lead to a small tube, which crosses a cross-rift and ends at a filthy sump. Left at the cross rift, however, a low crawl gives onto a greasy chimney climb of 4m with very little in the way of holds. At the foot of this, the water reenters, and soon develops acute verticality. The first 5m are technical and best rigged, but below that, the descent becomes more spiralling in mainly solid rock. After 30m, things become more shattered and muddy and the climb drops into water leading very quickly to a sump at -90m.</p><p>Shortly before the second pitch, a right turn leads into an inlet passage, over a slot to the main passage below, over a traverse and a false floor, to reach, eventually, an aven ascended for about 25m and continuing, but with no great prospects.</p><p>From the Chamber, a traverse can be entered from the top of the rock-slope. The level closes off after about 15m, but below a climb down, a pitch was excavated dropping into a larger passage which soon choked comprehensively.",,,,,"no","<a href=""../../jnl/1977/index.htm"">Cambridge Underground 1977</a>, facing page 46.</p><p><img alt=""survey: 15k gif"" width=""560"" height=""650"" src=""71.png"" /><p>(The original notes have been lost; the length cited was calculated by inventing stations and survey legs based on the drawn-up survey.)",,"347m","90m","116m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1600m",,,"West of Kratzer valley, off path to Schwarzmoossattel.",,"Entrance is in a fair-sized shakehole in the dwarf-pine-covered karren before Schwarzmoossattel.",,
+71,"2/S/W +","a b",,,"kratzer/71.htm",,,"Fledermaush&ouml;hle",,,4,"Discovered by Karl Gaisberger in October 1975, but prevented from continuing by start of winter snows, so shared exploration with CUCC, 1976.  ","Initial hands and knees crawl for 20m soon enlarges and descends past a couple of oxbows (one leading to within sight of daylight up an aven) to reach twin climbs of 8m, the easier being through a hole to the right. Soon afterwards is the first pitch, a sloping 8m. Below this, a pleasant passage with occasional bat-droppings leads to a short muddy crawl, an earth bank and a sizeable chamber. The next pitch, of 7m, is reached after more muddy passage, and may be climbed/jumped by a rift to one side, but is best rigged for the return.</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""l/ca7.htm""><img alt=""Photo - 34k"" src=""t/ca7.jpg"" width=""178"" height=""134"" /></a>&nbsp;<a href=""l/ca4.htm""><img alt=""Photo - 22k"" src=""t/ca4.jpg"" width=""200"" height=""150"" /></a></div><p>Easy going continues past a right turn to a complex junction at several levels. The water can be followed down a rift to a drop into an impenetrable fissure. Back at the junction, a traverse and thrutch through lead to a small tube, which crosses a cross-rift and ends at a filthy sump. Left at the cross rift, however, a low crawl gives onto a greasy chimney climb of 4m with very little in the way of holds. At the foot of this, the water reenters, and soon develops acute verticality. The first 5m are technical and best rigged, but below that, the descent becomes more spiralling in mainly solid rock. After 30m, things become more shattered and muddy and the climb drops into water leading very quickly to a sump at -90m.</p><p>Shortly before the second pitch, a right turn leads into an inlet passage, over a slot to the main passage below, over a traverse and a false floor, to reach, eventually, an aven ascended for about 25m and continuing, but with no great prospects.</p><p>From the Chamber, a traverse can be entered from the top of the rock-slope. The level closes off after about 15m, but below a climb down, a pitch was excavated dropping into a larger passage which soon choked comprehensively.",,,,,"no","<a href=""../../jnl/1977/index.htm"">Cambridge Underground 1977</a>, facing page 46.</p><p><img alt=""survey: 15k gif"" width=""560"" height=""650"" src=""71.png"" /><p>(The original notes have been lost; the length cited was calculated by inventing stations and survey legs based on the drawn-up survey.)",,"347m","90m","116m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1600m",,,"West of Kratzer valley, off path to Schwarzmoossattel.",,"Entrance is in a fair-sized shakehole in the dwarf-pine-covered karren before Schwarzmoossattel.",,"Believed to be numbered in red"
 72,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/loser/72.htm",,,"Skeletth&ouml;hle",,,"8c","Sektion Ausseerland, 1976 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1720m",,,"West of Augstsee. ",,,,
 73,"2/S =",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/73.htm",,,"Suppentellerschacht",,,4,"</p><ul><li>Discovered by K Gaisberger and F H&uuml;tter in August 1973 (to -30m)</li><li>Sektion Ausseerland, 1977 (Karl Gaisberger + Edith Bednarik)</li></ul><p>","The first step is sprayed by meltwater, and the second step leads to -30m. A short rope leads to the next step. A rift follows an acute angle under the entrance way, some metres back. This section is very narrow, and over the narrow section pours a showerbath. Now a second squeeze leads to a fine pitch which bends back under the previous section. Then it gets complicated (the language, not the cave). It sounds like a series of either roomy or narrow wet pitches. Exploration appears to cease at -60m because of water down the neck and in the suit. It isn't clear if the cave actually stops at this point.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1580m",,,"In Kratzer valley, some way up valley from <a href=""../../kratzer/71.htm"">Fledermaush&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.71).",,,,
 74,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/74.htm",,,"Schneckenhaush&ouml;hle",,,4,"Edith Bednarik, 1977","Sounds like a free-climb to a snow choke (very much like B5, which must be in virtually the same place ?)",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1600m",,,"In Kratzer valley, down valley from <a href=""../../kratzer/71.htm"">Fledermaush&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 71), on true right some way above bottom of valley. In the same entrance doline as <a href=""35.htm"">Dr.Kerschner H&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.35).",,,,
@@ -110,11 +110,11 @@
 80,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/80.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 80",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric, 1994","A straight pitch of 14m to a choke.",,,,,,,,,"14m ",,,,,,,"p080",,,"Nils","gps96bestfit.80","gps00.80",,,,"(1996) VSK nipple: 135&deg;, BW pt 1835: 043&deg; (this cannot possibly be right), Grieskogel: 007&deg;, HSK: 043&deg;",,"Plateau just NE of col.","From Schwarzmoossattel, drop onto the plateau, where an intermittent line of cairns leads from the Br&auml;uning wall camp (CUCC's <a href=""../tcamps.htm#topcamp"">Top Camp</a> from 1988) across to the right, leading to the 8x caves and <a href=""145.htm"">145</a>. Directly across a large clear area of karren, a large cairn used to mark the 8m by 5m entrance shaft, but this has apparently disappeared (1995) only to be rebuilt in 1996 - but is very vulnerable to demolition by winter snows. The shaft is otherwise invisible from a few metres away. The number 80, in red, is quite faded (1989) and is on the shaft wall facing the Br&auml;uning wall.",,,"tag 1998, retag 1999"
 81,"1/T +",,,,"plateau/81.htm",,,"Schwa H&ouml;hle 81",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","A short section of horizontal passage 5m below the surface, with two entrances, but no way on. ",,,,,,,,"15m. ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1670m",,,"Plateau just NE of col. ",,,,"paint"
 82,"4/S/T +",,,,"plateau/82.htm",,,"Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","Very obvious walking sized cave entrance leads to a boulder strewn passage (ice formations early in season) into an aven with daylight entering 20m above. A scramble over boulders leads to <b>Apfelschacht</b> - a 6m pitch with loose boulders at the head. This drops to a 3m climb and then a 20m pitch <b>Orangenschacht</b> with a trickle of water entering halfway down. From the foot, a fine keyhole passage imaginatively named <b>Schl&uuml;ssellochgang</b>, and a choice of routes. The most obvious way on is a 10m pitch, <b>Bierschacht</b> over a stalagmite flow to an awkward crawl, <b>Worm Passage</b>, which looked likely to end things. However, this opens out suddenly at a pitch head. <b>Nocheinbierschacht</b>  is 15m, impressively free. At the foot, a vocal connection can be made with a phreatic passage above the third pitch which ends in a big hole.</p><p>Ahead is a phreatic tunnel which chokes, and a large black emptiness. This is descended for 25m in four 6m steps, <b>Viermalbierschacht</b>, to a ledge big enough for one and a bit people. The stream goes over this ledge into a large black void. This pitch, <b>Besoffene</b>, is 50m and hangs free for all but the last 8m in a very impressive shaft. From the foot, traverse above a steeply dropping stream canyon to a sloping platform from which a 17m pitch reaches the stream floor. This cascades over a further 6m pitch, below which a climb out of the stream reaches a rig point for a 30m pitch ending on a slope down to a sump at -216m.",,,,,,"Cambridge Underground 1978, facing p 32</p><p>There is also an <a href=""145/145.png"">area plan</a> showing 82 in context with <a href=""145.htm"">145</a> and <a href=""148.htm"">148</a>.</p><p><img alt=""survey: 28k gif"" width=""640"" height=""1300"" src=""others/82.png"" />",,,"-216m, +20",,,,,,,"p82","tip of rock marked ""82"" at entrance",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Plateau 430m from col, roughly NE.","From Schwarzmoossattel, follow description to <a href=""80.htm"">80</a>. From here, a route leads directly towards Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel over fairly flat karren, becoming more shattered towards another cairn. Then there is a somewhat chaotic area.</p><p>Skirt this on the left to a small ridge running left-right. There is a cairn to the right across the chaotic bit. From the ridge, 82 is the obvious entrance directly ahead. Across the ridge to the right, more cairns lead initially towards 82, but then become misleading as they head up the hill to <a href=""145.htm"">Wolfh&ouml;hle</a> (145).",,"</p><table class=""imgtable""><tr><td rowspan=""2""><a href=""others/l/82jont.htm""><img alt=""Entrance"" width=""180"" height=""247"" src=""others/t/82jont.jpg"" /></a></td><td><a href=""others/l/82area.htm""><img alt=""Entrance area view"" src=""others/t/82area.jpg"" width=""185"" height=""122"" /></a></td></tr><tr><td><a href=""others/l/82stal.htm""><img alt=""Photo of ice stal (27k)"" src=""others/t/82stal.jpg"" width=""113"" height=""145"" /></a></td></tr> </table><p>","""82"" in red paint on boulder and on left of cave. 1998 tag ""1623 82 CUCC 1977"" on right inside cave entrance (not at survey point)."
-83,"2/S +",,,,"plateau/83.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 83",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","13m freeclimb dropped onto a steep snowslope requiring a handline. This was descended for 10m to a steep boulder slope which funnelled down to a small hole through which stones dropped for a long time. The large amounts of scree made descent unwise. Above the boulder slope, a phreatic passage led quickly to a big hole in the floor. The hole is a fine free-hanging descent of 36m to a solid choke of boulders. The phreatic passage continues beyond the pitch, but was not reached, and trends uphill.",,,,,,,,,"55m",,,,,,,"p83","exact point not recorded",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Plateau, 200m north of <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 82). This is not very obvious, since it is in an area of dwarf pine on a knoll south of the dry valley containing <a href=""107.htm"">Kat. 107</a>",,,,"paint"
+83,"2/S +",,,,"plateau/83.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 83",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","13m freeclimb dropped onto a steep snowslope requiring a handline. This was descended for 10m to a steep boulder slope which funnelled down to a small hole through which stones dropped for a long time. The large amounts of scree made descent unwise. Above the boulder slope, a phreatic passage led quickly to a big hole in the floor. The hole is a fine free-hanging descent of 36m to a solid choke of boulders. The phreatic passage continues beyond the pitch, but was not reached, and trends uphill.",,,,,,,,,"55m",,,,,,,"p83","exact point not recorded",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Plateau, 200m north of <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 82). This is not very obvious, since it is in an area of dwarf pine on a knoll south of the dry valley containing <a href=""107.htm"">Kat. 107</a>",,,,"Red paint number from 1977"
 84,"1/T -",,,,"plateau/84.htm",,,"Schwa H&ouml;hle 84",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","Draughting tube leads to a small chamber, further small tube leads off, unexplored since deemed impenetrable in shorts and T-shirt.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1660m",,,"Plateau WNW of <a href=""83.htm"">Kat.83</a>",,,,"paint"
-85,"2/t/S +",,,,"plateau/85.htm",,,"Schwa H&ouml;hle 85",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","Large descending entrance leads to a series of free climbs ending too tight at -50m.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p85","east wall of doline",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Plateau, at southwest end of depression containing <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.82)",,,,"large red painted number ""85"""
-86,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/86.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 86",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","Rift descent of 25m until gap between snow and rock got too small.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1670m",,,"Plateau, on higher ground just SE of <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.82)",,,,"paint"
-"87A","3/S +",,,,"smkridge/87.htm",,,"Schacht 87A bei St&ouml;gerweg",,,"2a","CUCC 1980, 1987","Horizontal entrance at base of small cliff at head of dry valley, leads over peaty infill to a pitch head. Cross first hole and descend second, 30m to large chamber. To left is unsurveyed inlet ending too small, while to right is head of very steeply descending phreatic-tube-like pitch of 15m vertically (20m+ of rope). This is a little thrutchy to start, but opens out, and ends in a short climb.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""p2"" href=""others/l/87a.htm""><img alt=""(mono photo - 63k)"" src=""others/t/87a.jpg"" width=""134"" height=""200"" /></a> Head of Second pitch <a href=""others/l/87b.htm""><img alt=""(mono photo - 41k)"" src=""others/t/87b.jpg"" width=""134"" height=""200"" /></a></div><p>A further 15m pitch follows, hanging clear of a wall made up mainly of boulders. A way on across the head of the final pitch appears too tight. Hole in floor is last pitch, of 33m, which has a boulder 10m high in it, and you can descend either side. Draught is lost into a small passage which you could reach by bolting, but it seems a little pointless.</p><p>There is a 1987 extension, but I can't make much sense of the logbook description.",,,,,,,"caves/087/087.svx",,"111.5m",,,,"The 1987 logbook suggests we changed this to 87b and the cave that had mistakenly been numbered 88, called 87b on this site, we called 87a, so we had better look into this.",,,"p87","first (of several) bolts used for rigging, LHS of entrance",,,,,,,,,,"In a dry valley leading up from the St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) shortly after the turn off for <a href=""115.htm"">Schnellzugh&ouml;hle</a>.  In 2001 the hole was seen blowing a large quantity of vapour visible from some way off.",,,,"paint"
+85,"2/t/S +",,,,"plateau/85.htm",,,"Schwa H&ouml;hle 85",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","Large descending entrance leads to a series of free climbs ending too tight at -50m.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p85","east wall of doline",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"Plateau, at southwest end of depression containing <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.82)",,,,"large red painted number ""85"", still visible in 1998"
+86,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/86.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 86",,,"1c","CUCC 1977 - Team Geriatric","Rift descent of 25m until gap between snow and rock got too small.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1670m",,,"Plateau, on higher ground just SE of <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.82)",,,,"Numbered in red (1977)"
+"87A","3/S +",,,,"smkridge/87.htm",,,"Schacht 87A bei St&ouml;gerweg",,,"2a","CUCC 1980, 1987","Horizontal entrance at base of small cliff at head of dry valley, leads over peaty infill to a pitch head. Cross first hole and descend second, 30m to large chamber. To left is unsurveyed inlet ending too small, while to right is head of very steeply descending phreatic-tube-like pitch of 15m vertically (20m+ of rope). This is a little thrutchy to start, but opens out, and ends in a short climb.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""p2"" href=""others/l/87a.htm""><img alt=""(mono photo - 63k)"" src=""others/t/87a.jpg"" width=""134"" height=""200"" /></a> Head of Second pitch <a href=""others/l/87b.htm""><img alt=""(mono photo - 41k)"" src=""others/t/87b.jpg"" width=""134"" height=""200"" /></a></div><p>A further 15m pitch follows, hanging clear of a wall made up mainly of boulders. A way on across the head of the final pitch appears too tight. Hole in floor is last pitch, of 33m, which has a boulder 10m high in it, and you can descend either side. Draught is lost into a small passage which you could reach by bolting, but it seems a little pointless.</p><p>There is a 1987 extension, but I can't make much sense of the logbook description.",,,,,,,"caves/087/087.svx",,"111.5m",,,,"The 1987 logbook suggests we changed this to 87b and the cave that had mistakenly been numbered 88, called 87b on this site, we called 87a, so we had better look into this.",,,"p87","first (of several) bolts used for rigging, LHS of entrance",,,,,,,,,,"In a dry valley leading up from the St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) shortly after the turn off for <a href=""115.htm"">Schnellzugh&ouml;hle</a>.  In 2001 the hole was seen blowing a large quantity of vapour visible from some way off.",,,,"No. 87 in red, which is correct but might have been changed to 87A (OK) or 87B (bad) in 1987"
 "87B","0 +",,,,"smkridge/87B.htm",,,"Schacht 87B bei St&ouml;gerweg",,,"2a","CUCC 1980, 1987",,,,,,,,,,"1.2m",,,,"The 1987 logbook suggests we changed this to 87a and 87 to 87b, so we had better look into this.  ",,,,,,,,,,,"circa 1505m",,,"<i>In</i> Stogerweg - you literally step over it while walking along the path.</p><p>Numbered '88' in a fit of optimism while the explorer was getting changed to investigate this impressively draughting hole, it proved in fact to be only 1.2 metres deep and too tight. It appears to be above the inlet below pitch 1 in cave 87, and has been renumbered 87b, since the Austrians have allocated number 88 to L&auml;rchenh&ouml;hle.",,,,
 88,"3/S/T x",,"40i",,"noinfo/smkridge/88.htm",,,"L&auml;rchenschacht",,,"2a","</p><ul><li>First descent by <span lang=""de"">Reinhard Lemmer</span> in 1983, depth 40m, blocked by ice.</li><li><span lang=""de"">Reinhard Kieselbach, Franz Lindenmayr</span> and  <span lang=""de"">K Peter</span> make second descent over a weekend in August 1985, finding the <b lang=""de"">Oberpf&auml;lzer Halle</b>.</li><li>In September, FHKF, VHM and HFG-KA returned, discovered <b lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg,</b> and the way to the <b lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on,</b> and surveyed.</li><li>In 1986, exploration continued to <b lang=""de"">Hall Dom,</b> connecting to <span lang=""de"">Stellerweg.</span> Also found <b lang=""de"">Geburtstagsgang,</b> which came out in <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on.</span></li><li>In 1987, the German groups were replaced by French (<a href=""../../others/gscb/index.htm"">GSCB,</a> GSD, ASCR) who found <b lang=""de"">Sandschacht,</b> heading N and E. A 5m climb from <span lang=""fr"">Puits Madonna</span> reached a passage with cairns and a definite connection to <span lang=""de"">Schwarzmooskogeleish&ouml;hle.</span>  A through trip was done the next day by GSCB and GSD.</li><li>In 1988 surveys were tied together with an improved surface survey.</li></ul><p>","Few details available, since we were for many years unable to obtain a survey. A figure of over 6 km long in 1987 was quoted, but this would appear to include the <a href=""40.htm"">Eish&ouml;hle</a>. Contact was finally made with the French group in 1997 and <span lang=""fr"">Denis Motte</span> has sent us a plan on 12 A3 sheets, dated April 1995, which gives the length as 1885m. The following description is made up entirely by looking at the survey, and should not be taken as reliable. It is hoped that we will do better after visiting the cave with a view to finding its connections with  <span lang=""de"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</span> (<a href=""../../smkridge/41.htm"">1623/41</a>) and <a href=""../../smkridge/144.htm"">1623/144</a>.</p><p>Open shaft descends 5m to first rigging bolt, then short pitch to snow plug. The way out is to the NE, where the survey shows a couple of (inaccessible ?) question marks and a traverse over a pit. Narrow rift continues past another unexplored small passage to the right, and in 20m opens out into a sizeable chamber. The boulder floor drops away to the north (left) and ahead. Up right is a bouldery antechamber with the base of a ramp up SE. A short passage here chokes.</p><p>20m across the boulder slope, it is possible to descend the slope left into the main part of <b lang=""de"">Oberpf&auml;lzer Halle</b>, 15m wide and 30m long, now heading west, still descending over boulders. To the right is a 15m rift passage with an inlet. Ahead, the chamber narrows, but large bouldery passage continues with two or three big boulders (over 5m). To SW is a junction marking the start of <b lang=""de"">Jsartal</b>. Up a steep ramp to the right (NW) is unexplored, whilst left, south, goes directly below the entrance in a passage with a slot in the floor. After 25m is a widening and junction. Right curves round to end below an aven. Left goes quickly to another junction. Right soon chokes in boulders, whilst left ends quickly in an undescended rift pitch.</p><p>Back at the junction at the start of <span lang=""de"">Jsartal,</span> the main way SW soon traverses a large hole in the floor, then continues as a small canyon until 50m from the start is a junction in small passage. Right pops out immediately into the side of a ramp rising right (north) to a choke. Down ends in a pitch, which is best reached by the small passage left at the junction. This quickly doglegs and comes out over the pitch on the opposite side from the ramp. The pitch (undescended) is seen to be a widening in a deep floor canyon, which continues as <span lang=""de"">Jsartal</span> develops into an 8m wide rocky chamber through which the floor trench meanders.</p><p>After a short way, the trench abruptly ends, and a ramp up above it leads to a junction. Left continues up ramp, but not very far. Right traverses the ramp (another down-section soon ends), then heads west past another blind passage on the right, to break out into a larger passage ahead. Left (south) is the way to <span lang=""de"">Geburtstagsgang,</span> whilst right (north) eventually leads to the <a href=""#fsw""><span lang=""de"">SchwarzmooskogelEish&ouml;hle</span> connection</a>.</p><h4 lang=""de"">Geburtstagsgang</h4><p>Ascending a low ramp leads past various short side-extensions to <b lang=""de"">Schafott</b> - apparently a breakthrough point in 1986 ? Beyond this, small passage continues SW, with a mudbank on the left, for almost 50m until it widens out and descends a steep slope towards a floor trench. Left here a further ramp ascends east to a choke. The floor trench continues W, then NW, but would seem to be too narrow. Staying on the north side of the trench and heading NW (right from the point of entry) leads through mud and/or shingle deposits in a small zig-zag passage which meets first a small canyon which doesn't go, and then a T-junction over another canyon.</p><p>Right ends after ten metres or so, whilst left (west) meets another junction where a further trench comes in from the left (south). This also appears to be too small to follow, but would seem likely to connect with one or both of the trenches seen earlier. Ahead reaches a chamber, with a steep slope down left to yet another trench, but staying high gains the continuation of <span lang=""de"">Geburtstagsgang</span> continuing small with a narrow floor canyon. This now goes NW for 50m, to a T-junction. Right ends almost immediately, whilst left shortly pops out in bigger passage on a ledge overlooking a small stream.</p><p>Right in the canyon, 12m away, is bigger passage <span lang=""de"">(<a href=""#gc"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on</a>),</span> and the original way to Stellerwegh&ouml;hle, whilst ahead/left goes west, quickly picking up an inlet from the left and dropping 30m in <b lang=""de"">Ungarn Ca&ntilde;on</b>, a narrow way for 50m, to where exploration ceased. It is not clear, but this may well be a pitch, quite possibly into part of the <span lang=""de"">Stellerweg</span> system.</p><h4>To <span lang=""de"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</span></h4><p>By going right at the start of <span lang=""de"">Ungarn Ca&ntilde;on,</span> large, bouldery passage is soon met at a T-junction. To the right is an alternative route from the entrance via <a href=""#fsw""><span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg</span></a> and <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on.</span> This route was found first, but the survey numbering suggests it was surveyed later and I might deduce that this is not the normal way.</p><p>Left in the bigger passage is over boulders, passing a short passage on the left. A hole in the floor of this appears to connect to <span lang=""de"">Ungarn Ca&ntilde;on.</span> Ahead, a slit in the floor is traversed (on the right ?) to reach a pair of large boulders. Up right here ends quickly in an unclimbable sediment wall. Continuing west, the trench reappears (now traversed on left) and soon expands to be a large hole in the floor. It is unclear from the survey how this is crossed, but on the far side, it would appear that a pitch of c 35m is descended, over jammed blocks. Rising steeply to the right (north) from (the foot ?) here is an unascended ramp, which seems likely to connect to unsurveyed passages below Roddick's Dive in <a href=""../../smkridge/144.htm"">1623/144</a>.</p><p>A continuation WNW from this point would appear to be part of the streamway below the <a href=""../../smkridge/41/41.htm#bigpitch"">Big Pitch</a> in <span lang=""de"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle.</span> This in turn suggests that the 35m or so descent must be in the lower part of this shaft, and the ramp seen to the right starts some way above the foot of the pitch.</p><h4><a name=""fsw""><span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg</span></a> and the way to the <a href=""40.htm""><span lang=""de"">Eish&ouml;hle</span></a></h4><p>From the junction at the west of <span lang=""de"">Jsartal,</span> large passage heads north for a short way to a T-junction. Right encounters two floor trenches, the right hand of which soon widens to a 3m deep blind pit. Across this is 25m of rising passage to a choke. Left soon swings round and heads north again, passong another short, blind ascending way on the left. A short section of floor trench is traversed and a short way beyond is  <b lang=""de"">Brotzeitplatz</b>, where a large cross-rift goes a short distance left and right.</p><p>Ahead is <b lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg</b>, a rifty passage with rounded roof, heading north with an initial floor trench. Thirty metres or so from <span lang=""de"">Brotzeitplatz</span> another cross-rift is met, this time at an angle. This is the start of a slightly mazey area. To the right is narrow for 30m to the edge of a wide shaft, <b lang=""de"">Regenschacht</b>, 4m deep. By traversing right on the near edge, a small passage is gained which circles all the way round to the far side, then ends in a small aven.</p><p>Ahead in <span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg,</span> another cross-rift is encountered less than 20m ahead. Right turns sharply back and connects to the <span lang=""de"">Regenschacht</span> passage about halfway along. Left is too narrow to follow, but lines up with another section of rift in the mazey area. Continuing north in <span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg,</span> the boulder floor changes and a steep slope down leads to the lip of a canyon at  <b lang=""fr"">Puits du Sable</b>. Directly opposite is a short blind ramp up. Right is the way to <a href=""#gg""><span lang=""fr"">Grand Galerie</span></a>, described below, whilst left is the start of <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on.</span></p><h4><a name=""gc""><span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on</span></a></h4><p>This is the deep rift reached at the end of <a href=""#fsw""><span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg</span></a>, but it is not clear that this is the best way to get to it. Back at the start of the mazey area, the way left (SW) is boulder-floored rift which continues for twenty metres or so until a junction. Ahead chokes, but two ways right soon unite. The left way looks harder - a traverse over a trench, whilst the right way is boulder floored. Beyond the reunion is narrower, with a slot in the floor, and zig-zagging roughly NW, though clearly interrupted by a number of SW-NE joints. One of these can be followed for ten or fifteen metres, where it becomes too narrow, but lined up with a cross-rift in  <span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg.</span></p><p>After this joint, the next junction is effectively an oxbow on the left, where a bat was found during exploration. Ahead soon reaches the top of the <b lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on</b>, some 40m downstream from the point reached in <span lang=""de"">Frankenschnellweg.</span> A descent to the bottom at this point is a 30m pitch. Directly across from the point of entry is a ramp up, with various sediment banks, leading to <a href=""#sh""><span lang=""de"">Sophienhalle.</span></a> To the right goes back towards the <span lang=""fr"">Puits du Sable</span> and  <a href=""#gg""><span lang=""fr"">Grand Galerie</span></a> - see below.</p><p>To the left, <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on</span> heads SW in a classic meander, or traversing rift. Give or take a couple of zags, this is straight for almost 100m, at which point it is interrupted by a bouldery chamber of about 10m diameter. Beyond, <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on</span> continues S then SW again, getting wider. Boulders hide the trench, and the passage curves west. To the left is the way in via <span lang=""de"">Geburtstagsgang</span> and on to <span lang=""de"">Ungarn Ca&ntilde;on.</span> Ahead is the main way into  <span lang=""de"">Stellerweg,</span> described above. It is not clear whether the stream below <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on</span> goes on this way, or joins <span lang=""de"">Ungarn Ca&ntilde;on.</span></p><h4><a name=""gg""><span lang=""fr"">Grande Galerie</span></a></h4><p>Upstream in <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on,</span> most easily reached by the <span lang=""fr"">Puits du Sable,</span> ascending passage heads east, and soon develops into a very wide passage with a deep canyon floor. It looks as if this passage is done at the level of the bottom of the canyon, which leads up, passing an inlet on the right, to a large pool at the foot of  <b lang=""fr"">Puits Madonna</b>. This is ascended to reach a similar level to the point of entry above <span lang=""fr"">Puits du Sable.</span> The continuation enlarges into <b lang=""fr"">Grande Galerie</b>, soon attaining impressive dimensions of 15m wide by 20m high. Question marks mark apparently inaccessible passages, two on the right and one on the left.</p><p>Beyond a couple of impressive boulders, a climb up leads to a smaller continuation. To the right is a hole in the floor with passage beyond, but left is a ramp up which soon rejoins the passage beyond the hole. The way gets bigger again, in passage first explored from <a href=""40.htm""><span lang=""de"">Schwarzmooskogeleish&ouml;hle</span></a>, until after 50m, it ends at the foot of a thirty metre pitch from the other cave.</p><h4><a name=""sh""><span lang=""de"">Sophienhalle</span></a></h4><p>On the NW side of <span lang=""de"">Gro&szlig;er Ca&ntilde;on,</span>  directly opposite the entry via the mazey area, or 40m downstream from the entry via <span lang=""fr"">Puits du Sable,</span> is a ramp up NNW. Right and left are walls of sediment, but the main way suddenly turns right, though still ascending steeply. The ramp eases and becomes more bouldery, now heading NE, suddenly to end at a widening above a deep undescended pit. A climb up on the right of this reaches the top of the far wall, in a large N-S collapse chamber, <b lang=""de"">Sophienhalle</b>. This shows clear bedding in the walls, and appears to have formed by spalling. Over the boulder floor, another steep wall precedes a ramp down to a choke. Dotted lines suggest a northward continuation, though whether this is above or below the ramp is unclear.",,,,"Information from <a href=""../../others/gscb/index.htm""><span lang=""fr"">Groupe Sp&eacute;l&eacute;ologique de Clerval - Baume les Dames</span></a>",,,"smk-system.svx",,"215m to connection below Stellerweg big pitch. ",,,,,,,"p088",,"p088x","Nils",,,,,,,,,,,,
 89,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/89.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 89",,,"1d","CUCC 1979 ","A 25m shaft into a narrow rift of zero lateral extension. ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1630m ",,,"Plateau",,,,
@@ -134,11 +134,11 @@
 ,,"a",,"last entrance","plateau/101a.htm",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"gps98.101a",,,,,,,"(GPS: (cliff directly above 101A) GK 5410503 5283483 (FOM 9.2m))",,,,"extremely faded numbers ""101A"" in red"
 102,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/102.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 102",,,"1b","CUCC 1977 - Team Youth (A.Waddington)  ","A near-straight shaft of 20m ends on a snow plug.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"gps98.102","gps00.102",,,"c 1630m",,,"GPS GK 5410464 5283496 (FOM 11.5m) About 50m west of <a href=""101.htm"">Kat.101</a>, c 15m south of <a href=""103.htm"">Kat. 103</a>, on a parallel joint.",,,,"painted number is extremely faded, and appears only as a slight lightening in the lichen when wet. Part drilled hole for tag. Tagged 1998"
 103,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/103.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 103",,,"1b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1977 - Team Youth (S.Farrow &amp; N.Thorne)</li><li>Surface survey to entrance, CUCC 1998</li></ul><p>","A semi-horizontal rift going south, slopes down at 45&deg; to head of a very broken shaft aligned on a joint perpendicular to the scarp (joint is on 055-235&deg;). Drops 30m past much wedged, frost-shattered rock to a choke at -30m.",,,,,,,,,"30m",,,,,,"t103",,,,"Surface survey","gps98.103",,,,,"HSK 075°, VSK Nipple 153°, Lost Rucksack Cairn 325°",,"GPS GK 5410472 5283506 (FOM 8.7m) About 15m north of <a href=""102.htm"">Kat.102</a>, in the face of the same 125-305&deg; fault scarp as <a href=""101.htm"">101</a>´s northward crawl, which is about 35m away to the SE.  ",,,," alloy tag ""1623 103 CUCC 1977"" on M6 stud below the faded remains of a painted number on the NW-facing wall of a prominent joint making a break in the scarp fade in which the entrance lies. "
-104,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/104.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 104",,,"1d","CUCC 1977 - Team Youth (S.Farrow)","Belay to a bolt in the boulder (on top, 1977 vintage), and as much dwarf pine as you can string together. A somewhat broken but roomy shaft of 29m with ledges at -10 and -24m, to a choke.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1650m  ",,,"In deep scrub adjacent to a very large erratic boulder, in the same area as <a href=""76/76.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 76). The boulder has an incipient split, and is visible from the col.",,,,"paint"
+104,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/104.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 104",,,"1d","CUCC 1977 - Team Youth (S.Farrow)","Belay to a bolt in the boulder (on top, 1977 vintage), and as much dwarf pine as you can string together. A somewhat broken but roomy shaft of 29m with ledges at -10 and -24m, to a choke.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1650m  ",,,"In deep scrub adjacent to a very large erratic boulder, in the same area as <a href=""76/76.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 76). The boulder has an incipient split, and is visible from the col.",,,,"Red-painted number (1977)"
 105,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/105.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 105",,,"1d","CUCC 1977 - Team Youth (N.Thorne, A.Waddington)","Handline descent for 9m leads to a ledge from where a fine 31m pitch drops 14m to a large ledge, then continues in a parallel shaft below an aven, with further ledges at -17, -21m. The shaft is in clean bluish-white limestone and lands on a dampish flat gravel floor.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p105",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"30m north of <a href=""76/76.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> on the plateau.",,,,"paint; tag 1999"
 106,,,,,,,,,,"Number not allocated (see <a href=""plateau/76/76.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle 1623/76</a>)",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
 107,"4/S/T +",,,,"plateau/107.htm",,,"Gemsh&ouml;hle",,,"1d","CUCC 1978: opened and Big Rift explored by Team Youth. Team Geriatric explored the Big Pitch and reached the bottom.","Small entrance in boulders in a dry gully drops into a small chamber, in the bottom corner of which is the excavated head of a pitch. This quickly bells out to 6m diameter and lands after 18m in a large passage which contains ice-formations early in the season. This large, phreatic passage chokes in both directions and the way on is in a rift to one side, from which the draught pours.</p><p>A pitch of 23m has an inlet entering part way down, which makes the rest of this pitch and the following one of 19m unpleasant in wet weather. Two ways then lead on, either down with the water or by traversing round this drop to another passage.</p><p>Climbing down with the water leads to a short passage with the water in a rift below. Round a sharp corner is a short drop to the head of a larger rift. A 5m pitch down this leads to another rift which, in turn, leads out to the side of a large shaft. Stones dropped from a small hole in the corner of the passage above the 5m pitch also fall into this shaft. Laddering from the side, the pitch is 67m with a large ledge just above half-way, and is unpleasantly wet in poor weather. From the base of this pitch, the continuing rift/canyon trends south west and has pitches of 5, 9 and 8m before the other route drops in from above.</p><p>Over the traverse, a short pitch of 4.5m, followed by a short climb up, leads to the head of a pitch of 10m to a boulder floor. Two ways on from here are down through the boulders into a shaft, or across the shaft and into a narrow rift. The way through boulders soon chokes, but the narrow rift soon opens into a massive shaft of 100m with a rebelay roughly halfway. This drops directly into the rift reached by the original route.</p><p>Below the junction, the rift continues with a 5m climb and pitches of 5, 14 and 44m, this last pitch being quite wet and emerging into a massive cross-rift trending south east. The water disappears into the choked floor of this rift via a nasty wet crawl, rapidly becoming too small.",,,,,"Reverse-engineered data in dataset measured from drawn-up survey","grade 5 survey from 1978</p><p><img src=""others/107.png"" alt=""107 survey"" />",,,"280m",,,,,,,"p107","exact point not recorded",,"Surface survey","gps98.107",,,,,,,"On the plateau in a prominent dry valley below southern forepeak of Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel, some way below Laser Point 0_5. The bottom of the gully is pretty much on the (cairned) best walking route from Top Camp to <a href=""82.htm"">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a>  (Kat.82) and <a href=""76/76.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.76).",,,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/l/107.htm""><img alt=""Photo of entrance"" src=""others/t/107.jpg"" width=""117"" height=""175"" /></a></div><p>","number twice in orange paint, 1998 tag on survey point ""1623 107 CUCC 1978"""
-108,"1/S +",,,,"remote/108.htm",,,"Schwa-H&ouml;hle 108",,,6,"CUCC 1980  John, Tony and Andy Connolly","Horizontal entrance to a large chamber with narrow rift dropping away.  Ends too tight.",,,,,,,,,"7m",,,,"This does not appear to be in the Austrians' Kataster.",,,,,,,,,,,,"Br&auml;uning Nase 200&deg;, Br&auml;uning Zinken 235&deg;, Vd. Schwarzmooskogel 175&deg;.",,"108 is not near 41 - it is on the plateau. Further across than 76 (106) past erratics - middle of nowhere",,,,
+108,"1/S +",,,,"remote/108.htm",,,"Schwa-H&ouml;hle 108",,,6,"CUCC 1980  John, Tony and Andy Connolly","Horizontal entrance to a large chamber with narrow rift dropping away.  Ends too tight.</p> <p>A cave numbered 108 was relocated in 2004, but does not match this description. It's marked with paint ""108"" and has a spit in the centre of the ""0"". The spit isn't great, but there's a good chunky flake to use too. The shaft descends ~9m to a ledge. At this level there's a horizontal passage which leads immediately to a 4m deep blind rift pitch. Back in the main shaft, a few natural rebelays get you to a floor just under 30m down. At one end of the rift a draught emerges from rocks, but removing some rocks it appears it would need quite a lot of work to make progress and the continuation may be too small anyway.</p>",,,,,,,,,"7m",,,,"This does not appear to be in the Austrians' Kataster.",,,"p108",,,,,,,,,"Br&auml;uning Nase 200&deg;, Br&auml;uning Zinken 235&deg;, Vd. Schwarzmooskogel 175&deg;.",,"108 is not near 41 - it is on the plateau. Further across than 76 (106) past erratics - middle of nowhere",,,,
 109,"1/t/S +",,,,"smkridge/109.htm",,,"Schwa-Schacht 109",,,"2b","CUCC 1980, 1987","The obvious way in leads to a 'Viewing gallery' over the entrance chamber, but descent this way would require tackle. Best way in is to the left where a freeclimb leads down a 10m ramp in a chamber. This is snow-choked in some years but in 1980 a dig opened a triangular slot to a 6m pitch into a smaller, boulder-choked chamber. This was reentered in 1987 and an animal skeleton was found and removed for the Austrian cavers. There is a very small, but draughting tube in the roof of this final chamber, going back towards the surface.",,,,,,"? grade 1",,,,,,,"This does not appear to be in the Austrians' Kataster.",,,"p109","point above 1623/109 entrance",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,"This is a hole you step over on the way to <a href=""113.htm"">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> (113).",,,"as at Aug 2001: ""109"" in very faded yellow paint, with an Omega."
 110,"1/S/T +",,,,"remote/110.htm",,,"Kein Hubschrauber H&ouml;hle",,,6,"CUCC 1978 - Team Supersmooth/Supercool  ","Insignificant low entrance with icy draught is marked with number in red paint. Through boulders leads to an 8m drop and walking passage ending in a collapse chamber with draught emerging from the choke. Needed digging to get in.",,,,,,"</p><p><img alt=""grade 1 plan: 12k gif"" width=""500"" height=""600"" src=""110.png"" />",,,,,,,"Name comes from logbook comment ""helicopter failed to turn up"".",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"On the plateau, about 2km (sic) beyond <a href=""../plateau/76/76.htm""><span lang=""de"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span></a> towards <span lang=""de-at"">Sch&ouml;nberg.</span> Actually, I am convinced that 2 km is a gross exaggeration, and half a mile would be more likely, otherwise it would be in a huge area of dwarf pine.",,,,"paint"
 111,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/111.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 111",,,"1d","CUCC 1978 - Supersmooth/Supercool","Shaft 20m to ledge, then 10m to choke/too narrow.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Out on plateau, quite near <a href=""98.htm"">98</a>.  ",,,,
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@
 137,"1/S +",,,,"smkridge/137.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 137",,,"2b","CUCC 1983","Shaft",,,,,,,,,"47m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1790m",,,"East of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel",,,,
 138,"1/S +",,,,"smkridge/138.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 138",,,"2b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1983</li><li>Surveyed-to 1999 (Wookey, Mark Shinwell)</li></ul><p>","Rapidly turns vertical and when explored, choked with snow at -40m.",,,,,"In dataset","Sketch in not-KH survey book 1996, page 14. Area map NoKH book p88.","caves/138/138.svx","46m","42m","6m",,,,,"p138",,,,"Surface survey",,,82206,36323,"1795m",,,"East flank of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel. One shelf up from 136. 50m WSW of 136a.","Follow route to <a href=""161/136.htm"">136</a>. From large cubic boulder at 136a entrance climb 4m step to west. Go 25m SW along 'gully' between bunde, then turn R into gap. Large, T-shaped entrance now visible in cliff 15m ahead.",,,"Number in red on the right wall of the vertical of the ""T"" saying ""138 CUCC 1983"". Spit with metal tag ""CUCC 138"" placed 1997.  "
 139,"1/S +",,,,"smkridge/139.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 139",,,"2b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1983</li><li>Relocated 1996 (Wookey).</li><li>Surveyed to 1999.08.07 (Andy Atkinson, Simon Flower)</li></ul><p>","Shaft. Two pitches to -30m, then too narrow.",,,,,"In dataset",,"caves/139/139.svx","21m","20m","0.6m",,,,,"p139",,,,"Surface survey",,"gps00.139",82312,362328,"1827m","HSK 022&deg;, Gries Kgl. 356&deg;, Hollweiser 147&deg;",,"Vord SMK, just below (~70m on bearing 070&deg;) secondary Northern summit. 90m NW of 136d, approx 200m N of  Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel summit.</p><p>GPS fix GK 5411207 to 5282893, Alt. 1877 &plusmn; 91m","From VSMK summit: go down 50m on E side to a large shelf, walk along ~NE 200m to where shelf peters out. Up slope on left is 139.</p><p>From VD1 to 136 route: As you come over crest out of grassy gully there is a choss bowl/snow ahead (you cross this to get to the 136 shelf. Instead turn right uphill, up small steps on open limestone. 139 is a large square cleft in a limestone scarp after about 60m.",,,"Tag ""CUCC 139"" (1997). Red Paint ""139 CUCC 1983"" (1983)."
-140,"2/S +",,,,"smkridge/140.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 140",,,"2b","CUCC 1983","Shaft entrance is 9m by 6m, with first pitch 15m to boulders. A 6m pitch is immediately followed by a 10m drop to a sloping boulder floor. From the end of this, a 5.5m drop reaches a longer boulder slope, which leads into a canyon at 90&deg;. Down this is a longer pitch split into 10 and 10.5m sections by a small ledge, landing on a very large boulder. Over the boulder are two ways on.</p><p>Through a squeeze is a shaft 10m deep to floor with <b>continuing hole and a further shaft to one side, neither of which were descended, despite a draught coming out through the squeeze</b>.</p><p>The way followed is a 5m pitch from the big boulder, to a boulder false floor. At the end of this, the roof rises into a high aven and an 11m pitch drops to a flat boulder floor next to another huge block. A hole down gives a 7m drop next to stacked rocks and a way on across boulders leads to a final 8m pitch.</p><p>Forward over boulders passes under another high aven from which water falls. A short climb down leads to where this water disappears into a scrofulous slot, at a depth of 95m.</p><p>The cave is in a key position, almost directly above the Breeze Block area of <a href=""161/chile.htm"">Chile,</a> in Kaninchenh&ouml;hle. However, these passages lie between 250 and 300m below the 140 entrance, so this is probably not a potential easy way in.",,,,,,"? grade 3.  In 1983 logbook",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"gps98.140","gps00.140",,,"1796m",,,"South of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel - 126m on 194&deg; from summit.</p><p>47&deg; 40' 41"" N 13&deg; 48' 58"" E","From Top Camp, climb the ""high"" route towards 161. Just past the highest point, join a traverse round the Schwarzmooskogel heading south and eventually more west. If you pick the right level, this passes the large open shaft of 140. Alternatively, the cave may be approached from the summit (point 1843) though various cliffs make this approach difficult.",,,
+140,"2/S x ",,,,"smkridge/140.htm",,,"Schwa Schacht 140",,,"2b","CUCC 1983","Shaft entrance is 9m by 6m, with first pitch 15m to boulders. A 6m pitch is immediately followed by a 10m drop to a sloping boulder floor. From the end of this, a 5.5m drop reaches a longer boulder slope, which leads into a canyon at 90&deg;. Down this is a longer pitch split into 10 and 10.5m sections by a small ledge, landing on a very large boulder. Over the boulder are two ways on.</p><p>Through a squeeze is a shaft 10m deep to floor with <b>continuing hole and a further shaft to one side, neither of which were descended, despite a draught coming out through the squeeze</b>.</p><p>The way followed is a 5m pitch from the big boulder, to a boulder false floor. At the end of this, the roof rises into a high aven and an 11m pitch drops to a flat boulder floor next to another huge block. A hole down gives a 7m drop next to stacked rocks and a way on across boulders leads to a final 8m pitch.</p><p>Forward over boulders passes under another high aven from which water falls. A short climb down leads to where this water disappears into a scrofulous slot, at a depth of 95m.</p><p>The cave is in a key position, almost directly above the Breeze Block area of <a href=""161/chile.htm"">Chile,</a> in Kaninchenh&ouml;hle. However, these passages lie between 250 and 300m below the 140 entrance, so this is probably not a potential easy way in.",,,,,,"? grade 3.  In 1983 logbook",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"gps98.140","gps00.140",,,"1796m",,,"South of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel - 126m on 194&deg; from summit.</p><p>47&deg; 40' 41"" N 13&deg; 48' 58"" E","From Top Camp, climb the ""high"" route towards 161. Just past the highest point, join a traverse round the Schwarzmooskogel heading south and eventually more west. If you pick the right level, this passes the large open shaft of 140. Alternatively, the cave may be approached from the summit (point 1843) though various cliffs make this approach difficult.",,,
 141,"1/S =",,,,"smkridge/141.htm",,,"Schwa H&ouml;hle 141",,,"2b","CUCC 1982, 1983",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p141",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"On the hillside above Windloch (Kat.32).",,"A large non-draughting entrance, not pushed, appears to contain an 80m pitch in a narrow rift. Described in a later journal as -30m.",,"painted number ""131"" in red"
 142,"6/T/S x",,"40n",,"smkridge/142.htm",,,"Schwa H&ouml;hle 142",,,"2a","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1982-85</li><li>Arge/CUCC 1996</li></ul><p>","Yet another entrance to <a href=""41.htm"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>, with two points of connection, and also the first point of connection with Schwabenschacht, a similar cave explored by <a href=""http://arge.itvd.uni-stuttgart.de/"">Arbeitsgemeinschaft H&ouml;hle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.</a>. 142 contains a very large chamber, imaginatively named <b>The Big Chamber</b> reached by a 34m pitch from a point adjacent to the connection. A <a href=""41/off41.htm#ent142"">full description</a> of 142 (but not 78) is one of the components of the Stellerwegh&ouml;hle guidebook, just an overview is given here.</p><p>Note: With apparent perversity, the Austrians have numbered this as 115e in their Kataster. This is likely to give rise to immense confusion in the long term as more caves are connected, and numbers on entrances cannot readily be altered (owing to the obscurity of their location and inaccessibility from within the system).</p><p>After an initial small tube, the cave opens into passages very similar to those in Schwabenschacht and the upper levels of Stellerwegh&ouml;hle. Descent of some of the steep ramps to the right of the main way on may provide further connections into the main cave (and one may have already done so). However, staying high leads through tubes to an inobvious junction. Left is the connection to 78, whilst right leads immediately to the head of a pitch into the <b>Big Chamber</b> - a popular name in the system. A route from this chamber leads to the foot of an 18m pitch in the entrance series of <a href=""41.htm"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>, and a more obscure route through boulders from the head of the Big Chamber pitch leads to the same place.",,,,,"In dataset","CUCC plan from surveys 1982-1985, here in several sections:</p><ul><li><a href=""41/142ent.png"">Entrance area</a></li><li><a href=""41/142bc.png"">Big Chamber</a></li><li><a href=""41/142-41.png"">Stellerweg connection</a>...</li></ul><p>","smk-system.svx",,,,,,"this entrance to the main system really should have a name.",,,"p142",,,"Nils",,,81218.2,35770.4,"1615.1m",,,,"Hack up the hillside behind <a href=""../noinfo/smkridge/32.htm"">Windloch</a> (Kat.32).",,,"The entrance was prominently numbered '132' in red but this was finally changed in 1996 after the connection to <a href=""../noinfo/smkridge/78.htm"">Schwabenschacht</a> (1623-78)"
 143,"3/S +",,,,"smkridge/143.htm",,,"Wei&szlig;e Warze Schacht I",,,"2a","CUCC 1983, 1984 ","The first pitch starts after a short climb down boulders. From here light may be seen entering from another entrance 143b. The pitch of 20m lands on a small ledge and a short freeclimb leads to a traverse over wedged blocks. The next pitch of 10m is rigged over the edge of the last of these and brings one to a balcony at the start of a 23m shaft. Another clean, almost circular shaft (19m) follows, to a climb of 6m down wedged boulders. The passage now narrows to a small vadose canyon with a stream in it, but soon turns vertical at an 8m pitch, followed quickly by one of 18m. At the foot of this final shaft, the stream flows down a rift, approximately 10m deep, but too narrow to follow. Much hammering here achieved little progress, but could be heard clearly in passages leading from above the Big Pitch in <a href=""41/41.htm#bigpitch"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>.",,,,,"In dataset","? grade 5","caves/143/143.svx","182m","124m","36m",,,"The above name is provisional, since its not really my prerogative to name it, but it should have a name really.",,,"p143",,"p143x","Nils",,,,,,,,"The Nipple, (aka ""Wei&szlig;e Warze"")",,"The square shaped entrance lies just below (22m vertically at 34m on 158&deg;) the nipple at the end of the ridge running SSW from Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel.",,
diff --git a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc
index e27f630e0..6db3748e4 100644
Binary files a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc and b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc differ