From 6d99ce82e4e3dea43962896c545fbbde113f466c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Expo on server <expo@expo.survex.com>
Date: Fri, 19 Jul 2024 11:14:03 +0100
Subject: [PATCH] Logbook edited 2024-07-15c

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 years/2024/logbook.html | 6 +-----
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 5 deletions(-)

diff --git a/years/2024/logbook.html b/years/2024/logbook.html
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@@ -542,11 +542,7 @@ Anyway I parked the bike at the "No Cycling" notice at the bottom of the track u
 
 <p>In the course of our wanderings, we came across an interesting rusty artefact. The base camp brains trust reckons this to be a reserve fuel tank likely jettisoned from a second world war era plane.</p>
 
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-<td><img src="/expofiles/photos/2024/AnthonyDay/mysterious-crash-wreckage.jpg" width=40% style="transform:rotate(270deg);"></td>
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+<img src="/expofiles/photos/2024/AnthonyDay/mysterious-crash-wreckage.jpg" width=40% style="transform:rotate(270deg);">
 
 <p>Our first target was to find the entrance to 1623/261. This is a fairly insignificant cave: <100m long, <50m deep. The interesting feature is that the cave is aligned with development in deep Balkonh&ouml;hle, specifically Charon, so I was interested to discover if there were any obvious similarly aligned surface features. Sure enough, the 1623/261 entrance was found to be in the side of a chossy gully. We didn't have a compass, so cannot confirm the alignment, but it seems highly probable that this surface feature is related to development of 1623/261 and deep Balkonh&ouml;hle. (There is another similarly aligned ARGE cave - Haldenloch (appears not to have a number) - that is further away to the northeast that we didn't visit.)</p>