From 9dd33d5911c2c5a9ac48e8faa4ecc6570c7800e6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Andy Waddington on Loser A walk around Altausseer See reveals few streams flowing in to the lake,
but a sizeable river flowing out, fuelling speculation that there were
diff --git a/aaussee/index.html b/aaussee/index.html
index bb9236d16..89a56438d 100644
--- a/aaussee/index.html
+++ b/aaussee/index.html
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
Altausseer See is a 2 km long glacier-carved lake south of the Loser
plateau. Its north shore lies on a significant fault which marks the
diff --git a/copyit.htm b/copyit.htm
index 15139720d..beefb67b3 100644
--- a/copyit.htm
+++ b/copyit.htm
@@ -29,24 +29,34 @@ publications, and the sources are individually acknowledged. Again, where
translated, we believe that copyright in the translation lies with the
translator, and rights to grant permission to use the material have been
granted to CUCC. Where original publication was in English (material from
-Bristol Exploration Club, University of Bristol Speleological Society and
-Lancaster University Speleological Society), then copyright undoubtedly lies
-with those organisations or with the individual authors. Permission has been
-sought to include such material in the archive, but neither CUCC nor the
-editors of these pages have been granted the right to permit further
-reproduction - please approach these organisations or the original authors
-direct.AltausseeEEEEr See north shore vauclusian risings
+Altausseer See north shore vauclusian risings
N & NE shore of Altauseer See
+N & NE shore of Altausseer See
Copyright in the HTML, page layout and structure of the archive lies with -Andy Waddington in almost all cases.
+Copyright in the HTML, page layout and structure of the archive originally +lay with Andy Waddington, who has relased anything directly attributable to +his work as CC-BY-SA. More recent work on the strucure, style and mechanisms +of maintaining the site belong to younger authors who may or may not wish +their work to be reproduced.
-Photographs: Where scanned photographs or images digitised from -video are included, the copyright information for the original photograph is -included in the HTML page which includes the full-sized image. In almost all -cases, the HTML files, page layout and image manipulation used to produce an -image for the website is © Andy Waddington. In these cases, these -aspects may be reproduced with acknowledgement, but permission to use the -image must be sought from the original photographer.
+Photographs: Where digital photographs (or, for much of the earlier +work, scanned photographs or images digitised from video) are included, the +copyright information for the original photograph is +included in the HTML page which includes the full-sized image (an effort will +be made over time to incorporate this into exif data where possible). Whilst +the HTML files, page layout and image manipulation used to produce an +image for the website may belong to the wesbite maintainers, permission to +reuse any image must be sought from the original photographer unless +licence terms (such as CC) are given with the image. Even when licensed +for reuse, credit to the photographer should be given in a form visible +to any end user. There may be the odd photo uncredited on the site - which +might mean we simply lost track of who took it ! If you took a photo used +here and would like it credited, please get in touch - we'd like to know +too, and will add credit as soon as possible.
There is a list of all the individual contributors to this archive, who ultimately own diff --git a/dclaim.htm b/dclaim.htm index 1e451c6c8..1daaa18b1 100644 --- a/dclaim.htm +++ b/dclaim.htm @@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ limestone karren fields. Marking of caves or routes by paint is now strongly discouraged, more discreet metal tags being used instead. This makes caves even harder to spot from any distance away.
-Many of the caves were explored up to twenty years ago, using 8mm +
Many of the caves were explored up to almost forty years ago, using 8mm self-drilling anchors - the hangers were removed. Not all of these were well-placed, and some were placed for ladders, not SRT. All will have deteriorated, even though, in most cases, they were greased during derigging. diff --git a/intro.htm b/intro.htm index abc003bb7..bb2561de5 100644 --- a/intro.htm +++ b/intro.htm @@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ Aussee, where we are annually made very welcome by and family.
Only in 1986 has an expedition failed to visit -Loser, and a substantial part of the journal of +Loser, and a substantial part of the journal of CUCC and exCS, "Cambridge Underground" is taken up by expedition reports. The majority of these are reproduced within these web pages and can be reached through the list of published reports.
diff --git a/noinfo/cave_data/1623-76.html b/noinfo/cave_data/1623-76.html index 0b3155f4f..91b8216a2 100644 --- a/noinfo/cave_data/1623-76.html +++ b/noinfo/cave_data/1623-76.html @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ 1dThe entrance to 1623/91 (foreground, behind left of snow bank), and 1623/93 (behind small shrubs, just right of centre) on the Loser plateau, as -they appeared in 1990 (quite a lot of snow that year). View is below the +they appeared in 1989 (quite a lot of snow that year). View is below the Bräuning Wall, roughly north back towards Schönberg (top right). Top camp is off to the right. Both caves are vertical, fairly loose, and -choke quickly (20m and 35m). They were explored in 1977. +choke quickly (20m and 35m). They were explored in 1977.
-The entrance to 1623/94 on the Loser plateau, as it appeared in 1990. This +
The entrance to 1623/94 on the Loser plateau, as it appeared in 1989. This view is from 1623/93, some way out from the Bräuning Wall, roughly north back towards Schönberg (top right). Top camp is off to the right. The cave is vertical, but freeclimbable to a -choke at -35m. It was explored in 1977. +choke at -35m. It was explored in 1977.
-After derigging, the two then ignominiously staggered off the plateau, -and down to the campsite to claim thair quota of lagerbier in the forlorn +and down to the campsite to claim their quota of lagerbier in the forlorn hope of restoring some of their hard-lost flab. A profitable day's work, nevertheless.
diff --git a/years/1989/log.htm b/years/1989/log.htm index c24d78ba6..03ba5d18d 100644 --- a/years/1989/log.htm +++ b/years/1989/log.htm @@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ they met Adam plus car to ferry them back up the hill.TEAM AVENGER - Rebecca Lawson, Chris Densham
Car having been bought in panic, we travelled across the unavoidable
-parts of Europe sans ownership documents, green cards, etc., ate bread, briw
+parts of Europe sans ownership documents, green cards, etc., ate bread, brie
and wine, then trogged round a few classic German towns visiting Becka's
cousins + lots of tourists (Pinkelsbühl is as sweet as it sounds). Got
lost on way to Austria, so went to Jugoslavia instead. Paid £17 for
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ lacking greed card - thoughts of cheap food, booze &
sexBKA - but, shock, horror - campsites were £3-4 a
night ! Campsites full of horrendous English touroids so, after a night sans
tent in a forest with lots of creepy noises, we found a place called
-'Logarskie Dolina in Slovenia where campsites were with toilets but without
+'Logarskie Dolina' in Slovenia where campsites were with toilets but without
people to collect money (another site got washed out as soon as we arrived -
involving pissed off Dutch people in several feet of water, a happy English
couple (us!) getting a free night on the floor of the Gastina over the road
@@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ good walking tho' very humid & sweat gallons. Sleep in car as nowhere to
pitch. Get benighted first night due to late setoff (to avoid thunderstorm)
& over-ambition late in the day. Sadly, only time I forgot Petzl !
-
Onto Erwald/Meiminger Kette. Short walk day travelled. One day fester +
Onto Erwald/Meiminger Kette. Short walk day travelled. One day fester because hips murder. Went to climb Zugspitze & got early start to do long roundtrip. Get most of way up. Get charged 5 Schillings "für the making of the vey". Sign says path closed because Steinschlag (rocks @@ -166,7 +166,7 @@ anyway. It was unnerving driving around a corner and getting the passenger to stick their head out to see if it was still there after a bump. Rover was leaking lots but then we got used to it and realised that driving faster didn't necessarily increase the temperature. We also got used to finding -stopping places with wateer supplies. Well when you get to 32 something's +stopping places with water supplies. Well when you get to 32 something's always a bit wrong.
Good tapes - "bat out of hell" -> lovely to put the foot down.