Online edit of cave 1623-2023-jss-01

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Philip Sargent 2023-09-15 08:48:23 +01:00
parent 602c4e29c0
commit a3bc45bd1e

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<!DOCTYPE html>
<!-- This file is generated by troggle on Sept. 15, 2023, 8:07 a.m. UTC using the form documented at /handbook/survey/caveentry.html -->
<!-- This file is generated by troggle on Sept. 15, 2023, 8:48 a.m. UTC using the form documented at /handbook/survey/caveentry.html -->
<!-- Only put one cave in this file -->
<!-- If you edit this 1623-nnn.html file by hand, and manually upload it to the server using git,
make sure you update the database by doing a full data import. If you edit it using the online form
@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ though, you do not need to do a data import as it happens automatically -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"/>
</head>
<body>
<b>This file is generated by troggle</b> on Sept. 15, 2023, 8:07 a.m. UTC using the form documented at
<b>This file is generated by troggle</b> on Sept. 15, 2023, 8:48 a.m. UTC using the form documented at
the form documented at
<a href="/handbook/survey/caveentry.html">handbook/survey/caveentry.html</a>
<br>
@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
</entrance>
<explorers></explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/2023-jss-01/2023-jss-01</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves/204/204.svx -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/2023-jss-01/2023-jss-01.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>[from logbook entry24th July]
<p>
Cave starts with a short, loose downwards slope, continuing on for about a metre before being ending, filled with frost-shatter. To the left, a short, again loose, upwards slope leads to a vertically upwards shaft of about 4 or 5 metres in height, and around 1.5m in diameter. The lower 3m or so of the shaft was easily free-climbable, but potentially loose rocks made climbing the rest of the shaft difficult. However, from the highest point reached, it looks to be very narrow carrying on, so was considered dead.