From 68bf1b5f170b53994d864d5117103dde094d29a8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: dave This page lists the lengths, depths and horizontal extents of those caves on
the plateau for which we have survey centerline data. At present, that's only
-79 out of 250 or so, but the missing ones are mostly very small and obscure;
+81 out of 250 or so, but the missing ones are mostly very small and obscure;
the notable exceptions are some caves explored by other groups (35, LA25,
BS17), and CUCC caves 71, 76, 92, 96 and 97. Of the latter 76 (by far the most
significant of these) is in the process of being re-explored, and the figures
@@ -54,7 +54,9 @@ caves88 Lärchenschacht 1775.0 211.0 400.7 90 Bräu Schacht 90 13.0 12.6 3.4
+91 Bräu Schacht 91 15.0 14.5 3.9 105 Plateau Schacht 105 40.0 38.8 4.5
+107 Gemshöhle 593.1 283.4 76.5 108 Schwa-Höhle 108 27.0 26.2 6.5 113 Sonnenstrahlhöhle 520.9 205.6 90.9 115 Schnellzughöhle 4720.2 738.6 1047.2
@@ -76,7 +78,7 @@ caves116 Kleine Eishöhle 221.9 39.5 60.6
Until recently, it has been difficult to come close to a comprehensive survey or even a good estimate of the length of the system because of a lack of contact and some misunderstanding between the groups involved. However, in 1997 a chance encounter (at the International Congress) by Wookey with Denis Motte, of the G.S.Clerval, led to renewed contacts with one group who explored this area, and Thilo Müller of ARGE has contacted the leaders of other groups and obtained all the rest of the 1980s information that survives. This is being merged into a coherent set of information which will guide necessary resurvey work to complete the picture.
Stellerweghöhle in turn is connected to Schwabenschacht which was over 7km at the time and exploration continues. This must make the combined system at least 19 km long. We have seen figures quoted as high as 25km, but this may involve some double-counting, given the uncertainties involved. Arge's estimate (entirely from extant survey data) was 22.7 km after summer 1999.","Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle is an extensive cave over 1600m long before 1983, extended to 2500m by a German group by 1985. The system is mainly horizontal, though tackle is needed to explore it fully, and crampons are necessary in parts, because of the substantial quantities of ice in the cave. Was extended by the Germans who worked in the area in the early eighties, who suggested then that there was potential for extension vertically. Subsequently linked via a 30m pitch to Lärchenschacht (1623/88) which in turn was connected to the Stellerweghöhlensystem, giving no increase in depth if the laser-rangefound altitude is correct rather than the old kataster one, which seems likely.
From 'Längsten und Tiefsten Hohlen in Österreich', translated by Wookey and Thilo:
The cave is on the southeastern slopes of the Vorderen Schwarzmooskogel (1843) developed in Dachsteinkalk. From seven partly shaft-like entrance points, a huge, flat-floored level with impressive ice formations can be approached. The Schneevulkanhalle at the northern end is the biggest ice-bearing chamber in middle Europe.
Four entrances lead into the central area. A 40m shaft from the Top Entrance 'Oberen Eingang' breaks into the ice-decorated 'Altausseer Halle'. To the west from here via a 25m ramp accessing 'Schneehalle' leads both to entrance 2 and the connecting gallery from the ice-bearing 'Thalhammerhalle', that can be entered from entrances 3 and 4 too. South of the Schnee and Altausseer Halles, the 'Teufelberger Halle' connects, the bottom of which contains an ice lake. A wide passage with side shafts goes southsouthwest to 'Hans-Pfandl-Halle'. The east connected room, also reached by a 23m high chimney (entrance 7), is divided into two by a high block barrier. The 'Flusstunnel' south from here ends blocked.
From the Altausseer Halle, a lofty passage with ice figures heads off NNE. The continuation is the 'Halle des Schiefen Turms', where the 'Wahnsinnschächte' branches off on the west. It was thought that this was blocked by ice. However, over a wall of ice one reaches the 130 by 75 by 50 m Schneevulkanhalle, on the eastern wall of which rises a steep snowslope flowing from the 'Königsschachts' (entrance 6). The chamber with its very impressive ice formations can also be reached via the 'Brennerbeselschluf' (entrance 5). At its northern end a climb reveals the easterly-running 'Kalten Gang' and the parallel 'Spinnenfriedhof'.
The principal objective of both pushing and tourist trips is the huge ice chamber of Schneevulkanhalle, which requires some serious ice work to reach from the older entrances in the middle of the system. Instead, follow the description to the ""new"" entrance (Brennerbeselschluf, 40e), with a somewhat limited area to get changed, perched between the icy blast from the cave and whatever the Austrian weather is offering.
The entrance is not walk-in, and low crawling in the face of the icy draught starts at once. A small descending tube (somewhat muddy - irritating in crampons!) leads in about 20m to a short climb down into larger (walking/stooping) passage 'Geröllgang. This goes downhill to a scramble up. This was totally ice-covered in 1997 and 1998, but not 1999 or 2000 and has a fixed rope (VfHO-installed), which may be buried in ice at somewhat critical points - a certain amount of care is needed if chipping it out with an ice-axe and gloves really are needed!
Partway up this slope is a space on the left [C0000-40-05 A], including a pitch in the floor. At the far end of this space, a short crawl and a grovel down through boulders where a stream comes in from above both choke. The pitch is a c3, p20, p30 - the last part being very wet in early summer. Leading to Schotterland.
Survey data also suggests a passage off to the right of the iceslope for 20m or so.
Above the scramble up is a short traverse, also rather interesting when covered in hard ice (and also protected by a fixed rope which had to be dug out in 1998). A steeply ascending passage to the L holds a quantity of particularly scrofulous rope (presumably a previous fixed rope). This can be climbed ~10m until it gets too vertical. It draughts. Beyond the ice is a steep snow/ice slope down into the huge Schneevulkanhalle. It is strongly recommended to equip this with a properly rigged SRT rope rather than anything less - the cave has seen a number of accidents, some fatal. Although the slope looks like soft snow, it is a layer of coarsely crystalline hard névé over solid ice. In parts it is almost impossible to kick steps into, whilst in others it offers only minimal purchase for crampon points. Conditions no doubt vary with the season as well as with position on the slope and the year. Tackle required: 50m rope, crampons. There is one bolt at the top, for a traverse line to two bolts off to the R in the roof where the snow-slope proper starts. Sometimes the traverse area is full of snow and an ice-screw or ice-axe rebelay/deviation (club first ? in 1989) may be needed. A deviation (from rock) at the head of the steep section was found adequate in 1998.
The 50m Königschacht (40f) entrance is the source of the snow slope and comes in here. It is often full of snow but was open in 1999 and so was surveyed (by ARGE).
At the bottom is the main chamber from which the pitch does indeed look like a snow-covered volcanic cone. Most of the floor area is ice-covered and only a slight slope is necessary to make crampons vital here. Most of the chamber is filled with ice formations up to 15m high (end of season). Those with two ice-tools can climb almost anything in the chamber, though the formations are no doubt rather more spectacular and fragile in spring or early summer. Formation-ice can also shatter very easily as melting occurs between component crystals later in the season, so it is probably safer for climbers to stick to hard névé. Ways on are mostly reached by steeper slopes that definitely require ice-gear and can be quite unnerving approached from above. Note that the slopes are usually hard ice, ice-axe-braking after a slip is not an option - lifeline or don't fall !
Starting from the pitch (facing outwards from the slope), heading round the chamber to the left leads over a large flat area of ice to where a gap between ice and rock [C0000-40-01 A] drops 10m (2 bolts, one added 1999) into large passage Elefantengang.
Right next to it is an icefall coming in from above [C0000-40-02 C] (Apparently explored by GSCB in early 80s for ~40m). 40m round the wall of the chamber is a rubble run-in, iced on the top half. This was climbed by Haines (1998) and Atkinson (1999), as well as the GSCB. At the top is a wet boulder choke that definately doesn't go, but the GSCB plan shows a narrow rift on the right marked 'tight'.
Halfway up this slope on the left is the narrow entrance to Persistence of Vision.
20m further round another couple of icefalls come in. Both are about 8-10m and vertical [C0000-40-03 A]. GSCB plan shows they have climbed up here to find a 20m pitch beyond into narrow rift. Their survey doesn't make it clear how it ends. CUCC bolted up the left side of the left icefall in 2000 to find an ice water duck leading to a pitch series (Mission Impossible). The duck was dry in 2001, but back again in 2002.
50m further round (downslope) the ice drops away steeply under the wall. A line is advisable for the descent. 20m down, the ice slope peters out giving way to sand and rocks. At the end here is a very strongly draughting hole [C0000-40-04 B]. This appears too tight, but survey data shows this is where Kalten Gang and Spinnefriedhof are (VfHM, 1984). To the right at the foot of the slope closes down with rocks and ice - it would probably connect with Plastic Hell. A few metres up from the bottom of the slope on the left hand (N) wall is a gap between the ice and rock leading into a large chamber [A1998-40-05 B] (reported by Robert Winkler).
Back in Schneevulkanhalle, another 10m clockwise round the chamber is another, steeper iceslope. A rope is definitely needed for this. This is the way to Plastic Hell.
Beyond and above are more thin icefalls coming from high in the ceiling - trying to climb these would be bonkers - the debris from the collapse of some of them is all around.
The foot of the piss-wet pitch opens out into very large triangular passage. You can go NE about 35m until it chokes (a good draught comes out of one hoplessly choked corner) or SW 20 to a T-junction. Right (W) is Kleiner keller. Left, ducking under the low wall, is Schotterland.
Kleiner keller is about 50m on huge passage to where the end is choked with glacial fill and a waterspout comes in the from the roof 3m up. A sling ladder makes it possible to ascend the waterspout - you can even doing it without getting very wet, as the spout is unusually well-concentrated, and thus avoidable. This comes into an E-W rift, with the water coming from the E end. It can be ascended in both directions at various traverse levels for about 30m, but the top appears choked at all points. The top is probably very close to the floor of Elephantengang.
The old Munich cavers' data suggests that there is a passage off kleiner keller that we missed - which seems hard to believe, but maybe it is worth another visit?
Schotterland is more enormous passage (10m wide) going SSE, presumably schotterland, due to the flooring of small rocks. A ramp goes up steeply on the L after 30m. It closes down after 40m. Ahead the passage slowly narrows until it chokes at the end - probably very close to the surface.",,,,,"In dataset",,"smk-system.svx","54000m","1032m","2941m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"SSE of Vd. Schwarzmooskogel and ENE of a large basin in the hillside which often contains a lot of snow. Roughly a 450m NNE of Sonnenstrahlhöhle - CUCC's furthest east permanent survey station.","From the Bergrestaurant, take path 201, ignoring the left turn to the plateau at Egglgrube. Pass the junction path left to Kratzer and continue until a red upper-case Omega is seen in the middle of the path, marking Kat. 28 (we think).
There is a well-marked (cairns and red paint spots/arrows) branch path here. Follow this for about half an hour to the back of the limestone knoll known as ""The Nipple"" (and Weisse Warz and bunter's bulge). Things to note: first there is a wire traverse then you pass the lightninged tree in a sizeable valley. (Opposite this tree is the point you would turn left for Schwabenscacht). Shortly after that a pair of red arrows point in opposite directions. Go steeply uphill here doubling back slightly, rather than the more obvious straight on. Turn right about 40m beyond the nipple and head across the limestone for a narrow gully. After a hundred metres or so new red paint marks appear and take you to 40a.
A very large cave entrance, 20 minutes further on, was the German's (Munich) bivouac, and a few minutes later, a strongly draughting (out in summer) tube about 5m in diameter is the main entrance (""Hauptportal"" - 40a). This was also the site of an old French bivouac, but must have been very cold. Continue along past some big holes and slightly downhill (one 5m step down). After about 180m(?) you reach the area of numerous entrances in a row There is the small Grüner Eingang (40s), 2 larger entrances ('Eistunnel' and 'Nichts50'), a small blocked entrance, and finally, where the path ends abruptly and unambiguously the ""new"" entrance (40e, Brennerbeserlschluf), also strongly draughting. This is between one and a half and two hours from the car park.",,,,,, +40,"7/S/T/E x","a–s",,"yes","noinfo/smkridge/40.htm",,,"Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle","Schwarzmooskogelhöhlensystem","see also CUCC discoveries in Eishöhle","2b","The main passages as far as Elephantengang were explored by 1938. Since then a variety of groups have worked here finding numerous extensions, of which Schneevulkanhalle is the most significant.
Until recently, it has been difficult to come close to a comprehensive survey or even a good estimate of the length of the system because of a lack of contact and some misunderstanding between the groups involved. However, in 1997 a chance encounter (at the International Congress) by Wookey with Denis Motte, of the G.S.Clerval, led to renewed contacts with one group who explored this area, and Thilo Müller of ARGE has contacted the leaders of other groups and obtained all the rest of the 1980s information that survives. This is being merged into a coherent set of information which will guide necessary resurvey work to complete the picture.
Stellerweghöhle in turn is connected to Schwabenschacht which was over 7km at the time and exploration continues. This must make the combined system at least 19 km long. We have seen figures quoted as high as 25km, but this may involve some double-counting, given the uncertainties involved. Arge's estimate (entirely from extant survey data) was 22.7 km after summer 1999.","Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle is an extensive cave over 1600m long before 1983, extended to 2500m by a German group by 1985. The system is mainly horizontal, though tackle is needed to explore it fully, and crampons are necessary in parts, because of the substantial quantities of ice in the cave. Was extended by the Germans who worked in the area in the early eighties, who suggested then that there was potential for extension vertically. Subsequently linked via a 30m pitch to Lärchenschacht (1623/88) which in turn was connected to the Stellerweghöhlensystem, giving no increase in depth if the laser-rangefound altitude is correct rather than the old kataster one, which seems likely.
From 'Längsten und Tiefsten Hohlen in Österreich', translated by Wookey and Thilo:
The cave is on the southeastern slopes of the Vorderen Schwarzmooskogel (1843) developed in Dachsteinkalk. From seven partly shaft-like entrance points, a huge, flat-floored level with impressive ice formations can be approached. The Schneevulkanhalle at the northern end is the biggest ice-bearing chamber in middle Europe.
Four entrances lead into the central area. A 40m shaft from the Top Entrance 'Oberen Eingang' breaks into the ice-decorated 'Altausseer Halle'. To the west from here via a 25m ramp accessing 'Schneehalle' leads both to entrance 2 and the connecting gallery from the ice-bearing 'Thalhammerhalle', that can be entered from entrances 3 and 4 too. South of the Schnee and Altausseer Halles, the 'Teufelberger Halle' connects, the bottom of which contains an ice lake. A wide passage with side shafts goes southsouthwest to 'Hans-Pfandl-Halle'. The east connected room, also reached by a 23m high chimney (entrance 7), is divided into two by a high block barrier. The 'Flusstunnel' south from here ends blocked.
From the Altausseer Halle, a lofty passage with ice figures heads off NNE. The continuation is the 'Halle des Schiefen Turms', where the 'Wahnsinnschächte' branches off on the west. It was thought that this was blocked by ice. However, over a wall of ice one reaches the 130 by 75 by 50 m Schneevulkanhalle, on the eastern wall of which rises a steep snowslope flowing from the 'Königsschachts' (entrance 6). The chamber with its very impressive ice formations can also be reached via the 'Brennerbeselschluf' (entrance 5). At its northern end a climb reveals the easterly-running 'Kalten Gang' and the parallel 'Spinnenfriedhof'.
The principal objective of both pushing and tourist trips is the huge ice chamber of Schneevulkanhalle, which requires some serious ice work to reach from the older entrances in the middle of the system. Instead, follow the description to the ""new"" entrance (Brennerbeselschluf, 40e), with a somewhat limited area to get changed, perched between the icy blast from the cave and whatever the Austrian weather is offering.
The entrance is not walk-in, and low crawling in the face of the icy draught starts at once. A small descending tube (somewhat muddy - irritating in crampons!) leads in about 20m to a short climb down into larger (walking/stooping) passage 'Geröllgang. This goes downhill to a scramble up. This was totally ice-covered in 1997 and 1998, but not 1999 or 2000 and has a fixed rope (VfHO-installed), which may be buried in ice at somewhat critical points - a certain amount of care is needed if chipping it out with an ice-axe and gloves really are needed!
Partway up this slope is a space on the left [C0000-40-05 A], including a pitch in the floor. At the far end of this space, a short crawl and a grovel down through boulders where a stream comes in from above both choke. The pitch is a c3, p20, p30 - the last part being very wet in early summer. Leading to Schotterland.
Survey data also suggests a passage off to the right of the iceslope for 20m or so.
Above the scramble up is a short traverse, also rather interesting when covered in hard ice (and also protected by a fixed rope which had to be dug out in 1998). A steeply ascending passage to the L holds a quantity of particularly scrofulous rope (presumably a previous fixed rope). This can be climbed ~10m until it gets too vertical. It draughts. Beyond the ice is a steep snow/ice slope down into the huge Schneevulkanhalle. It is strongly recommended to equip this with a properly rigged SRT rope rather than anything less - the cave has seen a number of accidents, some fatal. Although the slope looks like soft snow, it is a layer of coarsely crystalline hard névé over solid ice. In parts it is almost impossible to kick steps into, whilst in others it offers only minimal purchase for crampon points. Conditions no doubt vary with the season as well as with position on the slope and the year. Tackle required: 50m rope, crampons. There is one bolt at the top, for a traverse line to two bolts off to the R in the roof where the snow-slope proper starts. Sometimes the traverse area is full of snow and an ice-screw or ice-axe rebelay/deviation (club first ? in 1989) may be needed. A deviation (from rock) at the head of the steep section was found adequate in 1998.
The 50m Königschacht (40f) entrance is the source of the snow slope and comes in here. It is often full of snow but was open in 1999 and so was surveyed (by ARGE).
At the bottom is the main chamber from which the pitch does indeed look like a snow-covered volcanic cone. Most of the floor area is ice-covered and only a slight slope is necessary to make crampons vital here. Most of the chamber is filled with ice formations up to 15m high (end of season). Those with two ice-tools can climb almost anything in the chamber, though the formations are no doubt rather more spectacular and fragile in spring or early summer. Formation-ice can also shatter very easily as melting occurs between component crystals later in the season, so it is probably safer for climbers to stick to hard névé. Ways on are mostly reached by steeper slopes that definitely require ice-gear and can be quite unnerving approached from above. Note that the slopes are usually hard ice, ice-axe-braking after a slip is not an option - lifeline or don't fall !
Starting from the pitch (facing outwards from the slope), heading round the chamber to the left leads over a large flat area of ice to where a gap between ice and rock [C0000-40-01 A] drops 10m (2 bolts, one added 1999) into large passage Elefantengang.
Right next to it is an icefall coming in from above [C0000-40-02 C] (Apparently explored by GSCB in early 80s for ~40m). 40m round the wall of the chamber is a rubble run-in, iced on the top half. This was climbed by Haines (1998) and Atkinson (1999), as well as the GSCB. At the top is a wet boulder choke that definately doesn't go, but the GSCB plan shows a narrow rift on the right marked 'tight'.
Halfway up this slope on the left is the narrow entrance to Persistence of Vision.
20m further round another couple of icefalls come in. Both are about 8-10m and vertical [C0000-40-03 A]. GSCB plan shows they have climbed up here to find a 20m pitch beyond into narrow rift. Their survey doesn't make it clear how it ends. CUCC bolted up the left side of the left icefall in 2000 to find an ice water duck leading to a pitch series (Mission Impossible). The duck was dry in 2001, but back again in 2002.
50m further round (downslope) the ice drops away steeply under the wall. A line is advisable for the descent. 20m down, the ice slope peters out giving way to sand and rocks. At the end here is a very strongly draughting hole [C0000-40-04 B]. This appears too tight, but survey data shows this is where Kalten Gang and Spinnefriedhof are (VfHM, 1984). To the right at the foot of the slope closes down with rocks and ice - it would probably connect with Plastic Hell. A few metres up from the bottom of the slope on the left hand (N) wall is a gap between the ice and rock leading into a large chamber [A1998-40-05 B] (reported by Robert Winkler).
Back in Schneevulkanhalle, another 10m clockwise round the chamber is another, steeper iceslope. A rope is definitely needed for this. This is the way to Plastic Hell.
Beyond and above are more thin icefalls coming from high in the ceiling - trying to climb these would be bonkers - the debris from the collapse of some of them is all around.
The foot of the piss-wet pitch opens out into very large triangular passage. You can go NE about 35m until it chokes (a good draught comes out of one hoplessly choked corner) or SW 20 to a T-junction. Right (W) is Kleiner keller. Left, ducking under the low wall, is Schotterland.
Kleiner keller is about 50m on huge passage to where the end is choked with glacial fill and a waterspout comes in the from the roof 3m up. A sling ladder makes it possible to ascend the waterspout - you can even doing it without getting very wet, as the spout is unusually well-concentrated, and thus avoidable. This comes into an E-W rift, with the water coming from the E end. It can be ascended in both directions at various traverse levels for about 30m, but the top appears choked at all points. The top is probably very close to the floor of Elephantengang.
The old Munich cavers' data suggests that there is a passage off kleiner keller that we missed - which seems hard to believe, but maybe it is worth another visit?
Schotterland is more enormous passage (10m wide) going SSE, presumably schotterland, due to the flooring of small rocks. A ramp goes up steeply on the L after 30m. It closes down after 40m. Ahead the passage slowly narrows until it chokes at the end - probably very close to the surface.",,,,,"In dataset",,"smk-system.svx","5257m (SMK system total 54000m)","262m (SMK system total 1032m)","2941m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"SSE of Vd. Schwarzmooskogel and ENE of a large basin in the hillside which often contains a lot of snow. Roughly a 450m NNE of Sonnenstrahlhöhle - CUCC's furthest east permanent survey station.","From the Bergrestaurant, take path 201, ignoring the left turn to the plateau at Egglgrube. Pass the junction path left to Kratzer and continue until a red upper-case Omega is seen in the middle of the path, marking Kat. 28 (we think).
There is a well-marked (cairns and red paint spots/arrows) branch path here. Follow this for about half an hour to the back of the limestone knoll known as ""The Nipple"" (and Weisse Warz and bunter's bulge). Things to note: first there is a wire traverse then you pass the lightninged tree in a sizeable valley. (Opposite this tree is the point you would turn left for Schwabenscacht). Shortly after that a pair of red arrows point in opposite directions. Go steeply uphill here doubling back slightly, rather than the more obvious straight on. Turn right about 40m beyond the nipple and head across the limestone for a narrow gully. After a hundred metres or so new red paint marks appear and take you to 40a.
A very large cave entrance, 20 minutes further on, was the German's (Munich) bivouac, and a few minutes later, a strongly draughting (out in summer) tube about 5m in diameter is the main entrance (""Hauptportal"" - 40a). This was also the site of an old French bivouac, but must have been very cold. Continue along past some big holes and slightly downhill (one 5m step down). After about 180m(?) you reach the area of numerous entrances in a row There is the small Grüner Eingang (40s), 2 larger entrances ('Eistunnel' and 'Nichts50'), a small blocked entrance, and finally, where the path ends abruptly and unambiguously the ""new"" entrance (40e, Brennerbeserlschluf), also strongly draughting. This is between one and a half and two hours from the car park.",,,,,, 40,,"a",,"entrance","noinfo/smkridge/40a.htm",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Oberer Eingang",,"p40a","it is laser point 14",,"laser point",,,81700.9294,36459.4949,"1689.6784m",,,,"From the Bergrestaurant, take path 201, ignoring the left turn to the plateau at Egglgrube. Pass the junction path left to Kratzer and continue until a red upper-case Omega is seen in the middle of the path, marking Kat. 28 (we think). There is a well-marked (cairns and red paint spots/arrows) branch path here. Follow this for about half an hour to the back of the limestone knoll known as ""The Nipple"" (and Weisse Warz and bunter's bulge). Things to note: first there is a wire traverse then you pass the lightninged tree in a sizeable valley. (Opposite this tree is the point you would turn left for Schwabenscacht). Shortly after that a pair of red arrows point in opposite directions. Go steeply uphill here doubling back slightly, rather than the more obvious straight on. Turn right about 40m beyond the nipple and head across the limestone for a narrow gully. After a hundred metres or so new red paint marks appear and take you to 40a. A very large cave entrance, 20 minutes further on, was the German's (Munich) bivouac, and a few minutes later, a strongly draughting (out in summer) tube about 5m in diameter is the main entrance (""Hauptportal"" - 40a).","a strongly draughting (out in summer) tube about 5m in diameter",,"Tag (?)",,"Surveyed","Marked entrance thought to be 40a" 40,,"b",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Schneeschacht ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Tag","Tag placed eary in 2002 expo","?", 40,,"c",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Reichenvaterschacht ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"?", @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ 40,,"q","78c","entrance",,"noinfo/smkridge/78.htm","c",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 40,,"r","78d","entrance",,"noinfo/smkridge/78.htm","d",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 40,,"s",,"last entrance","smkridge/40/40s.html",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Grüner Eingang",,"p40s","?",,"Surface survey",,,81895,36567,"1651m",,,,,,"
| 40s entrance area | Closeup of entrance |
Photos © Wookey 2002",,,"Surveyed", -41,"7/S/T/E x","a b",,"yes","smkridge/41.htm",,,"Stellerweghöhle",,,"2a","Length of CUCC's part is approx 5.75 km, while the Germans had about 6 km in 88 in 1987, and the French (?) connected the Eishöhle (2.5 km or more) in the same year. This should make the system about 14-15 km all told before 1996. The Stuttgart group, Arbeitsgemeinschaft Höhle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V., have, early in 1996, connected their cave Schwabenschacht (1623-78) into a passage in 1623/142, one way into the system. This adds no new depth, but considerably increases the overall length. ARGE have also been doing much useful resurvey and some exploration, bringing their estimate of the total length to 22.7 km in 1999.","As the full guidebook description is understandably quite big and is still evolving, just an overview is given here.
Sub-horizontal passages lead through steeply-hading rifts from this entrance. A lower route was originally explored by a German group before CUCC's first visit, and remains poorly documented and not fully explored. The higher route, explored by CUCC, leads past connections to 142, another CUCC find. Passages trend downhill to reach the Big Pitch of 100m vertical.
Lärchenhöhle connects at the bottom of the Big Pitch, and a streamway leads down. A roof passage connects to CUCC's 144, and another leads on to smaller pitches to the Big Rift, dropping steeply down several pitches to reach Junction Chamber with connections to Schnellzughöhle (115).
The route to 115 also leads to Pete's Purgatory, 800m of awful streamway to the Confluence, much more easily reached by large fossil passages starting with Dartford Tunnel from Junction Chamber. The Confluence is around half the depth of the system, and marks a transition to a single linear streamway leading to great depth, a feature currently unique in the known caves of the area.
The streamway is interrupted by a bypassable sump and several, mainly short, pitches, before a low-airspace canal appears to mark the end. However, a low duck can be passed to reach a deep and very wet shaft Orgasm Chasm which drops to the final muddy passage and short pitch to a dismal and deep rift sump.
The sump is 898m below the 41a entrance, and is at just about the same level as Altausseer See, in whose underwater risings the Stellerweg water is presumed to emerge. The scope for greater depth here seems minimal, but connections to various higher entrances have increased this to c971m, with perhaps a little more potential still to realise (optimistically up to 1058m).",,,,,,,"smk-system.svx",,"Depth from 41b to sump 898m - Overall vertical range 971m in the 41 - 115 - 142 - 144 system. Connections to Lärchenschacht (88) and on to Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle (40) do not increase this.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"
","Follow Stögerweg to Windloch and then a hundred metres or so further. When the path starts to drop steeply, backtrack 10m (where there should be a permanent survey station 'P4') and start to hack up the hillside. Orange paint flashes on the rock should be visible, and will lead after 300m or so to a cave entrance at the head of a gully. If it isn't blowing the trees around in the cold air, it isn't the right place!",,,,,, +41,"7/S/T/E x","a b",,"yes","smkridge/41.htm",,,"Stellerweghöhle",,,"2a","Length of CUCC's part is approx 5.75 km, while the Germans had about 6 km in 88 in 1987, and the French (?) connected the Eishöhle (2.5 km or more) in the same year. This should make the system about 14-15 km all told before 1996. The Stuttgart group, Arbeitsgemeinschaft Höhle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V., have, early in 1996, connected their cave Schwabenschacht (1623-78) into a passage in 1623/142, one way into the system. This adds no new depth, but considerably increases the overall length. ARGE have also been doing much useful resurvey and some exploration, bringing their estimate of the total length to 22.7 km in 1999.","As the full guidebook description is understandably quite big and is still evolving, just an overview is given here.
Sub-horizontal passages lead through steeply-hading rifts from this entrance. A lower route was originally explored by a German group before CUCC's first visit, and remains poorly documented and not fully explored. The higher route, explored by CUCC, leads past connections to 142, another CUCC find. Passages trend downhill to reach the Big Pitch of 100m vertical.
Lärchenhöhle connects at the bottom of the Big Pitch, and a streamway leads down. A roof passage connects to CUCC's 144, and another leads on to smaller pitches to the Big Rift, dropping steeply down several pitches to reach Junction Chamber with connections to Schnellzughöhle (115).
The route to 115 also leads to Pete's Purgatory, 800m of awful streamway to the Confluence, much more easily reached by large fossil passages starting with Dartford Tunnel from Junction Chamber. The Confluence is around half the depth of the system, and marks a transition to a single linear streamway leading to great depth, a feature currently unique in the known caves of the area.
The streamway is interrupted by a bypassable sump and several, mainly short, pitches, before a low-airspace canal appears to mark the end. However, a low duck can be passed to reach a deep and very wet shaft Orgasm Chasm which drops to the final muddy passage and short pitch to a dismal and deep rift sump.
The sump is 898m below the 41a entrance, and is at just about the same level as Altausseer See, in whose underwater risings the Stellerweg water is presumed to emerge. The scope for greater depth here seems minimal, but connections to various higher entrances have increased this to c971m, with perhaps a little more potential still to realise (optimistically up to 1058m).",,,,,,,"smk-system.svx","8088m (SMK system total 54000m)","357m (SMK system total 1032m)",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"
","Follow Stögerweg to Windloch and then a hundred metres or so further. When the path starts to drop steeply, backtrack 10m (where there should be a permanent survey station 'P4') and start to hack up the hillside. Orange paint flashes on the rock should be visible, and will lead after 300m or so to a cave entrance at the head of a gully. If it isn't blowing the trees around in the cold air, it isn't the right place!",,,,,, 41,,"a","40j","entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p041a","station at entrance 41a, left side of main entrance","p041ax","Nils",,,81244,35827,"1621m",,,,,,,,,"Surveyed", 41,,"b","40k","last entrance","smkridge/41b.htm",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p41b","Surface survey",,,81258,35863,"1635m",,,"The upper entrance (41b) is in a large rift about 30m to the east of the lower (41a) which is a strongly outward-draughting tube in a shattered gully.",,,,"Paint","Number painted in red","Surveyed", 42,"1/S =",,,,"noinfo/smkridge/42.htm",,,"Wasserschacht",,,"2a","Sektion Ausseerland, 1952 ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1700m",,,"SSW of Vd. Schwarzmooskogel, not far (50m vertical) up the hill from Stellerweghöhle, so we have probably rediscovered it and renumbered it. ",,,,,,"Lost", @@ -95,12 +95,12 @@ 73,"2/S =",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/73.htm",,,"Suppentellerschacht",,,4,"
","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 Fledermaushöhle (Kat.71).",,,,,,"Lost", 74,"1/T +",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/74.htm",,,"Schneckenhaushöhle",,,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 Fledermaushöhle (Kat. 71), on true right some way above bottom of valley. In the same entrance doline as Dr.Kerschner Höhle (Kat.35).",,,,,,"Lost","Probably =B5" 75,"2/T +",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/75.htm",,,"Wisenthöhle",,,4,"Edith Bednarik, 1977","This entrance connects with a second shaft just down valley. The Austrian article describing the cave says it is about 60m long, but this did not appear to be the case in 1990, since it seems to choke very quickly - perhaps digging would now be required to get in.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1680m",,,"Just south of Schwarzmoossattel, in the far upper reaches of Kratzertal. There is an obvious freeclimbable shaft/cave just down valley from the equally obvious shakehole/shaft labelled B4.",,,,"Paint","It is numbered twice, once very faded and once very badly run (last seen 1996): both numbers are needed to deduce (with difficulty) that this is indeed ""75"".","Refindable","Seen in 1990 and 1996 (by AERW?)" -76,"5/S/E x","main a b",,"yes","plateau/76/76.htm",,,"Eislufthöhle",,,"1d","CUCC 1977-79,2004","
",,"Question Mark List",,"The exploration is written up in many places:This last item, the only complete write up of 1977-79, appeared in Polish translation, and is published in the English original for the first time here.","Data for the sections covered so far by the resurvey project begun in 2004 can be downloaded as a .3d file or raw Survex data.","
The lower parts of the 1970s surveys are based on measurement of rope lengths and thus probably best categorised as Grade 2. The 2004 resurveyed depth for the taproom agrees closely with the 1970s surveys:
",,"The entrance is prominently numbered 106 which is the number we had allocated to it, but a description of the cave was published in the Belfry Bulletin, which is seen by Alfred Auer, who allocated his own number to it in advance of our report.",," " +76,"5/S/E x","main a b",,"yes","plateau/76/76.htm",,,"Eislufthöhle",,,"1d","CUCC 1977-79,2004","
",,"Question Mark List",,"The exploration is written up in many places:This last item, the only complete write up of 1977-79, appeared in Polish translation, and is published in the English original for the first time here.","Data for the sections covered so far by the resurvey project begun in 2004 can be downloaded as a .3d file or raw Survex data.","
The lower parts of the 1970s surveys are based on measurement of rope lengths and thus probably best categorised as Grade 2. The 2004 resurveyed depth for the taproom agrees closely with the 1970s surveys:
",,"The entrance is prominently numbered 106 which is the number we had allocated to it, but a description of the cave was published in the Belfry Bulletin, which is seen by Alfred Auer, who allocated his own number to it in advance of our report.",," " 76,,"main",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p76","entrance dotted triangle on 76",,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,,,,"Tag",,"Surveyed", 76,,"a",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p76a",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Tag",,"Surveyed", 76,,"b",,"last entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p76b",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Unmarked",,"Surveyed", 77,"1/S +",,,,"noinfo/egglgrub/77.htm",,,"Fichtenschacht",,,7,"Sektion Ausseerland/ Edith Bednarik, 1979",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1500m ",,,"North of Scharlingkar. Some way east of the Bergrestaurant, above the cliffs. 500m west of Egglgrubenalm.",,,,,,"Lost", -78,"5/S/t/E x","a–e",,"yes","noinfo/smkridge/78.htm",,,"Schwaben(schacht)höhle",,,"2a","Fred Vischer, 1980 (as far as 2/S/T)
Ongoing exploration by Arbeitsgemeinschaft Höhle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.","The cave is a complex of hading rifts and steep ramps with several deep points. The deepest point is near the southern limit of the system. A vertical series with pitches of 9m, 15m, 17m and 13m reaches Nägschtmol-Meander (1992), where the survey legs are all very short. This climbs slightly before heading south and dropping, passing Alexander der Große (a generally level side passage heading southwest to Leopardencanyon, apparently beyond the known passages in Schnellzughöhle) to der gute Abgang (the good lead). A 7m pitch and more steep descents end at a point almost directly above the assumed line of Pete's Purgatory in Schnellzug, maybe a third of the way to the Confluence from where it is abandoned for the Purgatory Bypass. This small streamway lies perhaps 120-130m below Schwabenschacht's deep point, but it is known that several unsurveyed fossil phreatic passages lie above this upstream part of the Purgatory, so a connection could be quite close.
This description is now quite out of date as it does not include the its connection, nor entrances c,d and e.",,,,,"In dataset",,"smk-system.svx","6.04km","289m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Entrances a and b are actually on the SW side of Vorder Schwarzmooskogel","Approached by the same route as for things to the east, as cliffs bar access from Kratzer. Follow the Stoger weg from Egglgrube, past the T-junction to Kratzer, and on until there is a red omega in the middle of the path (marking Kat. 28). Just before this, in a position with a better view, is a laser-rangefound point marked by a bolt with a painted circle round it.
Take the Eishöhle path, which starts from the omega, going left up the hillside. Follow this for a few minutes, past an awkward little traverse rigged with a steel cable and then a couple of minutes further. There is a very easily missed branch left just before the path traverses a ledge under an overhang in a cliff to its left in a relatively wide small valley. The landmark for this point is a dead (lightning) tree up on the right.
Take this left branch, and follow it (few landmarks, but it is a definite path, and there are cut branches in places). This path eventually climbs into impenetrable dwarf pine, to emerge at a small gravelly clearing and a doline, used as a bivouac site. The a and b entrances are just short distances away through the pine, the normally-used one being below a prominent larch tree. The other entrance is a long rift shaft. Both are impressive, though it is quite infeasible that anyone could ever have found them in the first place.",,,,,, +78,"5/S/t/E x","a–e",,"yes","noinfo/smkridge/78.htm",,,"Schwaben(schacht)höhle",,,"2a","Fred Vischer, 1980 (as far as 2/S/T)
Ongoing exploration by Arbeitsgemeinschaft Höhle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.","The cave is a complex of hading rifts and steep ramps with several deep points. The deepest point is near the southern limit of the system. A vertical series with pitches of 9m, 15m, 17m and 13m reaches Nägschtmol-Meander (1992), where the survey legs are all very short. This climbs slightly before heading south and dropping, passing Alexander der Große (a generally level side passage heading southwest to Leopardencanyon, apparently beyond the known passages in Schnellzughöhle) to der gute Abgang (the good lead). A 7m pitch and more steep descents end at a point almost directly above the assumed line of Pete's Purgatory in Schnellzug, maybe a third of the way to the Confluence from where it is abandoned for the Purgatory Bypass. This small streamway lies perhaps 120-130m below Schwabenschacht's deep point, but it is known that several unsurveyed fossil phreatic passages lie above this upstream part of the Purgatory, so a connection could be quite close.
This description is now quite out of date as it does not include the its connection, nor entrances c,d and e.",,,,,"In dataset",,"smk-system.svx","7781m","327m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Entrances a and b are actually on the SW side of Vorder Schwarzmooskogel","Approached by the same route as for things to the east, as cliffs bar access from Kratzer. Follow the Stoger weg from Egglgrube, past the T-junction to Kratzer, and on until there is a red omega in the middle of the path (marking Kat. 28). Just before this, in a position with a better view, is a laser-rangefound point marked by a bolt with a painted circle round it.
Take the Eishöhle path, which starts from the omega, going left up the hillside. Follow this for a few minutes, past an awkward little traverse rigged with a steel cable and then a couple of minutes further. There is a very easily missed branch left just before the path traverses a ledge under an overhang in a cliff to its left in a relatively wide small valley. The landmark for this point is a dead (lightning) tree up on the right.
Take this left branch, and follow it (few landmarks, but it is a definite path, and there are cut branches in places). This path eventually climbs into impenetrable dwarf pine, to emerge at a small gravelly clearing and a doline, used as a bivouac site. The a and b entrances are just short distances away through the pine, the normally-used one being below a prominent larch tree. The other entrance is a long rift shaft. Both are impressive, though it is quite infeasible that anyone could ever have found them in the first place.",,,,,, ,,"a","40o","entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Haupteingang",,"p78a",,,"Nils",,"gps00.78",81430,35731,"1666m",,,,,,,,,"Surveyed", ,,"b","40p","entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Klufteingang (E2)",,"p78b",,,"Nils",,,81417,35717,"1659m",,,,,,,,,"Surveyed", ,,"c","40q","entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Lost", @@ -217,9 +217,9 @@ ,,"b",,"last entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p171b",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,,,,"Paint (?)",,"Surveyed", 172,"1/T +",,"90/2",,"plateau/172.htm",,,"Plateau Höhle 90/2",,,"1a","Almost certainly seen before, but recorded CUCC 1990","Horizontal, walk-in phreatic tube dipping to S and trending 190°. 40m long, 4m wide, 1.5 to 2m high. Choked at end.",,,,,"In dataset","
Notes in 2000#34","caves/172/172.svx",,,,,,,"p172",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,"North of 171 along fault, on cliff facing north, 10m east of fault. HSK 063°, Schönberg cross 343°. Relocated from these bearings, which seem about right, in 1995.",,,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/2"" in red, changed to ""172"" in 1991. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance in 1995.","Surveyed", 173,"1/S +",,"90/3",,"plateau/173.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/3",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990","Lies along fracture line from 172 with several shafts connected by a narrow rift. Most of these are snow plugged - 173 also has a plug but this has shrunk and a large gap is visible around the edges. Fracture trends 024°, shaft is c20m deep and 7m diameter.",,,,,,,,,"C20m",,,,"t173",,,,"Surface survey",,,,,,"Bräuning Nase 191° (1995, 1990 record says 186°), Nipple 159°, Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel appears as two peaks, left hand one is 080° (1995, 1990 figure 082° unclear which peak), Bräuning Zinken 224° (1995, 1990:220°)",,,,,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/3"" in red, changed to ""173"" in 1991. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance in 1995.","Surveyed", -174,"1/S +",,"90/4",,"plateau/174.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/4",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990, descended by Adam ?","c 30m shaft, climbable for first 10m to rock bridge. Snow at bottom, but cobble floor also visible.",,,,,,,,,"C30m",,,,,,,,,,,,,"1665m (by altimeter set 1610 at Bergrestaurant)","Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel 088° (1995, 1990:087°) to right hand peak, Rightmost apparent peak of three on Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel 160° (1990), Bräuning Nase 188° (1995, 1990:189°), Bräuning Zinken 221° (1995, 1990:218°)",,"Situated on fracture bearing 044° which forms prominent banded cliff visible North of Top Camp on second low ridge.","This cave is quite hard to find, even though the bearings get you very close. It is just below a cliff, which is almost the highest bit of cliff in the vicinity. The entrance is almost on the (E-W) axis on the ridge and the cliff faces SE. The number is easily missed.",,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/4"" in red, changed to ""174"" in 1991. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance in 1995.","Refindable","Refound in 1995. AERW knows where it is" -175,"1/S -",,"90/5",,"plateau/175.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/5",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990, but not descended ?","c20m shaft, snow at bottom, but quite possibly open.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Nipple 167°, Bräuning Nase 193°, Bräuning Zinken 220°, HSK 100° (1990 bearings)",,,"Further round cliff to NE of 174 on NW side of shallow valley bounded on one side by the HSK.
If you are coming from 174, 175 is a couple of scars down from where you arrive by simply following the cliff.",,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/5"" in red, changed to ""175"" in 1991. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance in 1995.","Refindable","Refound in 1995. AERW knows where it is. Has apparently been seen more recently and is close to 76." -176,"1/S -",,"90/6",,"plateau/176.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/6",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990","c30m shaft with snow-covered ledge at 15m. Rocks thrown down land on cobble floor.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1665m (by altimeter set 1610 at Bergrestaurant)","Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel 102½ (1995, to left hand peak; 1990/91 100 or 104°?), rightmost (of three) peak of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel 168½° (1990/91: 167 or 169°), Bräuning Nase 195° (1995, 1990:193°), Bräuning Zinken 220½ (1995, 1990/91 220 or 214°), Top Camp 192° (1991?)",,"At foot of SE-facing scar, just NE of a much more obvious (but unmarked) NW-SE rift with snow. Below this scar is a pavement formed in a shelly band of limestone, which dips c 10-15° on a strike of 135-315°. Following the pavement down and dropping down one scar leads to 175.",,,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/6"" in red, changed to ""176"" in 1991, on scar above cave, rather small. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance next to the number in 1995.","Refindable","Refound in 1995. AERW knows where it is" +174,"1/S +",,"90/4",,"plateau/174.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/4",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990, descended by Adam ?","c 30m shaft, climbable for first 10m to rock bridge. Snow at bottom, but cobble floor also visible.",,,,,,,,,"C30m",,,,,,,,,,"gps00.174",,,"1665m (by altimeter set 1610 at Bergrestaurant)","Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel 088° (1995, 1990:087°) to right hand peak, Rightmost apparent peak of three on Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel 160° (1990), Bräuning Nase 188° (1995, 1990:189°), Bräuning Zinken 221° (1995, 1990:218°)",,"Situated on fracture bearing 044° which forms prominent banded cliff visible North of Top Camp on second low ridge.","This cave is quite hard to find, even though the bearings get you very close. It is just below a cliff, which is almost the highest bit of cliff in the vicinity. The entrance is almost on the (E-W) axis on the ridge and the cliff faces SE. The number is easily missed.",,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/4"" in red, changed to ""174"" in 1991. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance in 1995.","Surveyed", +175,"1/S -",,"90/5",,"plateau/175.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/5",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990, but not descended ?","c20m shaft, snow at bottom, but quite possibly open.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"gps00.175",,,,"Nipple 167°, Bräuning Nase 193°, Bräuning Zinken 220°, HSK 100° (1990 bearings)",,,"Further round cliff to NE of 174 on NW side of shallow valley bounded on one side by the HSK.
If you are coming from 174, 175 is a couple of scars down from where you arrive by simply following the cliff.",,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/5"" in red, changed to ""175"" in 1991. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance in 1995.","Surveyed", +176,"1/S -",,"90/6",,"plateau/176.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/6",,,"1d","Recorded CUCC 1990","c30m shaft with snow-covered ledge at 15m. Rocks thrown down land on cobble floor.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"gps00.176",,,"1665m (by altimeter set 1610 at Bergrestaurant)","Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel 102½ (1995, to left hand peak; 1990/91 100 or 104°?), rightmost (of three) peak of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel 168½° (1990/91: 167 or 169°), Bräuning Nase 195° (1995, 1990:193°), Bräuning Zinken 220½ (1995, 1990/91 220 or 214°), Top Camp 192° (1991?)",,"At foot of SE-facing scar, just NE of a much more obvious (but unmarked) NW-SE rift with snow. Below this scar is a pavement formed in a shelly band of limestone, which dips c 10-15° on a strike of 135-315°. Following the pavement down and dropping down one scar leads to 175.",,,"
","Tag","Originally marked ""CUCC 90/6"" in red, changed to ""176"" in 1991, on scar above cave, rather small. An Austrian metal tag bolted to entrance next to the number in 1995.","Surveyed", 177,"1/S +",,"90/7",,"plateau/177.htm",,,"Tantalus Schacht",,,"1d","CUCC 1990 ","Named by dehydrated discoverers who had allowed water (and paint) out of their possession. At the bottom of the shaft is beautiful flowing stream. 35m shaft from Bunde belay to pool, water seep and ice at bottom. Access to promising looking passage which unfortunately quickly chokes.",,,,,,"
",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Bräuning Nase 215°, Bräuning Zinken 234°, Schönberg summit 332°. This proved impossible to find in 1995 from these bearings which bring one to a point c 200m NNE of 1623/104 (easily spotted by the prominent split boulder above its entrance). The vicinity is hard to search owing to an excess of dwarf pine scrub and small cliffs.",,"At break of slope between HSK and the plateau. ",,,,,,"Lost","There is a shaft nearby with a loose rock numbered 177, which is wrong (suspected at the time, hence the use of an easily erasable mark)"
178,"1/T +",,"90/8",,"plateau/178.htm",,,"Plateau Höhle 90/8",,,"1d","CUCC 1990 ","Window into very large passage about 10×20m, fluted snow plug, second drops onto end of plug. To NE, passage leads to another large chamber with another shaft coming in at the far end.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Schönberg cross 330°, Bräuning Zinken 239°, Bräuning Nase 229°, Nipple 210°. The last is apparently totally wrong, but the other three lines intersect within a circle about 200m across",,,,,,,,"Lost",
179,"1/S +",,"90/9",,"plateau/179.htm",,,"Plateau Schacht 90/9",,,"1d","CUCC 1990 ","A 7m pitch leading to c5m of low cave.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Bräuning Scharte 218°",,,,,,,,"Lost",
diff --git a/noinfo/create_dplong_table.py b/noinfo/create_dplong_table.py
index 56d5f1fd6..fc81103b1 100644
--- a/noinfo/create_dplong_table.py
+++ b/noinfo/create_dplong_table.py
@@ -34,10 +34,12 @@ def print_caveline(number, l, d, w, cave):
if cave["Autogen file"]: # single caves
dplong.write("""
Generated 06/14/05 17:47:58
+Generated 06/24/05 23:11:36
Notes:



| 160 | Plateau Schacht 160 | 35306 | 82484 | 1649 | Tag | 2/S/ + | |
| 164 | Plateau Schacht 164 | 35539 | 82509 | 1643 | Tag | 2/S + | |
| 171 (90/1) | Plateau Höhle 90/1 | Tag | 1/T + | ||||
| —171a | 35488 | 82581 | 1645 | Tag | |||
| —171b | 35462 | 82613 | 1650 | Paint (?) | |||
| —171a | Plateau Höhle 90/1 | 35488 | 82581 | 1645 | Tag | ||
| —171b | Plateau Höhle 90/1 | 35462 | 82613 | 1650 | Paint (?) | ||
| 172 (90/2) | Plateau Höhle 90/2 | 35475 | 82680 | 1645 | Tag | 1/T + | |
| 188 | Skinrip Durchgange I-VI | Tag | 1/T + | ||||
| —188a | 35503 | 82466 | 1649 | ||||
| —188b | Refindable | ||||||
| —188c | Refindable | ||||||
| —188d | Refindable | ||||||
| —188a | Skinrip Durchgange I-VI | 35503 | 82466 | 1649 | |||
| —188b | Skinrip Durchgange I-VI | Refindable | |||||
| —188c | Skinrip Durchgange I-VI | Refindable | |||||
| —188d | Skinrip Durchgange I-VI | Refindable | |||||
| 189 | Plateau Schacht 189 | 35545 | 82513 | 1642 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 190 (B9) | Glitterstompf | 35561 | 82546 | 1640 | Tag | 1/S/t/E = | |
| 190 (B9) | Glitterstompf | 35561 | 82546 | 1640 | Tag | 1/S/t/E = | |
| 197 (CUCC 1976/B8) | Bemoost Tropfen Höhle | 35604 | 82537 | 1638 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 198 (B11) | Fuchshöhle | 35556 | 82445 | 1647 | Tag | 2/S + | |
| 198 (B11) | Fuchshöhle | 35556 | 82445 | 1647 | Tag | 2/S + | |
| 207 (96-WK2) | Plumpsklohöhle | 35367 | 82396 | 1677 | Spit | 1/T + | |
| 208 (96-WK3) | Quallenhöhle | Spit | 1/S + | ||||
| —208a | 35370 | 82411 | 1673 | ||||
| —208b | Refindable | ||||||
| —208a | Quallenhöhle | 35370 | 82411 | 1673 | |||
| —208b | Quallenhöhle | Refindable | |||||
| 210 (1998-03) | Fettsack und Faulpelz höhle | 35633 | 82658 | 1635 | Tag | 1/T + | |
| 226 (1999OB03) | Skaschacht | ||||||
| —226a | 35503 | 82500 | 1649 | Unmarked | |||
| —226b | 35513 | 82500 | 1649 | Tag | |||
| —226a | Skaschacht | 35503 | 82500 | 1649 | Unmarked | ||
| —226b | Skaschacht | 35513 | 82500 | 1649 | Tag | ||
| 227 (1999OB04) | Faultienschacht | 35503 | 82503 | 1649 | Tag | ||
| B6 | CUCC 1976/B6 | Lost | 1/S + | Small shaft on plateau just over the col. It is believed that this has not been found since 1976, despite a number of searches. | |||
| B10 | CUCC 1976/B10 | Refindable | 1/S + | Lies in maze of karren north of B9. | |||
| 1996-X01 | Sheep Cave | 35426 | 82261 | 1733 | Unmarked | 1/T + | |
| 1996-X01 | Sheep Cave | 35426 | 82261 | 1733 | Unmarked | 1/T + | |
| 2000-AA-01 | Schönschrifthöhle | 35459 | 82652 | 1652 | Tag | 1/T + | |
| 86 | Schwa Schacht 86 | Lost | Paint | 1/S + | Plateau, on higher ground just SE of Bräuninghöhle (Kat.82) | ||
| 107 | Gemshöhle | 35929 | 82721 | 1660 | Tag | 4/S/T + | |
| 145 | Wolfhöhle | Paint | 4/t/S + | ||||
| —145a | 35927 | 82537 | 1687 | Paint | |||
| —145b | 35907 | 82532 | 1685 | ||||
| —145c | 35915 | 82502 | 1697 | ||||
| —145a | Wolfhöhle | 35927 | 82537 | 1687 | Paint | ||
| —145b | Wolfhöhle | 35907 | 82532 | 1685 | |||
| —145c | Wolfhöhle | 35915 | 82502 | 1697 | |||
| 148 | Marilyn Monroe Höhle | 35835 | 82640 | 1655 | Tag | 2/t/S + | |
| 157 | Schwa Schacht 157 | 36009 | 82765 | 1684 | Tag | 2/S x | |
| 220 (2000-04) | Kennedy Alternative | 35898 | 82522 | 1687 | Tag (?) | 1/T + | |
| Cave Number | Name | E | N | Alt | Marking | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 37 | Schachtgruppe beim Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel | Lost | 0/S - | West of Ht. Schwarzmooskogel. Well out onto the plateau, and hence, almost impossible to find or identify. | |||
| 38 | Algenhöhle | Lost | 1/T + | West of Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel (exact location unknown) Possibly near Kat.37 (q.v.) | |||
| 76 | Eislufthöhle | 5/S/E + | |||||
| —76main | 35866 | 82934 | 1646 | Tag | |||
| —76a | 35874 | 82939 | 1645 | Tag | |||
| —76b | 35874 | 82943 | 1647 | Unmarked | |||
| 76 | Eislufthöhle | 5/S/E x | |||||
| —76main | Eislufthöhle | 35866 | 82934 | 1646 | Tag | ||
| —76a | Eislufthöhle | 35874 | 82939 | 1645 | Tag | ||
| —76b | Eislufthöhle | 35874 | 82943 | 1647 | Unmarked | ||
| 89 | Schwa Schacht 89 | Lost | 1/S + | Plateau | |||
| 97 | Schneewindschacht | 35837 | 83041 | 1641 | Tag | 4/S/W x | |
| 98 | Plateau Schacht 98 | Lost | Paint | 1/S + | Out on the plateau somewhat further than 97, in a large sloping rockface. | ||
| 99 | Plateau Schacht 99 | 35871 | 82904 | 1642 | Tag | 1/S x | |
| 101 | Plateau Schacht 101 | Tag | 1/S + | ||||
| —101main | 35601 | 82908 | 1633 | Tag | |||
| —101a | 35626 | 82883 | 1630 | Paint | |||
| —101main | Plateau Schacht 101 | 35601 | 82908 | 1633 | Tag | ||
| —101a | Plateau Schacht 101 | 35626 | 82883 | 1630 | Paint | ||
| 102 | Plateau Schacht 102 | 35583 | 82859 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 103 | Plateau Schacht 103 | 35577 | 82932 | 1632 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 104 | Plateau Schacht 104 | Refindable | Paint | 1/S + | In deep scrub adjacent to a very large erratic boulder, in the same area as Eislufthöhle (Kat. 76). The boulder has an incipient split, and is visible from the col. | ||
| 111 | Plateau Schacht 111 | Lost | Paint (?) | 1/S + | Out on plateau, quite near 98. | ||
| 112 | Plateau Schacht 112 | Lost | Paint (?) | 1/S + | Out on plateau, 50m from 111. | ||
| 173 (90/3) | Plateau Schacht 90/3 | 35563 | 83010 | 1640 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 174 (90/4) | Plateau Schacht 90/4 | 35545 | 83108 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S + | Situated on fracture bearing 044° which forms prominent banded cliff visible North of Top Camp on second low ridge. Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel 088° (1995, 1990:087°) to right hand peak, Rightmost apparent peak of three on Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel 160° (1990), Bräuning Nase 188° (1995, 1990:189°), Bräuning Zinken 221° (1995, 1990:218°) |
| 175 (90/5) | Plateau Schacht 90/5 | 35688 | 83250 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S - | Nipple 167°, Bräuning Nase 193°, Bräuning Zinken 220°, HSK 100° (1990 bearings) |
| 176 (90/6) | Plateau Schacht 90/6 | 35719 | 83309 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S - | At foot of SE-facing scar, just NE of a much more obvious (but unmarked) NW-SE rift with snow. Below this scar is a pavement formed in a shelly band of limestone, which dips c 10-15° on a strike of 135-315°. Following the pavement down and dropping down one scar leads to 175. Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel 102½ (1995, to left hand peak; 1990/91 100 or 104°?), rightmost (of three) peak of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel 168½° (1990/91: 167 or 169°), Bräuning Nase 195° (1995, 1990:193°), Bräuning Zinken 220½ (1995, 1990/91 220 or 214°), Top Camp 192° (1991?) |
| 174 (90/4) | Plateau Schacht 90/4 | 35545 | 83108 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 175 (90/5) | Plateau Schacht 90/5 | 35688 | 83250 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S - | |
| 176 (90/6) | Plateau Schacht 90/6 | 35719 | 83309 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S - | |
| 177 (90/7) | Tantalus Schacht | Lost | 1/S + | At break of slope between HSK and the plateau. Bräuning Nase 215°, Bräuning Zinken 234°, Schönberg summit 332°. This proved impossible to find in 1995 from these bearings which bring one to a point c 200m NNE of 1623/104 (easily spotted by the prominent split boulder above its entrance). The vicinity is hard to search owing to an excess of dwarf pine scrub and small cliffs. | |||
| 178 (90/8) | Plateau Höhle 90/8 | Lost | 1/T + | Schönberg cross 330°, Bräuning Zinken 239°, Bräuning Nase 229°, Nipple 210°. The last is apparently totally wrong, but the other three lines intersect within a circle about 200m across | |||
| 179 (90/9) | Plateau Schacht 90/9 | Lost | 1/S + | Bräuning Scharte 218° | |||
| 1996-05 | 35375 | 83596 | 0 | Tag | 1/S - | ||
| 1998-X01 | 35652 | 82900 | 1636 | Unmarked (?) | ? + | ||
| 1999-OB-01 | Refindable | Tag | VSK 151, HSK 065, Sch 010, BZW 222 (from top of small cliff). (from NotKH 1996- book p110) | ||||
| 1999-OB-02 | Refindable | Tag | BN 211 BZ 229 HSK 061 (from email 2/6/2005) - at least one of these must be wrong (probably the Zinken) | ||||
| 1999-OB-02 | Refindable | Tag | BN 211 BZ 229 HSK 061 | ||||
| 2004-01 | 35891 | 82905 | 1651 | Tag | = | ||
| 2004-02 | Refindable | Tag | = | Short distance further north along same small valley as the 2004 Eislufthöhle bivi | |||
| 2004-03 | Refindable | Unmarked | - | On cairned route from Eislufthölhle to old Top Camp | |||
| 31 | Elchhöhle | 35394 | 81035 | 1582 | Paint | 2/T + | |
| 32 | Windloch am Stögerweg | 35766 | 81126 | 1567 | Spit | 1/S + | |
| 41 | Stellerweghöhle | 7/S/T/E x | |||||
| —41a (40j) | 35832 | 81245 | 1621 | ||||
| —41b (40k) | 35866 | 81256 | 1638 | Paint | |||
| —41a (40j) | Stellerweghöhle | 35832 | 81245 | 1621 | |||
| —41b (40k) | Stellerweghöhle | 35866 | 81256 | 1638 | Paint | ||
| 42 | Wasserschacht | Lost | 1/S = | SSW of Vd. Schwarzmooskogel, not far (50m vertical) up the hill from Stellerweghöhle, so we have probably rediscovered it and renumbered it. | |||
| 78 | Schwaben(schacht)höhle | 5/S/t/E x | |||||
| —78a (40o) | 35735 | 81433 | 1670 | ||||
| —78b (40p) | 35719 | 81418 | 1662 | ||||
| —78c (40q) | Lost | ||||||
| —78d (40r) | 35727 | 81661 | 1672 | ||||
| —78e | 35789 | 81427 | 1685 | ||||
| —78a (40o) | Schwaben(schacht)höhle | 35735 | 81433 | 1670 | |||
| —78b (40p) | Schwaben(schacht)höhle | 35719 | 81418 | 1662 | |||
| —78c (40q) | Schwaben(schacht)höhle | Lost | |||||
| —78d (40r) | Schwaben(schacht)höhle | 35727 | 81661 | 1672 | |||
| —78e | Schwaben(schacht)höhle | 35789 | 81427 | 1685 | |||
| 79 | Badenerschacht | Lost | 2/S + | Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel. | |||
| 87A | Schacht 87A bei Stögerweg | 35987 | 81148 | 1535 | Paint | 3/S + | |
| 87B | Schacht 87B bei Stögerweg | Refindable | Paint | 0/S + | In Stogerweg - you literally step over it while walking along the path. 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 Lärchenhöhle. | ||
| Cave Number | Name | E | N | Alt | Marking | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | 7/S/T/E x | |||||
| —40a | 36458 | 81700 | 1689 | Tag (?) | |||
| —40b | ? | Tag | |||||
| —40c | ? | ||||||
| —40d | ? | ||||||
| —40e | 36625 | 81990 | 1642 | Tag | |||
| —40f | 36586 | 82039 | 1688 | ||||
| —40g | ? | ||||||
| —40h | 36595 | 81955 | 1646 | ||||
| —40s | 36567 | 81892 | 1651 | ||||
| —40a | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | 36458 | 81700 | 1689 | Tag (?) | ||
| —40b | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | ? | Tag | ||||
| —40c | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | ? | |||||
| —40d | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | ? | |||||
| —40e | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | 36625 | 81990 | 1642 | Tag | ||
| —40f | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | 36586 | 82039 | 1688 | |||
| —40g | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | ? | |||||
| —40h | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | 36595 | 81955 | 1646 | |||
| —40s | Schwarzmooskogeleishöhle | 36567 | 81892 | 1651 | |||
| 140 | Schwa Schacht 140 | 36219 | 82040 | 1796 | Paint (?) | 2/S x | |
| 153 | Schwa Schacht 153 | 36112 | 81845 | 1743 | 1/S + | ||
| 154 | Schwa Schacht 154 | 1/S x | |||||
| —154a | 36105 | 81974 | 1771 | ||||
| —154b | 36122 | 81958 | 1762 | Unmarked | |||
| —154a | Schwa Schacht 154 | 36105 | 81974 | 1771 | |||
| —154b | Schwa Schacht 154 | 36122 | 81958 | 1762 | Unmarked | ||
| 155 | Unerforscht Schacht 155 | 36224 | 81976 | 1750 | 0 | ||
| 158 | Donner und Blitzen Höhle | 36143 | 81798 | 1714 | Paint | 3/S + | |
| 163 | Schwa Höhle 163 | 36486 | 82112 | 1727 | Tag | 2/S + | |
| 206 | 7-Eingangshöhle | ||||||
| —206a | 36200 | 81721 | 1698 | ||||
| —206b | |||||||
| —206c | |||||||
| —206d | |||||||
| —206e | |||||||
| —206a | 7-Eingangshöhle | 36200 | 81721 | 1698 | |||
| —206b | 7-Eingangshöhle | ||||||
| —206c | 7-Eingangshöhle | ||||||
| —206d | 7-Eingangshöhle | ||||||
| —206e | 7-Eingangshöhle | ||||||
| 215 (2000-05) | Rufverbindungshöhle | Tag | |||||
| —215a | 36611 | 81983 | 1645 | Tag | |||
| —215b | 36611 | 81986 | 1649 | Tag | |||
| —215a | Rufverbindungshöhle | 36611 | 81983 | 1645 | Tag | ||
| —215b | Rufverbindungshöhle | 36611 | 81986 | 1649 | Tag | ||
| 216 (2000-06) | Nichts 50 | 36580 | 81930 | 1650 | Tag | ||
| 217 (2000-07) | Schneepfropfenhöhle | 36576 | 81902 | 1648 | Tag | ||
| 229 | Weiße Höhle | 36556 | 81887 | 1663 | Spit | ||
| 235 | Schaukelfelsbrockenhöhle | 36537 | 82149 | 1679 | Tag | 1/T + | |
| 236 | Moostunnelhöhle | 36423 | 81988 | 1704 | Retag | 1/T + | |
| 237 | Dreieingangabdrosselnhöhle | Retag | 1/T + | ||||
| —237a | 36451 | 81990 | 1729 | ||||
| —237b | |||||||
| —237c | |||||||
| —237a | Dreieingangabdrosselnhöhle | 36451 | 81990 | 1729 | |||
| —237b | Dreieingangabdrosselnhöhle | ||||||
| —237c | Dreieingangabdrosselnhöhle | ||||||
| 238 | Flinkameiseschacht | 1/T + | |||||
| —238a | 36499 | 82173 | 1687 | Tag | |||
| —238b | Tag | ||||||
| —238a | Flinkameiseschacht | 36499 | 82173 | 1687 | Tag | ||
| —238b | Flinkameiseschacht | Tag | |||||
| HFG-KA88 | 36494 | 82051 | 1678 | Paint | + (?) | ||
| 88H | Refindable | ||||||
| 88F | 36545 | 82160 | 1683 | Tag | |||
| Cave Number | Name | E | N | Alt | Marking | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 135 | Schwa Schacht 135 | 36399 | 82219 | 1783 | Spit | 1/S + | |
| 136 | Steinschlagschacht | 2/S + | |||||
| —136a | 36363 | 82220 | 1795 | Tag | |||
| —136b (CUCC96-WK10) | 36367 | 82237 | 1789 | Spit | |||
| —136c (CUCC96-WK9) | 36371 | 82252 | 1790 | Spit | |||
| —136d (CUCC96-WK9) | 36376 | 82252 | 1792 | Retag | |||
| —136a | Steinschlagschacht | 36363 | 82220 | 1795 | Tag | ||
| —136b (CUCC96-WK10) | Steinschlagschacht | 36367 | 82237 | 1789 | Spit | ||
| —136c (CUCC96-WK9) | Steinschlagschacht | 36371 | 82252 | 1790 | Spit | ||
| —136d (CUCC96-WK9) | Steinschlagschacht | 36376 | 82252 | 1792 | Retag | ||
| 137 | Schwa Schacht 137 | Refindable | Paint (?) | 1/S + | East of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel | ||
| 138 | Schwa Schacht 138 | 36323 | 82206 | 1795 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 139 | Schwa Schacht 139 | 36313 | 82312 | 1827 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 149 | Plateau Schacht 149 | Lost | 1/S + | The entrance is in a large gully, just above the sandy depression, opposite Wolfhöhle. Several draughting entrances. Sketch with no north arrow, but would guess that its north from 145. | |||
| 156 | Schwa Schacht 156 | 36089 | 82287 | 1794 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 161 | Kaninchenhöhle | 5/S/E x | |||||
| —161a | 36468 | 82623 | 1787 | Tag | |||
| —161b | 36497 | 82540 | 1752 | Tag | |||
| —161c (VSS 88AF) | 36507 | 82551 | 1752 | Tag | |||
| —161d | 36854 | 82409 | 1613 | Tag | |||
| —161a | Kaninchenhöhle | 36468 | 82623 | 1787 | Tag | ||
| —161b | Kaninchenhöhle | 36497 | 82540 | 1752 | Tag | ||
| —161c (VSS 88AF) | Kaninchenhöhle | 36507 | 82551 | 1752 | Tag | ||
| —161d | Kaninchenhöhle | 36854 | 82409 | 1613 | Tag | ||
| 162 | Schwa Höhle 162 | 2/S + | |||||
| —162main | 36499 | 82303 | 1747 | Paint | |||
| —162b (1999-10) | 36481 | 82269 | 1753 | Retag | |||
| —162main | Schwa Höhle 162 | 36499 | 82303 | 1747 | Paint | ||
| —162b (1999-10) | Schwa Höhle 162 | 36481 | 82269 | 1753 | Retag | ||
| 180 (90/10) | Schwa Schacht 90/10 | 36602 | 82696 | 1766 | Tag | 2/S + | |
| 185 | Zweijahreentstehungshöhle | 36381 | 82531 | 1763 | Paint | 2/S + | |
| 185 | Zweijahreentstehungshöhle | 36381 | 82531 | 1763 | Paint | 2/S + | |
| 187 | Schwa Schacht 187 | Refindable | Paint | 1/S - | Bräuning Nase 246° | ||
| 191 | Schwa Schacht 191 | 36598 | 82652 | 1764 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 192 | Schwa Schacht 192 | Lost | Paint | 1/S - | About 100m NNE from 161c, and a few metres higher. 1623/161c 200° | ||
| 209 (1996WK8 (maybe also CUCC 1996-08)) | Schistock-Absturzschacht | 36370 | 82256 | 1792 | Tag | 1/S + | |
| 218 (1996WK6) | Hammerkopfabsturtzhöhle | 36399 | 82354 | 1779 | Retag | 1/S = | |
| 219 (1996WK5) | Tertaeingfester | 36414 | 82337 | 1785 | Retag | 1/S - | |
| 225 (90 ADAM) | Jahrzehnschacht | Refindable | Tag (?) | ? | On the old path to 161, on a bit where you're walking over soil-like stuff, just near the ankle-breaking hole. Probably around halfway between 146 and 147. | ||
| 225 (90 ADAM) | Jahrzehnschacht | Refindable | Tag made but not placed yet (probably at 76 bivi) | 1/S + | On the old path to 161, on a bit where you're walking over soil-like stuff, just near the ankle-breaking hole. Probably around halfway between 146 and 147. | ||
| 1996-01 | Ski-pole höhle | 36682 | 82940 | 0 | Tag | 1/S - | |
| 1997-07 | =1996-07, 1996wk7 | 36337 | 82308 | 2000 | Tag | 1/S - | |
| 1999-X01 | MI5 Cave | 36561 | 82654 | 1763 | Paint (?) | ||
| 2000-02 | 36563 | 82896 | 1803 | Tag | 1/? + | ||
| Cave Number | Name | E | N | Alt | Marking | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| —161e | 37117 | 82824 | 1659 | Tag | ||
| —161f | 37093 | 82773 | 1660 | Tag | ||
| Cave Number | Name | E | N | Alt | Marking | Status |
| —161e | Kaninchenhöhle | 37117 | 82824 | 1659 | Tag | |
| —161f | Kaninchenhöhle | 37093 | 82773 | 1660 | Tag | |
| —161g (2003-06) | Arachnowrapper | 37097 | 82914 | 1716 | Retag | |
| —161h (2004-12) | 37131 | 83050 | 1689 | Retag | ||
| —161h (2004-12) | Kaninchenhöhle | 37131 | 83050 | 1689 | Retag | |
| 165 | Schwa Schacht 165 | 36323 | 83162 | 1792 | Tag | 1/S + |
| 194 | Schwa Schacht 194 | 36244 | 83229 | 1762 | Tag | 1/S + |
| 195 | Schwa Schacht 195 | 36305 | 83245 | 1778 | Tag | 1/S - |
| 196 | Schwa Höhle 196 | 36352 | 83264 | 1790 | Tag | 1/T + |
| 204 (CUCC 1999/03) | Steinbrückenhöhle | 5/S x | ||||
| —204a | 36697 | 83699 | 1812 | Tag | ||
| —204b | 36685 | 83710 | 1808 | Tag | ||
| —204c | 36661 | 83903 | 1830 | Tag | ||
| —204d | 36449 | 83878 | 1773 | Tag | ||
| —204e | 36613 | 83860 | 1814 | Tag | ||
| —204f | 36622 | 83873 | 1818 | Tag | ||
| —204a | Steinbrückenhöhle | 36697 | 83699 | 1812 | Tag | |
| —204b | Steinbrückenhöhle | 36685 | 83710 | 1808 | Tag | |
| —204c | Steinbrückenhöhle | 36661 | 83903 | 1830 | Tag | |
| —204d | Steinbrückenhöhle | 36449 | 83878 | 1773 | Tag | |
| —204e | Steinbrückenhöhle | 36613 | 83860 | 1814 | Tag | |
| —204f | Steinbrückenhöhle | 36622 | 83873 | 1818 | Tag | |
| 214 (2000-03) | Segment cave | 36744 | 83121 | 1822 | Tag | |
| 222 (1996-04) | Gösserhöhle | 36775 | 83061 | 1807 | Retag | 1/S - |
| 223 (1996-03) | Eggenbergschacht | 36766 | 83095 | 1813 | Retag | 1/S + |
| 224 (1996-02) | Toplesscayonhöhle | 36752 | 83037 | 1802 | Retag | 1/S + |
| 231 (2000-01) | Traungoldhöhle | 2/E + | ||||
| —231a | 36715 | 83723 | 1815 | Tag | ||
| —231b | 36715 | 83744 | 1815 | Tag | ||
| —231c | 36733 | 83741 | 1823 | Tag | ||
| —231d | 36720 | 83722 | 1815 | Tag | ||
| —231e | 36722 | 83709 | 1817 | Tag | ||
| —231f | 36733 | 83708 | 1819 | Tag | ||
| —231g | 36725 | 83717 | 1820 | Tag | ||
| —231h | 36723 | 83722 | 1815 | Tag | ||
| —231i | 36707 | 83732 | 1811 | Tag | ||
| —231a | Traungoldhöhle | 36715 | 83723 | 1815 | Tag | |
| —231b | Traungoldhöhle | 36715 | 83744 | 1815 | Tag | |
| —231c | Traungoldhöhle | 36733 | 83741 | 1823 | Tag | |
| —231d | Traungoldhöhle | 36720 | 83722 | 1815 | Tag | |
| —231e | Traungoldhöhle | 36722 | 83709 | 1817 | Tag | |
| —231f | Traungoldhöhle | 36733 | 83708 | 1819 | Tag | |
| —231g | Traungoldhöhle | 36725 | 83717 | 1820 | Tag | |
| —231h | Traungoldhöhle | 36723 | 83722 | 1815 | Tag | |
| —231i | Traungoldhöhle | 36707 | 83732 | 1811 | Tag | |
| 234 (2000-09) | Hauchhöhle | 3/S/W x | ||||
| —234a | 36468 | 83441 | 1784 | Tag | ||
| —234b (2002-02) | 36490 | 83462 | 1793 | Tag | ||
| —234a | Hauchhöhle | 36468 | 83441 | 1784 | Tag | |
| —234b (2002-02) | Hauchhöhle | 36490 | 83462 | 1793 | Tag | |
| 239 (2001-04) | Rock'n'Roll Höhle | 36779 | 83506 | 1832 | Tag | 3/S/T x |
| 240 (2003-08) | Gewölbeschacht | 36919 | 83134 | 1791 | Tag | 2/S/T + |
| 241 (2003-04) | Dreieckhöhle | 36744 | 83837 | 1843 | Tag | 2/T + |
| 2004-13 | 37149 | 82917 | 1695 | Tag | 0/S - | |
| 2004-14 | Doktorarbeitloch | 36411 | 83655 | 1756 | Tag | 1/T + |
| 2004-15 | Rundreisehöhle | Tag | 1/T + | |||
| —2004-15a | 36432 | 83663 | 1761 | Tag | ||
| —2004-15b | 36465 | 83672 | 1768 | Tag | ||
| —2004-15a | Rundreisehöhle | 36432 | 83663 | 1761 | Tag | |
| —2004-15b | Rundreisehöhle | 36465 | 83672 | 1768 | Tag | |
| 2004-16 | 36526 | 83954 | 1831 | Tag | 0/S - | |
| 2004-17 | 36526 | 83979 | 1834 | Tag | 0/S - | |
| 2004-18 | 36552 | 84028 | 1834 | Tag | 0/S - | |
| 2004-19 | Kindergartenhöhle | 2/S/T x | ||||
| —2004-19a | 37123 | 83318 | 1763 | Tag (?) | ||
| —2004-19b | 37122 | 83326 | 1766 | Tag (?) | ||
| —2004-19c | 37105 | 83313 | 1769 | Tag (?) | ||
| —2004-19a | Kindergartenhöhle | 37123 | 83318 | 1763 | Tag (?) | |
| —2004-19b | Kindergartenhöhle | 37122 | 83326 | 1766 | Tag (?) | |
| —2004-19c | Kindergartenhöhle | 37105 | 83313 | 1769 | Tag (?) | |
| 2004-20 | Crowbar höhle | 36627 | 83601 | 1814 | Tag | 1/S/T + |
| 2004-21 | Earl's Hat Cave | 36416 | 83907 | 1760 | Unmarked | 1/E = |