diff --git a/copyit.htm b/copyit.htm
index dac0a793c..15139720d 100644
--- a/copyit.htm
+++ b/copyit.htm
@@ -24,13 +24,6 @@ to restrict access to cave descriptions derived from Austrian sources, so
 you will find that this material is in the "NoInfo" hierarchy which is under
 password protection.</p>
 
-<p>Copies of this archive being browsed from local disc (especially if intended
-to be used on a machine with no "real" net connection) may contain a mirror of
-certain pages produced by third parties. There will always be a link to the
-original website, as well as an internal link to the local mirror. These pages
-are <b>not</b> reproduced on our main web server, and you will therefore find
-that the local link will not work when browsing over the net.</p>
-
 <p>A number of other descriptions are derived from individual club
 publications, and the sources are individually acknowledged. Again, where
 translated, we believe that copyright in the translation lies with the
@@ -61,26 +54,14 @@ copyright to the original articles. As almost everyone on an expedition writes
 something in the logbook, see the list of <a href="folk/index.htm">expedition
 members</a> for a pretty inclusive list of authors.</p>
 
-<p>Where no address is given, please approach the webmaster
-(email: &lt;Austria&gt; on site pennine.demon.co.uk)
-in the first instance before reproducing any material.</p>
+<p>Where no address is given, please approach the maintainers (email:
+<tt>expoweb-admin</tt> on site <tt>cucc.survex.com</tt>) in the first instance
+before reproducing any material.</p>
 
 <p>And finally ... material written specifically for this archive tries to be
-as objective, accurate and up-to-date as possible. Individual articles and
-logbook write-ups may not be any of these. In <b>ALL</b> cases, any opinions
-expressed are those of the contributing author, and do not necessarily
-reflect an official position of Cambridge University Caving Club or of any
-other body which they may appear to represent. Any representation of a legal
-or 'official' position reflects our best efforts at understanding, but should
-not be taken as an authoritative source. Errors, omissions and
-misunderstandings are inevitable, especially when there are language
-barriers and only one visit to the area each year. Legal positions,
-regulations, policies and responsible bodies all change, and the latest
-situation may not yet have come to our attention. In no case can CUCC or the
-authors of information presented here be held responsible for any conflict,
-loss or consequential damage arising from the use of or inability to use the
-information. We would appreciate being informed of any errors, omissions or
-misunderstandings of which you become aware.</p>
+as objective, accurate and up-to-date as possible; but we cannot make any
+guarantee that this has been achieved; please see the <a
+href="dclaim.htm">disclaimer</a>.  </p>
 
 <hr />
 
diff --git a/dclaim.htm b/dclaim.htm
index 914e5eaec..1e451c6c8 100644
--- a/dclaim.htm
+++ b/dclaim.htm
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ exploration by any groups who have not previously worked in the area.</p>
 that knowing the coordinates of a cave, and/or bearings to prominent landmarks,
 is no guarantee of being able to find it in the intricate and confusing
 limestone karren fields. Marking of caves or routes by paint is now strongly
-discouraged, more discrete metal tags being used instead. This makes caves even
+discouraged, more discreet metal tags being used instead. This makes caves even
 harder to spot from any distance away.</p>
 
 <p>Many of the caves were explored up to twenty years ago, using 8mm
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ deteriorated, even though, in most cases, they were greased during derigging.
 Some of them are very hard to find (even with a detailed rigging guide) and
 omission of a critical rebelay or deviation can render a pitch much more
 dangerous either through abrasion or through greater exposure to floodwater.
-Many of the caves contain loose rock, many are subject to rapid flooding with
+Many of the caves contain loose rock; many are subject to rapid flooding with
 very cold runoff water. Rocks can move, ice formations can form in different
 places each year and may be in a greater or lesser state of decomposition
 during the summer. What may have been safe rigging during the original
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ unaware.</p>
 
 <p>Please take these caves as you find them and treat their descent as if it
 was original exploration. It is up to the individual to satisfy his or herself
-that the descent is safe, that any belays used or reused are sound.  CUCC does
+that the descent is safe, that any belays used or reused are sound. CUCC does
 not maintain any of the anchors or fixed ropes in the caves except during their
 own continuing explorations and even then cannot guarantee their safety.
 Neither CUCC nor any member or guest of a CUCC expedition can be held
diff --git a/folk/l/andyc.htm b/folk/l/andyc.htm
index 8c1ba3cef..cd0a85a14 100644
--- a/folk/l/andyc.htm
+++ b/folk/l/andyc.htm
@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@
 alt="" />
 <b>Andy Connolly</b>, (Corpus Christi 1977-80)<br />
 Expedition 1979 (worked in <a href="../../plateau/99.htm">1623/99</a> and
-helped in <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76),
+helped in <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76),
 1980 (Team Sunbeam - explorers of
 <a href="../../smkridge/113.htm">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> 1623/113)</p>
 
diff --git a/folk/l/andyw.htm b/folk/l/andyw.htm
index 9fe9be632..04166b91c 100644
--- a/folk/l/andyw.htm
+++ b/folk/l/andyw.htm
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ at the first opportunity. Didn't miss a single term-time meet in his three
 years as a student, and only missed one vacation meet - keen, or what ? CUCC
 Secretary 1976/77 and Junior Treasurer 1977/78. Invited to join Austria
 expedition in 1977 and formed part of "team youth" who found and started
-exploring <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a>.</p>
+exploring <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a>.</p>
 
 <p>Took a major part in 1978 and 1979 expeditions which finally bottomed
 this cave at -506m. Tried to organise a change of area for 1980, but had
diff --git a/folk/l/benvm.htm b/folk/l/benvm.htm
index 941d92cda..b9f0b9641 100644
--- a/folk/l/benvm.htm
+++ b/folk/l/benvm.htm
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ alt="" />
 Queens' 1976-79 (Tacklemaster 1978-79).<br />
 Expedition 1978, 1979, 1980, 1983.<br />
 Explored <a href="../../plateau/107.htm">Gemseh&ouml;hle</a> (1623/107) in
-1978, <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76) in 1979
+1978, <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76) in 1979
 and worked in the <a href="../../smkridge/41.htm">Stellerwegsystem</a>
 (1623/41) and <a href="../../smkridge/87.htm">1623/87</a> in 1980.
 <a href="../../plateau/145.htm">Wolfh&ouml;hle</a> (1623/145) was the main
diff --git a/folk/l/dougf.htm b/folk/l/dougf.htm
index c83a7206f..4ec35e010 100644
--- a/folk/l/dougf.htm
+++ b/folk/l/dougf.htm
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@
 <b>Doug Florence</b>,
 Jesus 1975-78 (Tacklemaster 1977-78).<br />
 Expedition 1978 and 1982 (with a non-caving visit in 1989).
-Explored in <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> in 1978, and
+Explored in <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> in 1978, and
 <a href="../../smkridge/142.htm">142</a> in 1982. The photo was taken in base
 camp in 1978.</p>
 
diff --git a/folk/l/simonf.htm b/folk/l/simonf.htm
index af9a936f9..b8b440af8 100644
--- a/folk/l/simonf.htm
+++ b/folk/l/simonf.htm
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ alt="" />
 Fitzwilliam 1975-78 (Committee 1976-7, President 1977-8).<br />
 Expedition 1977,1978,1979.<br />
 Major explorations: <b lang="de">Eislufth&ouml;hle</b>
-<a href="../../plateau/76.htm">(1623/76)</a> -
+<a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">(1623/76)</a> -
 one of the 1979 bottoming party.<br />
 Member of the
 <a href="http://www.pennine.demon.co.uk/NPC/">Northern Pennine Club</a>
diff --git a/folk/l/tonym.htm b/folk/l/tonym.htm
index c1d3d8bf2..a04844796 100644
--- a/folk/l/tonym.htm
+++ b/folk/l/tonym.htm
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ alt="" />
 <b>Tony Malcolm</b>, (Fitzwilliam 1977-?, Committee 1977-78, Secretary
 1978-79)<br />
 Expedition 1979 (worked in <a href="../../plateau/99.htm">1623/99</a> and
-helped in <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76)),
+helped in <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76)),
 1980 (Team Sunbeam - explorers of
 <a href="../../smkridge/113.htm">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> 1623/113, the
 Sunbeam was Tony's car, making 113 the only cave CUCC has (indirectly) named
diff --git a/handbook/known.htm b/handbook/known.htm
index e8b25cb99..79a16dd80 100644
--- a/handbook/known.htm
+++ b/handbook/known.htm
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ Nr. col and B4</td></tr>
 </td><td>marked twice, one faded, the other run - number can<br />
 only be deduced from both versions, with difficulty [1996]</td></tr>
 
-<tr><td>"106"</td><td><a href="../plateau/76.htm">76</a>
+<tr><td>"106"</td><td><a href="../plateau/76/76.htm">76</a>
 </td><td>Chiselled number "106" erased(-ish).<br />
 Painted No. Nr laser point 6 (which had its number refreshed 1995?)</td></tr>
 
diff --git a/handbook/rig/boltin.htm b/handbook/rig/boltin.htm
index 035ad9632..8de69aaa1 100644
--- a/handbook/rig/boltin.htm
+++ b/handbook/rig/boltin.htm
@@ -2,96 +2,76 @@
 <html>
 <head>
 <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
-<title>CUCC Expo Rigging Handbook: Artificial belays - bolts</title>
+<title>CUCC Expo Rigging Handbook: Placing bolts</title>
 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../css/main2.css" />
 </head>
 <body>
 <h2 id="tophead"> CUCC Expo Rigging Handbook</h2>
-<h1>Bolt belays - placing and using</h1>
+<h1>Bolt belays - placing</h1>
 
-<p>Most people on Austria expeditions will be familiar with the use of bolt
-belays from trips in the UK. In Austria, caves already explored will have
-bolts with the hangers removed, which can be quite hard to spot. Anyone
-hoping for a join-the-dots trip will be disappointed. These bolts can usually
-be found fairly easily by anyone familiar with expo rigging, <i>provided a
-good rigging guide was drawn up by the previous explorers</i>. Y-hangs are
-common at pitch heads, so check that you find both bolts. Lower down, it is
-as well to know whether a bolt has been placed for a rebelay or a deviation,
-as it may not become obvious which until some way down the pitch. Such a
-rigging guide is also useful to show which existing bolts should <b>not</b>
-be used. Inevitably some bolts will be badly placed, or may become damaged.
-It is as important not to use these as it is to find the right ones.</p>
+<p>Once you've decided where to put your bolt, you have to actually physically
+place and set it. The methods used differ substantially depending on whether
+you are using hand bolts (spits) or Hilti HKDS's.</p>
 
-<p>For new pitches when, as is often the case, good natural belays are
-scarce, you must place one or more bolts yourself. Doing so puts you in
-a position of responsibility both for the safety of future users of that
-bolt and for the conservation of the cave. The aim should always be to
-put in good bolts which will contribute to a safe rig with a minimum of
-further bolting needed.</p>
+<p>Before you actually start drilling, it is wise to flatten the surface of the
+rock around the bolt site. This allows the hanger to lie flat against the rock.
+Different types of hanger have different footprints; bollards have almost no
+footprint at all, rings and bends somewhat more, and twists a great deal.
+Remember, of course, that the next person who rigs the pitch may well use a
+different type of hanger from the one you happen to have handy, and that the
+club only has about ten bollards left! When dressing the rock, use the pointed
+end of the hammer and tap gently, so as not to crack the rock below the
+surface.</p>
 
-<p>This is easier said than done, and there is ample evidence of this in
-caves CUCC have explored over the years. The best place for a bolt may
-be far from obvious until the pitch has been descended. Or maybe the best
-place is obvious, but that place is hard to reach. It is tempting to try
-to reach for the best placement, but overstretching or an insecure perch
-may lead to a poor bolt in the perfect place. This is very much to be
-avoided, since it is now impossible to put a good bolt in the perfect
-place - the rock around the first placement will have been stressed and
-another bolt should not be placed closer than about 20 cm from it.</p>
-
-<div class="onleft"><a href="../l/bosch.htm"><img
-alt="(73k image)" src="../t/bosch.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a><p
-class="caption">Using the Drill</p></div>
+<h2>Hand spits</h2>
 
 <div class="onleft" style="clear: left"> <a
 href="../../smkridge/161/l/boltin.htm"><img alt="(36k image)"
 src="../../smkridge/161/t/boltin.jpg" width="113" height="152" /></a> <p
 class="caption">Bolting by Hand</p> </div>
 
-<h3>Placing bolts</h3>
+<p>Old-style hand-drilled spits are self-drilling; the spit sleeve functions
+both as a drill bit and as an anchor. Screw it firmly onto the driver and tap
+it gently against the surface of the rock, turning it around slightly between
+each tap and removing it to blow dust away every half dozen blows or so. (You
+should also tap the spit itself gently to free dust compacted into it). Once
+the hole is established you can begin to hit a bit harder, but don't overdo it;
+the idea is to powder the rock at the point of the spit without setting up
+cracks through the rest of the rock which will weaken it.</p>
 
-<p>Placing a bolt is a simple matter of drilling a hole and inserting a rock
-anchor. The bottom end of the rock anchor is expanded by some mechanism,
-and thus grips tightly in the hole, resisting any attempt to pull it
-out. The anchor is strongest if loaded at right angles to its axis, ie.
-parallel with the rock surface. Hence for a vertical pitch, it is normally
-best to place the anchor in a vertical rock surface.</p>
+<p>Watch out for the spit <i>cratering</i>; this is when flakes of rock crack
+away around the rim of the hole. A severely cratered spit is greatly weakened
+as the end of the sleeve is not supported by the rock. With some types of
+hanger (bollards and Clowns) it is possible to drive the spit in a bit further
+into the bottom of the crater, particularly if the rope is thin, but this
+renders it almost impossible to use other types of hanger with that spit.</p>
 
-<p>The hole may be made in either of two ways. For the penalty of carrying
-considerable extra weight, a cordless power drill is the quickest way to
-drill the hole. The heaviest item is the drill battery, which must, of
-course, be removed from the cave each time it needs charging. This method is
-of the most use where a lot of bolts need to be placed on a pitch series
-relatively accessible from an entrance. Lots of bolts are also needed for
-climbs up or exposed traverses to reach inaccessible passages.</p>
+<p>There is normally a line around the driver stem around 3mm above the thread;
+keep drilling until this point is reached. (This typically takes around 15-20
+minutes of drilling). Now grab yourself a cone, put it in the end of the spit,
+and hammer it back into the hole. You can normally detect when it is fully set
+by a change in the tone of the sound when you hit it; it should rise gradually
+to a high ring. If the hole is the right depth this will coincide with the spit
+being flush with the surface. Now you can remove the driver and screw in a
+hanger, and Bob's your uncle.</p>
 
-<p>The older (and more reliable, but slower) method is to use the anchor
-itself as the drill bit, driven in by use of a hammer. 8mm self-drilling
-rock anchors have teeth around their bottom for this purpose. The anchor is
-attached to a bolt driver, which is then repeatedly pounded with a hammer,
-whilst rotating the anchor by hand every couple of whacks. When this gets
-a little stiff, the anchor is pulled out of its hole and the dust and rock
-chips blown out. The process is repeated until the top of the anchor is
-just below the rock surface. A small conical "wedge" is then inserted into
-end of the anchor (thin end into the anchor) and the pair put back in the
-hole. Three or four good hard whacks with the hammer "set" the anchor by
-driving the wedge into the bottom end, expanding it. Beware of hitting it too
-many times, as this will start to weaken the rock around the anchor.</p>
+<h2>Power-drills and Hilti anchors</h2>
 
-<p>The hole produced by the power drill is a different shape from that produced
-by hand - since the power drill bit has a pointed end. It is also quite
-difficult to get the depth of the hole exactly right. For this reason, if a
-self-drilling anchor is set into a powerdrill hole, the wedge will not be
-driven into the anchor and an unsafe placement will result.  To use a
-self-drilling anchor, it is best to under-drill the hole, and finish off to
-just the right depth, and a square hole-bottom with a hand driver.</p>
+<div class="onleft"><a href="../l/bosch.htm"><img
+alt="(73k image)" src="../t/bosch.jpg" width="200" height="200" /></a><p
+class="caption">Using the Drill</p></div>
 
-<p>More efficiently for power-drilled holes, use a form of anchor specially
-intended for these holes. These anchors use a smaller hole, so you get more
-holes for your money from one battery charge, and the design of anchor means
-that the bottom of the hole is not used in the setting process, and the depth
-of the hole is therefore less critical (as long as it is deep enough that the
-anchor goes right in!)</p>
+<p>Since the first cordless hammer drills made an appearance on Expo 1990
+thanks to sponsorship from Bosch, drills have been enthusiastically adopted as
+the best solution for large-scale bolting tasks; some of the fun and games of
+recent years, like the 21-bolt traverse over Gaffered to the Walls in 2003,
+would be unthinkable with hand bolts. However, drills are not suited to use
+with ordinary spits, as the setting process depends critically on the bottom of
+the hole being flat. It is possible to drill a hole part-way with a power drill
+and finish it off by hand, but this is tedious.</p>
+
+<p>Hence we have found it easier to use Hilti anchors, which are specifically
+designed for use in drilled holes.</p>
 
 <div style="text-align: center">
 <a href="../../years/1990/hilti1-300.png"><img
@@ -102,6 +82,32 @@ src="../../years/1990/hilti1-100.png" /></a><br />
 width="220" height="94" 
 src="../../years/1990/hilti2-100.png" style="margin: 10pt" /></a></div>
 
+<p>There are two versions of these bolts, the HKD and the HKDS. The latter are
+easier to use, as they have a "shoulder" around the top of the bolt which sits
+against the rock, meaning that the depth of the hole is not important.</p>
+
+<p>To place a HKDS, drill the hole in the obvious manner until it is deep
+enough for the bolt to sit in without touching the bottom. If in doubt, drill
+it deep! When the hole is deep enough, grab a setting tool and start bashing it.</p>
+
+<p>Start with very gentle taps. The reason for this is so the shoulder can hold
+the bolt in position until it begins to grip the sides of the hole; if you
+start by smashing it with all your might, the shoulder will bend and the bolt
+will disappear, useless, into the depths of the hole. Once it has some grip you
+can start hitting a bit harder.</p>
+
+<p>It is very important to hit the Hilti setting tools exactly square, as they
+are made of very hard steel which is rather brittle and hence it is easy to
+shear the end off. When the bolt is fully set, you should be able to see marks
+on the shoulder of the spit from the four little teeth on the collar of the
+driver; don't worry if you can't see all four setting marks, but aim for two at
+least - one can easily be a consequence of leaning the driver over too far to
+one side.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, in particularly hard rock, it can be impossible to get the
+setting marks. Use your judgement; if you're not making any progress despite
+sustained hammering, it's probably OK to stop!</p>
+
 <hr />
 
 <ul id="links">
@@ -110,7 +116,9 @@ src="../../years/1990/hilti2-100.png" style="margin: 10pt" /></a></div>
 	<li><a href="index.htm">Rigging Guide</a>
 	<ul>
 		<li><a href="intro.htm">Introduction</a></li>
-		<li>Bolt belays &ndash; placing &amp; using</li>
+		<li><a href="boltplace.html">Choosing bolt locations</a></li>
+		<li>The mechanics of placing a bolt</li>
+		<li><a href="exporig.html">Expo-specific rigging tricks</a></li>
 	</ul></li>
 	<li><a href="../look4.htm">Prospecting guide</a></li>
 	<li><a href="../survey/index.htm">Surveying guide</a></li>
diff --git a/handbook/rig/index.htm b/handbook/rig/index.htm
index d2e01f2af..d1653c5db 100644
--- a/handbook/rig/index.htm
+++ b/handbook/rig/index.htm
@@ -25,7 +25,9 @@ expedition work, and some will cover techniques very rarely seen at home...</p>
 
 <ul>
 <li><a href="intro.htm">Introduction</a></li>
-<li><a href="boltin.htm">Placing bolts</a></li>
+<li><a href="boltplace.html">Where to put your anchors</a></li>
+<li><a href="boltin.htm">The mechanics of placing bolts</a></li>
+<li><a href="exporig.html">Expo-specific tricks</a></li>
 <li>well, that's all so far...</li>
 </ul>
 
diff --git a/handbook/rig/intro.htm b/handbook/rig/intro.htm
index 41106aece..18639b9a0 100644
--- a/handbook/rig/intro.htm
+++ b/handbook/rig/intro.htm
@@ -123,17 +123,19 @@ rebelay will result in a high fall-factor if the belay fails.</p>
 <hr />
 
 <ul id="links">
-<li><a href="../index.htm">Expedition Handbook</a> &ndash; Contents
+<li><a href="../index.htm">Expedition Handbook</a> - Contents
 <ul>
+	<li><a href="index.htm">Rigging Guide</a>
+	<ul>
+		<li><a href="intro.htm">Introduction</a></li>
+		<li><a href="boltplace.html">Choosing bolt locations</a></li>
+		<li><a href="boltin.htm">The mechanics of placing a bolt</a></li>
+		<li><a href="exporig.html">Expo-specific rigging tricks</a></li>
+	</ul></li>
 	<li><a href="../look4.htm">Prospecting guide</a></li>
 	<li><a href="../survey/index.htm">Surveying guide</a></li>
 	<li><a href="../rescue.htm">Rescue guide</a></li>
 	<li><a href="../photo.htm">Photography guide</a></li>
-	<li><a href="index.htm">Rigging guide</a> &ndash; Contents
-	<ul>
-		<li>Introduction</li>
-		<li><a href="boltin.htm">Bolt belays</a> - placing and using</li>
-	</ul></li>
 </ul></li>
 <li><a href="../../infodx.htm">Index to info/topics pages</a></li>
 <li><a href="../../indxal.htm">Full Index to area 1623</a>
@@ -141,7 +143,6 @@ rebelay will result in a high fall-factor if the belay fails.</p>
 	<li><a href="../../areas.htm">Area/subarea descriptions</a></li>
 </ul></li>
 <li><a href="../../index.htm">Back to Expedition Intro page</a></li>
-
 <li><a href="../../../index.htm">Back to CUCC Home page</a></li>
 </ul>
 </body>
diff --git a/handbook/survey/gps.htm b/handbook/survey/gps.htm
index 6a2a88921..915aa174f 100644
--- a/handbook/survey/gps.htm
+++ b/handbook/survey/gps.htm
@@ -57,7 +57,9 @@ can't select this particular set, but it is very important that you <u>write
 down what was actually used</u>, since different grid systems can give
 results up to a couple of kilometres different!</p>
 
-<p>If your GPS doesn't support Austrian coordinates out of the box, then you can set it up as a "User Grid" using some or all of the following cryptic runes:</p>
+<p>If your GPS doesn't support Austrian coordinates out of the box, then you
+can set it up as a "User Grid" using some or all of the following cryptic
+runes:</p>
 
 <div style="background-color: #BDB">
 <table>
@@ -74,13 +76,20 @@ a = 63377397.155m (&Delta;A = 739.845)<br />
 False easting 450km<br />
 No additional scaling<br />
 Grid boundaries at 11&deg;50' and 14&deg;50'</td></tr>
-<tr><th>EFEC coordinate conversion equation with respect to WGS84:</th>
+<tr><th>EFEC coordinate conversion<br />equation with respect to WGS84:</th>
 <td>Offsets &Delta;x = -575m, &Delta;y = -93m, &Delta;z = -466m<br />
 Rotations &omega;<sub>x</sub> = 5.1"; &omega;<sub>y</sub> = 5.1", &omega;<sub>z</sub> = 5.2"<br />
 Scaling -2.5ppm
 </td></tr></table>
 </div>
 
+<p>A good way of testing that your GPS is correctly set up is to set it WGS84
+Lat/Long and enter a waypoint for a point whose coordinates are known &ndash;
+such as the 204a tag, at 47&deg;41.456'N 013&deg;49.288' &ndash; and then
+change the settings again to use the user grid. It will now convert this point
+into the new grid; if you check its coordinates, it should come out as
+something close to 36697E, 83699N, which are the Gauss + Krugers for 204a.</p>
+
 <p>Write down the figure that the GPS gives for each waypoint at the time
 (just in case some failure loses the data from the GPS memory). That's all
 you need to do at the cave. Get the GPS data downloaded to a computer next
diff --git a/handbook/survey/lasers.htm b/handbook/survey/lasers.htm
index 3b089f649..4ceef6499 100644
--- a/handbook/survey/lasers.htm
+++ b/handbook/survey/lasers.htm
@@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ being dodgy, but we have no real indication of why.</p>
 <tr><td>0/4</td><td>35927.72</td><td>(52)82537.57</td><td>1687.45</td><td><a href="../../plateau/145.htm">Wolfh&ouml;hle</a></td></tr>
 <tr><td>0/5</td><td>36005.96</td><td>(52)82782.82</td><td>1690.70</td><td>up gully and left from <a href="../../plateau/107.htm">107</a>
 tatty cloth replaced with alloy tag "LASER 0/5" 1998</td></tr>
-<tr><td>0/6</td><td>35873.09</td><td>(52)82944.29</td><td>1647.78</td><td>Near <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">76</a> - between the three entrances</td></tr>
+<tr><td>0/6</td><td>35873.09</td><td>(52)82944.29</td><td>1647.78</td><td>Near <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">76</a> - between the three entrances</td></tr>
 
 <tr><td>0/7</td><td>35419.56</td><td>(52)82237.16</td><td>1769.77</td><td>Br&auml;uning Nase</td></tr>
 <tr><td>7/8</td><td>36040.75</td><td>(52)81522.72</td><td>1732.39</td><td>Felskuppe im Bereich des Vd. Schwarzmooskogel (Wei&szlig;e Warze, The Nipple, Bunter's Bulge)</td></tr>
diff --git a/intro.html b/intro.html
index 448f27bfa..1e0890f0f 100644
--- a/intro.html
+++ b/intro.html
@@ -9,21 +9,22 @@
 <h1>CUCC Austria Expeditions: Introduction</h1>
 
 <p><b>For well over two decades, Cambridge University Caving Club, CUCC, have
-explored caves on the <span lang="de-at">Loser</span> Plateau, about 80 km
-east of <span lang="de-at">Salzburg</span> in Austria. These WWW pages (over
-800 pages and over 700 images) contain much of the documentation from the
+explored caves on the <span lang="de-at">Loser</span> Plateau, about 80 km east
+of <span lang="de-at">Salzburg</span> in Austria. These WWW pages (over 800
+pages and over 700 images) contain much of the documentation from the
 exploration of these annual expeditions.</b></p>
 
-<p>The next expedition runs this year from 10th July to 14th August.  See
-<a href="years/2004/index.html">here</a> for more details.</p>
+<p>The next expedition runs next summer, probably mid-July to mid-August; it is
+still at the earliest planning stage. More details will appear when
+available.</p>
 
-<p>For those coming on an Austria expedition for the first time, this
-great bulk of material can seem a little overwhelming. However, it's
-important for people to have some idea of what they are coming to, in
-order that they can get the most out of expo. It is probably worth
-starting with the <a href="primer.htm">Expedition Primer</a> - a document
-intended specifically for new expo members, and leading to some of the more
-important pages which you should read.</p>
+<p>For those coming on an Austria expedition for the first time, this great
+bulk of material can seem a little overwhelming. However, it's important for
+people to have some idea of what they are coming to, in order that they can get
+the most out of expo. It is probably worth starting with the <a
+href="primer.htm">Expedition Primer</a> - a document intended specifically for
+new expo members, and leading to some of the more important pages which you
+should read.</p>
 
 <h4>A little history</h4>
 
@@ -48,17 +49,18 @@ majority of these are reproduced within these web pages and can be reached
 through the <a href="pubs.htm">list of published reports</a>.</p>
 
 <p>Accounts of these expeditions also make it to all the usual places, such
-as BCRA Caves &amp; Caving, Descent, and also to the journals of the various
-other clubs to which various <a href="folk/index.htm">expedition members</a>
-also belong. Much of this material is also being incorporated into these
-pages and can be reached through the above list.</p>
+as the BCA <i>Speleology</i> magazine or occasionally <i>Descent</i>, and also
+to the journals of the various other clubs to which various <a
+href="folk/index.htm">expedition members</a> also belong. Much of this material
+is also being incorporated into these pages and can be reached through the
+above list.</p>
 
-<p>All the expedition <a href="pubs.htm#logbooks">logbooks</a> which we
+<p>Most of the expedition <a href="pubs.htm#logbooks">logbooks</a> which we
 still possess have also been transcribed, and these, too, appear in this
 archive. When reading the logs, please bear in mind that the authors (often
 shattered after a hard day's caving, or, even more likely, drunk), never
-expected these accounts to be read by a wider public. Whilst some accounts
-are detailed and factual, others are.... lets say "informal" :-)</p>
+expected these accounts to be read by a wider public. Whilst some accounts are
+detailed and factual, others are.... lets say "informal" :-)</p>
 
 <p>Since 1988 CUCC has received generous help from many companies, mostly in
 the form of food. We are grateful for this support and are happy to promote
diff --git a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
index 3472721b8..5822ee699 100644
--- a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
+++ b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.CSV
@@ -95,7 +95,7 @@
 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).",,,,
 75,"2/T +",,,,"noinfo/kratzer/75.htm",,"Wisenth&ouml;hle",,,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 <a href=""../../kratzer/b4.htm"">B4</a>.",,,,"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""."
-76,"5/S/E +","a b c",,"yes","plateau/76.htm",,"Eislufth&ouml;hle",,,"1d","CUCC 1977-79","Two snow plugged dolines (76 b &amp; c) and a narrow shaft (76a) unite in a narrow rift leading to a windy lifelining position, <b>Draught Bitter</b>, at the head of a 72m shaft plugged with snow. Rigging <b>Plugged Shaft</b> between snow and rock, pitches in 1977 were 18m to a snow platform, 12m to a ledge, then 29m to a substantial ledge, <b>Yesterday's Terminus</b>. In 1979, with changed snow topography, and rigging for SRT, the drops were 11, 7, 17 and 19m to Yesterday's Terminus where a traverse out reaches a bolt for the final 13m drop onto a snow pile in a large aven chamber. A further 13m pitch, <b>Saved Shaft</b>, into a smaller aven chamber, <b>Boulder Chamber</b>, leads to an apparent end, but thrutch through boulders into top of rift/canyon. Hole in floor is 32m pitch into <b>Keg Series</b> (no draught) with further unexplored pitch below. Continuing traverse leads to climbs down then split pitch of 19m and 14m, <b>Follow-through Shaft</b>, dropping into side of abandoned canyon. Upstream to the left ends immediately while down canyon leads to head of a chamber, The Taproom, with a 5m climb down a big boulder under heavy drip/spray (handline useful). Also from the head of the chamber, passage leads back to a large unexplored hole in floor with lots of water entering from a high aven. 1977 terminus at -150m.</p><p>From chamber, scramble down in rift (rope useful owing to greasy rock and 120 metre drop) to reach head of large rift pitch below jammed boulder. Pitch drops in two sections of 10m and 35m, with stream out of reach in canyon, to ledge where stream bed is crossed (traverse line). Further pitch of 10m leads to straddle climb up to rocking boulder, then traverse forward to good belays for 48m pitch. This lands on <b>The Balcony</b> where water runs away from obvious way on into a tight immature drain.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""hgk"" href=""76/l/hotgk.htm""><img src=""76/t/hotgk.jpg"" width=""151"" height=""116"" alt=""HotGK.jpg (69k)"" /></a><p>Ben with the Greene King pennant on the Balcony</p></div><p>From the Balcony a 7m pitch drops into the <b>Hall of the Greene King</b>, a huge soaring aven chamber. The way on over a boulder floor leads under suspended boulders, one of immense size, to a 5m pitch down off the edge of a boulder. In the floor is a sharp canyon that loops round to a junction. Left leads to <b>Gents' Pitch</b> route, while right leads to a dry passage. After a few metres in the dry passage, there is a rift in the floor to the left, which is a muddy, broken pitch with sections of 3m, 12m and 18m into the main canyon (1978 route). Another few metres ahead, a bold step across the canyon leads to further passage which eventually degenerates and rejoins the main canyon upstream (right) of the bold step.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""p16"" href=""76/l/p16.htm""><img src=""76/t/p16.jpg"" width=""143"" height=""170"" alt=""p16.jpg (58k)"" /></a>&nbsp; &nbsp;<a href=""76/l/gents.htm""><img src=""76/t/gents.jpg"" width=""143"" height=""170"" alt=""Gents.jpg (36k)"" /></a><p>Julian Griffiths abseiling the 16.5m and Gents' pitches on the bottoming trip in 1979</p></div><p>The 1979 route from the junction leads to a pitch of 16.5m, free hanging just clear of the wall, with an excellent takeoff. However the rope gets muddy from mud on clothing in a couple of trips, so care is required. Next drop is the Gents' pitch of 9.5m, which leads to a short streamway rejoining the main canyon from the 1978 route. The bottom of this pitch is a good place for cavers to perform ablutions with the mud on their ascenders, hence the name (all the explorers were male). The main passage now leads on with stream in floor and muddy ledges above until the <b>Fiesta Run</b> is reached. This awkward slanting rift pitch of 28m is so muddy that ladders are <b><i>de rigeur</i></b>. The name derives from the car crash which terminated exploration at this point in 1978.</p><p>A traverse forward on muddy ledges leads out over a huge shaft with the ominous sound of a waterfall below. Traversing further eventually leads to a further pitch of 5m to a col. Down another 10m on the side away from the main shaft lands on a solid floor in an abandoned rift. Forward leads through narrow passage with sharp rock to a point where thrutchy traversing is necessary to make further progress. A 23m broken pitch in sharp rock, with very bad rub points leads only to a tight crawl. This was pushed by Julian Griffiths to emerge at a drop with a large aven above, which remains unexplored at about -395m depth.</p><p>The main way on, however, is to drop back into canyon towards the ominous hiss of water in a very wide pitch where the stream seems to have hit a fault at right angles to the arriving passage direction. The middle section of this 28m pitch is huge, before narrowing to a ledge parallel to the new fault, and 'downstream' from the original direction of stream flow. From the ledge, a smaller shaft of 33m drops down the new fault rift to a boulder floor where the water sinks. The fault rift, <b>Madlmeier Schacht</b>, now drops in sections of 24 and 19m to the end of the rope in 1979. Here an exposed freeclimb of 5m with icy water flowing over the handholds is not really recommended - take a longer rope. Next pitch of 24m picks up the main water again 10m down, and final pitch of 17m from ledge drops to floor of rift chamber, but mud on floor precedes final muddy 10m pitch down a boulder wall to a deep and terminal rift sump at -506m.</p><p><a name=""penult"" href=""76/l/penult.htm""><img src=""76/t/penult.jpg"" width=""123"" height=""184"" alt=""Penult.jpg (87k)"" class=""aligntop"" /></a> Simon Farrow on the last 17m pitch of Madlmeier Schacht</p><p><a href=""76/l/sump.htm""><img src=""76/t/sump.jpg"" width=""121"" height=""187"" alt=""Sump.jpg (37k)"" class=""aligntop"" /></a> Julian Griffiths at the final sump - 1979</p><p>There are a number of going leads in this cave and you're welcome to them.",,,,"The exploration is written up in many places:</p><ul><li><a href=""../years/1977/report.htm#youth"">Cambridge Underground 1978</a></li><li><a href=""../years/1977/771649.htm"">Belfry Bulletin 354</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../years/1978/report.htm#ropes"">Cambridge Underground 1979</a></li><li><a href=""../years/1978/bcracc.htm"">BCRA Caves &amp; Caving 2</a>, Andy Waddington </li><li><a href=""../years/1978/npc79.htm"">Northern Pennine Club Journal vol 3 no. 2, 1979</a>, Andy Waddington, Simon Farrow</li><li><a href=""../years/1978/descnt.htm"">Descent 40 (Jan/Feb 1979)</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../years/1978/782034.htm"">Belfry Bulletin 366 (Oct 1978)</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../years/1979/report.htm"">Cambridge Underground 1980</a></li><li><a href=""../years/1979/descnt.htm"">Descent 44</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../years/1979/792026.htm"">Belfry Bulletin 378</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../years/1979/bcracc.htm"">BCRA Caves &amp; Caving 8</a>, Andy Waddington</li><li><a href=""../years/1977/andylg.htm#id1977-76-1"">Logbook accounts</a></li><li><a href=""76/histry.htm"">Trip index</a></li><li><a href=""../years/1979/811412.htm"">Speleo Krakow 1/2 Dec 1980</a>, Andy Waddington</li></ul><p>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 <a href=""76/76.3d"">.3d file</a> or <a href=""76/surveydata.tgz"">raw Survex data</a>.","? grade 1",,"1181m resurveyed so far","approx 506m; resurveyed to 190m","172m surveyed",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Out on the plateau near some very large erratic boulders. Laser rangefound point 0/6 is between the three entrances",,,"</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""scf"" href=""76/l/scf.htm""><img src=""76/t/scf.jpg"" width=""170"" height=""108"" alt=""SCF.jpg (73k)"" /></a><p>Simon Farrow at the entrance of 76 during the initial exploration in 1977</p></div><p>","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 +","a b c",,"yes","plateau/76/76.htm",,"Eislufth&ouml;hle",,,"1d","CUCC 1977-79","Two snow plugged dolines (76 b &amp; c) and a narrow shaft (76a) unite in a narrow rift leading to a windy lifelining position, <b>Draught Bitter</b>, at the head of a 72m shaft plugged with snow. Rigging <b>Plugged Shaft</b> between snow and rock, pitches in 1977 were 18m to a snow platform, 12m to a ledge, then 29m to a substantial ledge, <b>Yesterday's Terminus</b>. In 1979, with changed snow topography, and rigging for SRT, the drops were 11, 7, 17 and 19m to Yesterday's Terminus where a traverse out reaches a bolt for the final 13m drop onto a snow pile in a large aven chamber. A further 13m pitch, <b>Saved Shaft</b>, into a smaller aven chamber, <b>Boulder Chamber</b>, leads to an apparent end, but thrutch through boulders into top of rift/canyon. Hole in floor is 32m pitch into <b>Keg Series</b> (no draught) with further unexplored pitch below. Continuing traverse leads to climbs down then split pitch of 19m and 14m, <b>Follow-through Shaft</b>, dropping into side of abandoned canyon. Upstream to the left ends immediately while down canyon leads to head of a chamber, The Taproom, with a 5m climb down a big boulder under heavy drip/spray (handline useful). Also from the head of the chamber, passage leads back to a large unexplored hole in floor with lots of water entering from a high aven. 1977 terminus at -150m.</p>  <p>From chamber, scramble down in rift (rope useful owing to greasy rock and 120 metre drop) to reach head of large rift pitch below jammed boulder. Pitch drops in two sections of 10m and 35m, with stream out of reach in canyon, to ledge where stream bed is crossed (traverse line). Further pitch of 10m leads to straddle climb up to rocking boulder, then traverse forward to good belays for 48m pitch. This lands on <b>The Balcony</b> where water runs away from obvious way on into a tight immature drain.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""hgk"" href=""l/hotgk.htm""><img src=""t/hotgk.jpg"" width=""151"" height=""116"" alt=""HotGK.jpg (69k)"" /></a><p>Ben with the Greene King pennant on the Balcony</p></div><p>From the Balcony a 7m pitch drops into the <b>Hall of the Greene King</b>, a huge soaring aven chamber. The way on over a boulder floor leads under suspended boulders, one of immense size, to a 5m pitch down off the edge of a boulder. In the floor is a sharp canyon that loops round to a junction. Left leads to <b>Gents' Pitch</b> route, while right leads to a dry passage. After a few metres in the dry passage, there is a rift in the floor to the left, which is a muddy, broken pitch with sections of 3m, 12m and 18m into the main canyon (1978 route). Another few metres ahead, a bold step across the canyon leads to further passage which eventually degenerates and rejoins the main canyon upstream (right) of the bold step.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""p16"" href=""l/p16.htm""><img src=""t/p16.jpg"" width=""143"" height=""170"" alt=""p16.jpg (58k)"" /></a>&nbsp; &nbsp;<a href=""l/gents.htm""><img src=""t/gents.jpg"" width=""143"" height=""170"" alt=""Gents.jpg (36k)"" /></a><p>Julian Griffiths abseiling the 16.5m and Gents' pitches on the bottoming trip in 1979</p></div><p>The 1979 route from the junction leads to a pitch of 16.5m, free hanging just clear of the wall, with an excellent takeoff. However the rope gets muddy from mud on clothing in a couple of trips, so care is required. Next drop is the Gents' pitch of 9.5m, which leads to a short streamway rejoining the main canyon from the 1978 route. The bottom of this pitch is a good place for cavers to perform ablutions with the mud on their ascenders, hence the name (all the explorers were male). The main passage now leads on with stream in floor and muddy ledges above until the <b>Fiesta Run</b> is reached. This awkward slanting rift pitch of 28m is so muddy that ladders are <b><i>de rigeur</i></b>. The name derives from the car crash which terminated exploration at this point in 1978.</p><p>A traverse forward on muddy ledges leads out over a huge shaft with the ominous sound of a waterfall below. Traversing further eventually leads to a further pitch of 5m to a col. Down another 10m on the side away from the main shaft lands on a solid floor in an abandoned rift. Forward leads through narrow passage with sharp rock to a point where thrutchy traversing is necessary to make further progress. A 23m broken pitch in sharp rock, with very bad rub points leads only to a tight crawl. This was pushed by Julian Griffiths to emerge at a drop with a large aven above, which remains unexplored at about -395m depth.</p><p>The main way on, however, is to drop back into canyon towards the ominous hiss of water in a very wide pitch where the stream seems to have hit a fault at right angles to the arriving passage direction. The middle section of this 28m pitch is huge, before narrowing to a ledge parallel to the new fault, and 'downstream' from the original direction of stream flow. From the ledge, a smaller shaft of 33m drops down the new fault rift to a boulder floor where the water sinks. The fault rift, <b>Madlmeier Schacht</b>, now drops in sections of 24 and 19m to the end of the rope in 1979. Here an exposed freeclimb of 5m with icy water flowing over the handholds is not really recommended - take a longer rope. Next pitch of 24m picks up the main water again 10m down, and final pitch of 17m from ledge drops to floor of rift chamber, but mud on floor precedes final muddy 10m pitch down a boulder wall to a deep and terminal rift sump at -506m.</p><p><a name=""penult"" href=""l/penult.htm""><img src=""t/penult.jpg"" width=""123"" height=""184"" alt=""Penult.jpg (87k)"" class=""aligntop"" /></a> Simon Farrow on the last 17m pitch of Madlmeier Schacht</p><p><a href=""l/sump.htm""><img src=""t/sump.jpg"" width=""121"" height=""187"" alt=""Sump.jpg (37k)"" class=""aligntop"" /></a> Julian Griffiths at the final sump - 1979</p><p>There are a number of going leads in this cave and you're welcome to them. ",,,,"The exploration is written up in many places:</p><ul><li><a href=""../../years/1977/report.htm#youth"">Cambridge Underground 1978</a></li><li><a href=""../../years/1977/771649.htm"">Belfry Bulletin 354</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../../years/1978/report.htm#ropes"">Cambridge Underground 1979</a></li><li><a href=""../../years/1978/bcracc.htm"">BCRA Caves &amp; Caving 2</a>, Andy Waddington </li><li><a href=""../../years/1978/npc79.htm"">Northern Pennine Club Journal vol 3 no. 2, 1979</a>, Andy Waddington, Simon Farrow</li><li><a href=""../../years/1978/descnt.htm"">Descent 40 (Jan/Feb 1979)</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../../years/1978/782034.htm"">Belfry Bulletin 366 (Oct 1978)</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../../years/1979/report.htm"">Cambridge Underground 1980</a></li><li><a href=""../../years/1979/descnt.htm"">Descent 44</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../../years/1979/792026.htm"">Belfry Bulletin 378</a>, Nick Thorne</li><li><a href=""../../years/1979/bcracc.htm"">BCRA Caves &amp; Caving 8</a>, Andy Waddington</li><li><a href=""../../years/1977/andylg.htm#id1977-76-1"">Logbook accounts</a></li><li><a href=""histry.htm"">Trip index</a></li><li><a href=""../../years/1979/811412.htm"">Speleo Krakow 1/2 Dec 1980</a>, Andy Waddington</li></ul><p>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 <a href=""76.3d"">.3d file</a> or <a href=""surveydata.tgz"">raw Survex data</a>.","? grade 1",,"1181m resurveyed so far","approx 506m; resurveyed to 190m","172m surveyed",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Out on the plateau near some very large erratic boulders. Laser rangefound point 0/6 is between the three entrances",,,"</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""scf"" href=""l/scf.htm""><img src=""t/scf.jpg"" width=""170"" height=""108"" alt=""SCF.jpg (73k)"" /></a><p>Simon Farrow at the entrance of 76 during the initial exploration in 1977</p></div><p>","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,,"a",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p76a","p76","entrance dotted triangle on 76",,"Surface survey",,,82939,35874,"1645m  ",,,,,,,
 76,,"b",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
 76,,"c",,"last entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
@@ -125,22 +125,22 @@
 94,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/94.htm",,"Br&auml;u Schacht 94",,,"1a","CUCC 1977 - Team Enthusiast.","A rift on a joint (strike 223&#176;, dip 70&#176; to SE) is a spiralling freeclimb to a choke at -35m",,,,,,,,,"35m",,,,,,"p94",,,,"Surface survey",,,82540,35248,"1642m",,," A little north of Kat.93.","From <a href=""91.htm"">91</a> (q.v.), the karren slopes down at 10&#176;. About 50m down the slope on a bearing of 335&#176; is the large open shaft of 94, (visible from <a href=""93.htm"">93</a>, which is about 20m from 91).",,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/l/94x93.htm""><img src=""others/t/94x93.jpg"" alt=""Location of 94 in the landscape (71k JPEG)"" width=""218"" height=""160"" /></a><p>Entrance 94 in centre, looking towards Sch&ouml;nberg</p></div><p>","number in red (1977) on scarp facing south, 1998 tag ""1623 94 CUCC 1977"" - tag bolt (middle of ""9"")"
 95,"1/S -",,,,"br-alm/95.htm",,"Br&auml;u Schacht 95",,,3,"CUCC 1977 - Team Enthusiast. ","A 10m climb down to an unpushed and unpromising tube. ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1585m",,,"South of Br&auml;uning Alm, near camp 1 (1977) ? ",,,,
 96,"3/S +",,,,"br-alm/96.htm",,"Br&auml;u Schacht 96",,,3,"CUCC 1977 - Team Enthusiast.","Open shaft of 15m leads to a descending rift. Next pitch of 25m, then a short climb, 6m pitch and 15m pitch into a chamber where the water sinks. The upper level of a small rift leads to an abandoned passage and a series of increasingly muddy freeclimbs to a final squeeze and 5m pitch into a sordid little sump.",,,,,,"</p><p><img alt=""grade 1 elevation: 13k gif"" width=""640"" height=""900"" src=""96.png"" />",,,"105m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1600m",,,"In grassy pasture east of Br&auml;uning Alm, next to CUCC's high-level camp of 1977 (<a href=""../tcamps.htm#id1977camp"">camp 1</a>).  ",,,"</p><div class=""centre""><img alt=""entrance photo - 16k jpeg"" width=""240"" height=""360"" src=""t/s109.jpg"" /></div><p>","number painted red in 1976, refreshed (probably in orange which elsewhere hasn't lasted well) in 1990."
-97,"4/S/W x",,,,"plateau/97.htm",,"Schneewindschacht",,,"1d","CUCC 1977 - Team Enthusiast.","The entrance is the head of a 10m freeclimbable chimney, followed by a 5m climb into a small chamber. Two ways on from the chamber unite in a tiny crawl under a drip. A thrutch through (about the size of Baptistry in Car Pot) is <b>The Nun's Cunt</b>, which ends abruptly at  <b>The Vestry</b>, where SRT gear can be put back on while perched above the pitch which follows. Drops of 15m, 20m and 20m, <b>The Bottomless Abbess</b>, lead to a traverse over a blind pitch of about 10m.</p><p>The Bottomless Abbess continues with pitches of 15m, 30m, 15m and 15m to a short horizontal section. This breaks out into the side of another shaft where 15m and 10m pitches lead to a more complex area. A short pitch of 6m leads to the <b>Priest's Hole</b> and a gently slanting ramp into a dry, dusty, abandoned phreatic passage. This is interrupted by a large hole in the floor, which would require bolts to cross.</p><p>Down the hole, the 25m pitch starts unpromisingly, but soon bells out into a magnificent trench passage. Traversing over a gully leads to a series of short climbs and a fine last pitch <b>The Dissolution</b>. Here the water sinks into an impenetrable crack.</p><p>The entrance draughts strongly, but there is no air movement at the end, the most likely way on being the traverse to reach the continuation of the phreatic level at -190m. Unfortunately, the trip to this point is quite severe, since the crawl would render rescue impractical and the Bottomless Abbess rapidly becomes very wet after rain.",,,,,,"</p><ul><li>grade 1 extended section, JTG, 1977.</li><li>Surface survey grade 3, 1984, AERW+MM from laser 0/4 at <span lang=""de"">Wolfh&ouml;hle</span></li></ul><div class=""centre""><img alt=""100 dpi elevation (710x1710) 30k gif"" width=""710"" height=""1710"" src=""others/97.png"" /></div><p>",,,"265m",,,,,,,"p97","west edge of doline",,"Surface survey",,,83039,35837,"1641m",,,"Out on the plateau.","Head across for the large erratic boulders near <a href=""76.htm"">76</a> (aka 106), then away from the col past the open shaft of <a href=""105.htm"">105</a>, turning left at a gap in the scrub which leads down a bare karren corridor to some dolines. Step across one and cast about for a large one with 97 in red paint.","A moderately large doline, usually without snow, has a small triangular opening at the SW end.",,"""97"" in red paint on doline wall"
+97,"4/S/W x",,,,"plateau/97.htm",,"Schneewindschacht",,,"1d","CUCC 1977 - Team Enthusiast.","The entrance is the head of a 10m freeclimbable chimney, followed by a 5m climb into a small chamber. Two ways on from the chamber unite in a tiny crawl under a drip. A thrutch through (about the size of Baptistry in Car Pot) is <b>The Nun's Cunt</b>, which ends abruptly at  <b>The Vestry</b>, where SRT gear can be put back on while perched above the pitch which follows. Drops of 15m, 20m and 20m, <b>The Bottomless Abbess</b>, lead to a traverse over a blind pitch of about 10m.</p><p>The Bottomless Abbess continues with pitches of 15m, 30m, 15m and 15m to a short horizontal section. This breaks out into the side of another shaft where 15m and 10m pitches lead to a more complex area. A short pitch of 6m leads to the <b>Priest's Hole</b> and a gently slanting ramp into a dry, dusty, abandoned phreatic passage. This is interrupted by a large hole in the floor, which would require bolts to cross.</p><p>Down the hole, the 25m pitch starts unpromisingly, but soon bells out into a magnificent trench passage. Traversing over a gully leads to a series of short climbs and a fine last pitch <b>The Dissolution</b>. Here the water sinks into an impenetrable crack.</p><p>The entrance draughts strongly, but there is no air movement at the end, the most likely way on being the traverse to reach the continuation of the phreatic level at -190m. Unfortunately, the trip to this point is quite severe, since the crawl would render rescue impractical and the Bottomless Abbess rapidly becomes very wet after rain.",,,,,,"</p><ul><li>grade 1 extended section, JTG, 1977.</li><li>Surface survey grade 3, 1984, AERW+MM from laser 0/4 at <span lang=""de"">Wolfh&ouml;hle</span></li></ul><div class=""centre""><img alt=""100 dpi elevation (710x1710) 30k gif"" width=""710"" height=""1710"" src=""others/97.png"" /></div><p>",,,"265m",,,,,,,"p97","west edge of doline",,"Surface survey",,,83039,35837,"1641m",,,"Out on the plateau.","Head across for the large erratic boulders near <a href=""76/76.htm"">76</a> (aka 106), then away from the col past the open shaft of <a href=""105.htm"">105</a>, turning left at a gap in the scrub which leads down a bare karren corridor to some dolines. Step across one and cast about for a large one with 97 in red paint.","A moderately large doline, usually without snow, has a small triangular opening at the SW end.",,"""97"" in red paint on doline wall"
 98,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/98.htm",,"Plateau Schacht 98",,,"1d","CUCC 1978 - Team Youth/Ladders","After top of entrance shaft, it bells out, to land on a lightly boulder-covered floor after 29m. Tight thrutch to one side leads to second pitch of 17m to a flat rock floor with no way on.",,,,"<a href=""../years/1978/log.htm#id1978-98-1"">Logbook accounts</a>",,"<!--</p><p><img alt=""3-d sketch - 21k gif"" width=""590"" height=""890"" src=""others/99.png"" /></p><p>-->Grade 1 3-d sketch by Tony Malcolm, 1979 (missing)",,,"47m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"c 1630m ",,,"Out on the plateau somewhat further than <a href=""97.htm"">97</a>, in a large sloping rockface.",,"A small shaft in a large grike with very sharp rocks at the top",,
-99,"1/S x",,,,"plateau/99.htm",,"Plateau Schacht 99",,,"1d","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1979</li><li>Surface survey 1999</li></ul><p>","Entrance gully of 5m leads to 20m pitch at 70&deg; over snow, heading roughly back towards Eislufth&ouml;hle. At the base is a 'snow-duck' under a rock wall beyond which a small rift-like chamber descends about 3m. Straight ahead at the same level, the rift quickly becomes an impenetrable slot through which can be seen a 2m wide passage with an ice floor running down from right to left at 5-10&deg;. This is the source of the strong draught. Below the slot is another low hole, this leaks a vague draught and leads to a small boulder-strewn ledge with a definite blackness continuing to the left behind more boulders. Energetic but nervous removal of these gave obvious signs of a continuation, but other commitments and rain prevented a return. Note therefore it has been <strong>Left Going</strong>.",,,,"<a href=""../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-99-1"">Logbook accounts</a>",,,,,,,,,,,"p99",,,,"Surface survey",,,82904,35871,"1642m",,,"A short way South East of <span lang=""de"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> Kat.76</p><p>E  35876.6   N  (52)82903.5   H  1638.9",,"Draughting entrance near <span lang=""de"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span><a href=""76.htm"">(1623/76)</a>, ignored at first, since it was assumed it would join 76.",,"tag 1999"
+99,"1/S x",,,,"plateau/99.htm",,"Plateau Schacht 99",,,"1d","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1979</li><li>Surface survey 1999</li></ul><p>","Entrance gully of 5m leads to 20m pitch at 70&deg; over snow, heading roughly back towards Eislufth&ouml;hle. At the base is a 'snow-duck' under a rock wall beyond which a small rift-like chamber descends about 3m. Straight ahead at the same level, the rift quickly becomes an impenetrable slot through which can be seen a 2m wide passage with an ice floor running down from right to left at 5-10&deg;. This is the source of the strong draught. Below the slot is another low hole, this leaks a vague draught and leads to a small boulder-strewn ledge with a definite blackness continuing to the left behind more boulders. Energetic but nervous removal of these gave obvious signs of a continuation, but other commitments and rain prevented a return. Note therefore it has been <strong>Left Going</strong>.",,,,"<a href=""../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-99-1"">Logbook accounts</a>",,,,,,,,,,,"p99",,,,"Surface survey",,,82904,35871,"1642m",,,"A short way South East of <span lang=""de"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span> Kat.76</p><p>E  35876.6   N  (52)82903.5   H  1638.9",,"Draughting entrance near <span lang=""de"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</span><a href=""76/76.htm"">(1623/76)</a>, ignored at first, since it was assumed it would join 76.",,"tag 1999"
 100,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/100.htm",,"Plateau Schacht 100",,,"1a","CUCC 1977, Team Youth, and again in 1990 by AERW ","An east-west rift with two obvious points of descent. The more easterly is about 6m deep and can be seen to end in a chamber. The more westerly is a 15m pitch, with a window communicating with the east hole. At base are boulders and a climb down. A crawl leads to an inlet where water appears and sinks into an impenetrable slot with very sharp rock. ",,,,,,,,,"18m",,,,,,"p100",,,,"Surface survey",,,82401,35521,"1657m",,,"Just beyond the col, on the left.  It is, in fact, extremely near Top Camp, virtually on one of the routes to the Schwarzmooskogel areas. ",0,,,"red painted number, with 1998 tag ""1623 100 CUCC 1977"" in centre (M6 stud).</p><p>This cave was originally only numbered in carbide, so was unmarked for years. It was relocated in 1989, but was not numbered until 1993 since AERW didn't think to carry paint while trying to find old holes. The orange number was fading and chipped in 1995, so was refreshed in red. The surface survey was to the centre of the middle digit of the number."
 101,"1/S +","main a",,"yes","plateau/101.htm",,"Plateau Schacht 101",,,"1b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1977 - Team Youth (A.Waddington &amp; N.Thorne)</li><li>Surface survey to entrance CUCC, 1998</li></ul><p>","Entrance is in a rift orientated 40&deg;-220&deg; and hading about 20&deg;. A 5m climb down leads to a horizontal passage going both ways, north leading out into the face of the scarp (101A). South (down dip) leads to a 4m pitch followed by a small crawl in a scree-floored phreatic tube, leading down dip, at about 30&deg;. This drops via a short climb into a meandering phreatic tube with a tiny stream slot fed by an aven on the left. Progress is by crawling in the roof tube, which goes for about 40m until a window in the right wall leads to the base of an aven. The continuing crawl is too small, while a climb down below the aven (undescended) appears to choke.",,,,,,"? grade 1",,,"~12m",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Br&auml;uning Scharte 218&deg;, Grieskogel 012.5&deg;, Br&auml;uning Nase 194.5&deg;, Lost Rucksack cairn 319&deg; (compass #439258: NPC2)",,"Out on the plateau, near a large north-facing fault scarp on 125-305&deg;. Perhaps best located when looking for Wolfh&ouml;hle (which is nowhere nearby) in the mist (see <a href=""../years/1984/log.htm#rescue"">1984 logbook</a>). There was an OAV ski-tourers' marker pole due north of the col, from which the entrance is about 50m away on 35&deg;. Unfortunately, the pole was pretty much invisible from the approach route in 1977, and is now rotting on the ground, only visible from a metre away at best. However, the cave was relocated in 1998. It turns out to be very close to the faintly-marked path which leads past <a href=""200.htm"">Lost Rucksack Cave</a> towards <a href=""1996_05.html"">CUCC 1996-05</a>, and is a short way south of <a href=""173.htm"">1623/173</a>.</p><p>(GPS: (cliff directly above 101A) GK 5410503 5283483 (FOM 9.2m))",,,,"extremely faded numbers ""101"" and ""101A"" in red on upper and lower entrances. 1998 tag ""1623 101 CUCC 1977"" on upper entrance, southeast-facing (M6 stud)."
 ,,"main",,"entrance","plateau/101main.htm",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"t101",,,,"Surface survey",,,82908,35601,"1633m","Br&auml;uning Scharte 218&deg;, Grieskogel 012.5&deg;, Br&auml;uning Nase 194.5&deg;, Lost Rucksack cairn 319&deg; (compass #439258: NPC2)",,,,"Entrance is in a rift orientated 40&deg;-220&deg; and hading about 20&deg;",,"extremely faded numbers ""101"" in red. 1998 tag ""1623 101 CUCC 1977"" southeast-facing (M6 stud)."
 ,,"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",,82932,35577,"1632m","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.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 76). The boulder has an incipient split, and is visible from the col.",,,,"paint"
-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",,,82967,35883,"1649m ",,,"30m north of <a href=""76.htm"">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> on the plateau.",,,,"paint; tag 1999"
-106,,,,,,,,,"Number not allocated (see <a href=""plateau/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.",,,,,,"? grade 5",,,"280m",,,,,,,"p107",,"exact point not recorded","Surface survey","gps98.107",,82721,35929,"1660m",,,"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.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"""
+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"
+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",,,82967,35883,"1649m ",,,"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.",,,,,,"? grade 5",,,"280m",,,,,,,"p107",,"exact point not recorded","Surface survey","gps98.107",,82721,35929,"1660m",,,"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",,,,
 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",,,81246,36202,"1592m",,,,"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.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"
+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>.  ",,,,
 112,"1/S +",,,,"plateau/112.htm",,"Plateau Schacht 112",,,"1d","CUCC 1978 - Supersmooth/Supercool","Next to open shaft half full of snow. Shaft drops 50m past two ledges to choke.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,," Out on plateau, 50m from <a href=""111.htm"">111</a>.  ",,,,
 113,"4/S/T +",,,,"smkridge/113.htm",,"Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle",,,"2b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1980 (Team Sunbeam) to bottom</li><li>1982 to push bottom, but no new passage found.</li><li>Entered from 152 in 1985, Ibbeth Perilous Pot route connected 1987</li></ul><p>","Entrance is <b>huge</b>. A sizeable dry valley develops into a canyon which is full of snow. The canyon ends downstream in a solid wall, where the rigging point for the entrance pitch starts by the aforementioned tree. A short drop leads to a ledge where a stretch to the left (facing the rock) reaches a rebelay in a fine position on the impending wall. From here, drop 21m onto a large snow slope, then 10m further to the flat snow floor of a large chamber lit from above by the shaft.</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/l/113day.htm""><img src=""others/t/113day.jpg"" alt=""(photo (23k jpeg))"" width=""130"" height=""200"" /></a></div><p>The way on is up a climb of 3m to a horizontal passage. There is an area of hading rifts, not fully explored. The first hole descends a ramp over treacherous ice and rubble for 30m to the head of a pitch, <b>Ibbeth Perilous Pot</b>. A second parallel ramp connects to the same point. Both these ramps suffer from loose rock and are best tackled with a handline. The main pitch drops for 20m in a series of steps, best rigged. A final 13m drop then lands on a rock/ice blockage <b>Marathon Ledge</b>, which at one time contained the original explorer's helmet and lights, dropped from the head of the pitch. A hammered route past the blockage leads to two short drops, then a 6m pitch into the Opera House (see below).</p><p>A descent of the second major hole from the entrance is the normal route and leads to a ramp down, traverse across and the head of <b>Point Five Gully</b>. The gully is decorated with ice formations early in the season, as are all the useful hand- and footholds on the following ramp, so a rope is recommended to descend <b>Fox's Glacier</b>. At the foot, about 60m below the entrance chamber, is a low bouldery chamber, and a low arch leads to a larger chamber, <b>Barnsley Methodist Chapel</b>, which is 20m high and 30m long.</p><p>The Chapel is floored with large boulders at one end, but an obvious low sandy passage to the left leads to the head of a 14m dry rift pitch with a bouldery takeoff. The pitch is free-hanging after the first two metres, to a gravel-floored chamber opening off the rift. Water entering high on the right takes a floor trench 10m deep which may be traversed above to gain the <b>Balcony</b> of the <b>Opera House</b>, an impressive 20m diameter, roughly circular chamber. A 12.5m pitch (awkward takeoff as rigged in 1980) gains the bouldery, sloping floor. A scramble down boulders and a further 7m pitch over a very large boulder leads into a rift, where an awkward 10m pitch with natural belays and joke bolts leads to a flat mud floor at a larger section at the head of a pitch. At this point the draught changes direction, the cave becomes clean, and a stream is met falling from an inaccessible (and out of sight) passage, apparently at the same level as the pitch head.</p><p>Down the pitch, a rebelay (which is a very long stretch to rig unless you're very tall) avoids the worst of the water on <b>Purple Pit</b>. Quite possibly this could be rigged as a deviation (we didn't do these in 1980). There is a long section to a large ledge, from where the pitch leaves the fault it has been following and heads down a series of short steps with rebelays a few metres apart. At the bottom of this section, 60m below the start, a further fault is met at right angles, with twin holes in the floor. The first one is wet and nasty, while the second is tolerable. Both unite and go off to the left in a diminutive streamway. To the right above the holes is the entry point from <a href=""152.htm"">Bananeh&ouml;hle</a>(152), explored in 1985.</p><div class=""centre""><a name=""ppitbot"" href=""others/l/purple.htm""><img src=""others/t/purple.jpg"" alt=""(B/W photo (58k jpeg))"" width=""134"" height=""200"" /></a><p>Simon Kellet at the top of the short dry pitch below Purple Pit </p></div><p>The diminutive streamway ends shortly in a tight sump, but before this, a climb up leads unobviously to a traverse and then a crawl trending back over the entry point, <b>M&uuml;sli Crawl</b>. A number of acute bends are disorientating, then a short drop leads to a final rift and a pitch head. This is a thrutch to start, then drops 10m to where the water reenters. A series of drops, <b>Sprucy Wind</b>, follows, and some of the bolts (1980 vintage, greased in 1982) are easily missed, which makes the pitches wetter. There is a branch shaft at one point which is unexplored, but appears to reunite somewhat lower down. The pitches of 8, 26, 12, 10, 10, 20, 5 and 9m drop to a final rift chamber where an inlet from up on the left doubles the size of the stream on a rocky floor. This inlet responds to floods about an hour faster than the main water. The combined waters fall down a 6m drop and sink in a gravel-choked pool.</p><p>Climbing up opposite the inlet, a dry rift is a little tight but pops out into a series of dry passages, apparently quite unrelated to the rift pitches. This area, <b>The Crematorium</b>, is a good place to wait when the pitches flood. There is a large horizontal passage ending in a chamber with various bedding crawl extensions. Avens in the roof are hard to reach (one bolt used for aid) and don't seem to go anywhere. A narrow rift in the floor contains the stream, and a climb down can be made at one point where it is just wide enough. Thrutching forward in a traverse cum crawl a short way above the water, a couple more diminutive drops reach a place where to continue would be just plain stupid, since it is small and wet. The cave was rigged in 1982 just to go and push the end. It didn't go.</p><p>There is potential for further extension by traversing over down-ramps in the entrance area, and by gaining access to the source of the water (and route of the draught) at the top of Purple Pit. Apparently the Point Five Gully and Fox's Glacier Ramp was traversed over in 1987, and another ramp descended, but this seems to have rejoined the main route somewhere near Barnsley Methodist Chapel. This route was not surveyed.",,,,,,"? grade 3","caves/113/113.svx","521m","330m approx (apparently, but surveyed only to 206m)","91m",,,,,,"p113","pitch head bolt on wall above yawning chasm near ""113"" paint mark.   NB this cannot be reached without SRTing off the bunde and is very exposed (start of underground survey)",,"Surface survey",,,81333,36253,"1640m",,,,"Follow St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) well past turn off for <a href=""41.htm"">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>. This involves a steep descent, then a long horizontal stretch, crossing the dry valley containing Kat.  <a href=""87.htm"">87a</a>. After quite a way, there is an orange paint flash on the left, more easily seen when coming the other way. This is just a few metres before you turn left and start hacking up the hillside. Further orange paint marks the route, which goes up a dry valley and over the entrance <a href=""109.htm"">109</a>. Eventually, a scrub-free area is reached, go right and then scramble up rock towards a tree. Don�t rush beyond the tree or you'll fall a long way.",,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/l/113ac.htm""><img src=""others/t/113ac.jpg"" alt=""(photo (67k jpeg))"" width=""124"" height=""184"" /></a> Andy Connolly on entrance, 1980 <a href=""others/l/113ent.htm""><img src=""others/t/113ent.jpg"" alt=""(photo (53k jpeg))"" width=""131"" height=""165"" /></a></div><p>","Orange painted number on north-facing wall above shaft"
@@ -165,7 +165,7 @@
 ,,"a",,"entrance","smkridge/161/136a.htm",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p136",,,,"Nils","gps96bestfit.136","gps00.136 gps00.136_2",82220,36364,"1796m","135m on bearing of 66&deg; from Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel summit or 123m East and 55m north of the summit.",,,,,,
 ,,"b","CUCC96-WK10","entrance","smkridge/161/136b.htm",,,,,,"</p><ul><li>Discovered CUCC 1996 (Wookey)</li><li>Explored and surveyed 1999 (Andy Atkinson, Simon Flower)</li></ul><p>",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p136b","spit",,"Surface survey",,,82237,36367,"1789m","VSK: 233&deg;, Hollweiser: 145&deg; (from a point between the WK7-WK10 entrances)",,"136b is 22m N of 136a",,"Slot entrance, leads 10m down spacious boulder slope to p5. Warm draught.",,"Spit"
 ,,"c","CUCC96-WK9","entrance","smkridge/161/136c.htm",,,,,,"</p><ul><li>Discovered CUCC 1996 (Wookey)</li><li>Explored and surveyed 1999 (Andy Atkinson, Simon Flower)</li></ul><p>",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p136c","spit",,"Surface survey",,,82252,36371,"1790m","VSK: 233&deg;, Hollweiser: 145&deg; (from a point between the WK7-WK10 entrances)",,"136c is 28m N of 136a",,"136c is slot next to Schistock-Absturzschacht, and clearly connects to 136d.",,"Spit"
-,,"d","CUCC96-WK9","last entrance","smkridge/161/136d.htm",,,,,,"</p><ul><li>Discovered CUCC 1996 (Wookey)</li><li>Explored and surveyed 1999 (Andy Atkinson, Simon Flower)</li></ul><p>",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p136d",,,,"Surface survey",,,82252,36376,"1792m","VSK: 233&deg;, Hollweiser: 145&deg; (from a point between the WK7-WK10 entrances)",,"136d is 35m NNE of 136a.",,"136d is 15x10m funnel-shaped shaft over a 1m ridge from <a href=""209.htm"">209 - Schistock-Absturzschacht</a>, so not quite as obvious.",,"Tag ""CUCC 97-08"" between 136d and 209 (Schistock-Absturzschacht)"
+,,"d","CUCC96-WK9","last entrance","smkridge/161/136d.htm",,,,,,"</p><ul><li>Discovered CUCC 1996 (Wookey)</li><li>Explored and surveyed 1999 (Andy Atkinson, Simon Flower)</li></ul><p>",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p136d",,,,"Surface survey",,,82252,36376,"1792m","VSK: 233&deg;, Hollweiser: 145&deg; (from a point between the WK7-WK10 entrances)",,"136d is 35m NNE of 136a.",,"136d is 15x10m funnel-shaped shaft over a 1m ridge from <a href=""../209.htm"">209 - Schistock-Absturzschacht</a>, so not quite as obvious.",,"Tag ""CUCC 97-08"" between 136d and 209 (Schistock-Absturzschacht)"
 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)."
@@ -245,11 +245,11 @@
 197,"1/S +",,"CUCC 1976/B8",,"plateau/197.htm",,"Bemoost Tropfen H&ouml;hle","Mossy Dribble Cave",,"1a","CUCC 1976","A large open hole with snow in the bottom. In wet weather, the old number is even harder to spot, but the hole is very noisy with sinking water. 20m of ladder were fed down between snow and rock before snow plug totally blocked the way on. However, this was in 1976, a year with quite a large amount of snow.",,,,,,,,," 25m",,,,,,"b8tag",,,,"Surface survey","gps98.b8","gps00.b8",,,,"(1976)  Br&auml;uning Nase 208&deg;, Sch&ouml;nberg 350&deg;, Spot point 1828, 240&deg;</p><p>In fact it is impossible to see <b>any</b> landmarks from the actual entrance.",,,"This is situated on the plateau just on a major fault where one climbs down over bare rock for 4m. From <a href=""../tcamps.htm#topcamp"">Top Camp</a>, head somewhat east of north onto a large area of bare karren containing B11 (<a href=""198.htm"">1623/198</a>). Continue parallel with the line of a small scarp running north, and pass <a href=""164.htm"">1623/164</a> on the left. Scrambling past a wide snow choked shaft (<a href=""189.htm"">1623/189</a>) on the right, descend and turn right, along the line of a north-facing scarp containing B9 (<a href=""190.htm"">1623/190</a>), heading roughly east, and clamber down a few small scars to the large open doline.",,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/l/b8locn.htm""><img src=""others/t/b8locn.jpg"" alt=""Photomontage indicating location of B8 in landscape (98k JPEG)"" width=""334"" height=""167"" /></a><p>Photomontage showing location of B8 below scar. Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel and Schwarzmoossattel behind (<b>Warning</b> - full size image is 1000 pixels wide)</p></div><p>","Number ""B8"" of 1976 vintage painted in dull green on the wall facing south, opposite the fault scarp, which is very hard to spot, although not fading appreciably year to year. There is an easier-to-find number painted higher up on an east-facing rock, initially in orange, but &quot;refreshed&quot; in red in 1995 as the orange paint was crap. Below this number is the drilled spit with tag ""CUCC 1976 B8"" which is also the point surveyed to. This will, in due course, be replaced by a new tag with the Austrian kataster number, on the same bolt.</p><p>Retagged 1997."
 198,"2/S +",,"B11",,"plateau/198.htm",,"Fuchsh&ouml;hle",,,"1a","CUCC 1976, reexamined 1994, surface survey 1996","A fine pitch of 55m is broken by a ledge halfway down. The shaft narrows towards the bottom, and from the foot of the ladder, boulders lead to a choke a few metres further down.",,,,,,,,,"55m",,,,,,,,,,,"gps96bestfit.b11 gps98.b11_1998","gps00.b11",,,,,,"On plateau between <a href=""197.htm"">B8</a> and the col, very difficult to spot from more than 5m away, but very noisy in wet weather.",,,"</p><div class=""centre"">1976 - ladder descent&nbsp;<a href=""others/l/b11.htm""><img alt=""View up entrance shaft"" src=""others/t/b11.jpg"" width=""174"" height=""118"" /></a>&nbsp; &nbsp;<a href=""others/l/b11_jh.htm""><img alt=""1994 descent"" src=""others/t/b11_jh.jpg"" width=""122"" height=""177"" /></a>&nbsp;1994 - SRT descent</div><p>","Number ""B11"" was repainted in 1988 (in red) and this is quite visible on flat rock to the SE of the shaft. Just next to it is the spit for the tag ""CUCC 1976 B11"" which is the point surveyed to. This tag will shortly be replaced (on the same bolt) with a new tag bearing the official Austrian number.</p><p>Retagged 1999"
 199,"1/T +",,,,"smkridge/199.htm",,"St&uuml;rzender Felsbrocken H&ouml;hle","Tumbling Boulder Hole",,"2b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1987-08-30</li><li>Reexplored (and a new sketch survey, see 1998 NotKH survey book) (Kate Janossy, Brian Outram) in 1998.</li><li>Grade 3 survey in 1999 (Wookey, Andy Atkinson)</li></ul><p>","A steeply descending tube over scree (sometimes snow), initially 3m in diameter, leads down to a choke. To the right in a cross-rift 24m long (beware of loose rock here) is an audible connection to the surface (199c). The final section of the main tube has roof pendants, and ends with a rising sand floor over which the crawl becomes too tight. The second entrance (199b) is just up and to the left of the main one.","None absolutely required, but 15m handline helpful for entrance, especially if snowy.",,,,"In dataset","</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/199p.png""><img alt=""1999 plan, 19k gif"" width=""320"" height=""300"" src=""others/199p2.png"" /></a><a href=""others/199e.png""><img alt=""1999 elevation, 14k gif"" width=""320"" height=""260"" src=""others/199e2.png"" /></a></div><p>","caves/199/199.svx","65m","29m",,,,,,,"p199",,,"Surface survey",,"gps00.199",,,,,,"NW flank of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel. About 30m SSW of 156.","Follow the cairned path which ascends the Vorder Schwarzmooskogel from the NW. Shortly after passing the open rift entrance of 1623/156 (50m south of Laser Point 0/1), scramble up to the right (south). One large and two small open cave entrances.",,,"metal tag stamped ""CUCC 199"" fixed by M6 stud epoxied into vertical wall left of main entrance (stud placed 1998, kataster number tag replaced provisional one in 1999)."
-200,"1/S +",,"93/01",,"plateau/200.htm",,"Verlorener Rucksack Schacht","Lost Rucksack Cave",,"1b","Discovery and initial descent CUCC 1993 (Adam Cooper), bottomed in three trips in 1998 (Wookey, Andy Waddington).","Found in 1993, it was intended to mark the cave but not descend. However Adam Cooper's rucksack (containing the rope), placed unwisely near the edge, made the first descent. Adam followed on a ladder to retrieve it, then placed a bolt for a further descent on rope. The shaft continued beside a snow plug, but was deemed unsuitable for further exploration in shorts. The find was not relocated in 1993, so exploration stopped. Found again in 1995 whilst marking other known entrances, and probably seen again in 1996.</p><p>After a first descent placing a bolt again showed it unsuitable for exploration in shorts, a determined effort by Wookey in 1998 pushed the second pitch, between hanging death ice and snow to a definite choke. However, partway down this pitch was a window with a draught, leading to a third pitch (one bolt at takeoff, another just below). This was nn metres to a final choke.</p><p>The whole cave is formed on a fault which forms a SE-facing scarp on the surface. A short distance NE of the entrance, the fault line cuts a lower-lying area. The draught, which was mostly outward through the head of the third pitch during the final exploratory trip, periodically reverses for 10-15 seconds. It would appear to be powered by surface breezes via various other small windows to the surface, most probably including ones lower down in the depression to the NE.",,,,,,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/200.png""><img alt=""1998 survey 27k gif"" width=""645"" height=""662"" src=""others/200.png"" /></a></div><p>",,,"45m",,,,,,"t200",,,,"Surface survey","gps98.1993_01 gps98.1993_01a","gps00.93_01a gps00.93_01b",,,,,,"700m north of Schwarzmoossattel.","From  <a href=""164.htm"">164</a>, avoid <a href=""189.htm"">189</a> (easiest 15m to its right over a small ridge, but OK immediately on its right edge), then go roughly NNW (a few cairns - 1996 vintage orange paint has completely faded). This leads up onto the right edge of a ridge (the main part of which is deep L&auml;tchen), passing right of the OAV ski marker pole. This is an easy walk above a short (climbable) cliff looking down onto <a href=""210.htm"">210</a>. When this easy walk is interrupted by a step down, head leftish over a series of limestone steps to reach a descent into a large broken area (near <a href=""173.htm"">173</a>). Climb steeply left up boulders to a large cairn, then along a sloping limestone shelf. Shortly ahead is an abrupt headwall, below which is the shaft of <b>Lost Rucksack Cave</b> (given temporary number CUCC 1993 01). The area could also be reached (with more difficulty) from the ""central"" plateau area towards <a href=""76.htm"">76</a>, and also via the ""Geologists' walk"" which passes much further left via <a href=""171.htm"">171</a> and <a href=""172.htm"">172.</a> ",,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""../plateau/others/l/lrh.htm""><img alt=""Photo of 1993 descent"" src=""../plateau/others/t/lrh.jpg"" width=""123"" height=""169"" /></a><p>Adam Cooper descending to place a bolt below the lip in 1993</p></div><p>","M6 stud with alloy tag ""CUCC 1993 01"" on flat rock NE of shaft. This will be replaced with the correct kataster number in due course."
+200,"1/S +",,"93/01",,"plateau/200.htm",,"Verlorener Rucksack Schacht","Lost Rucksack Cave",,"1b","Discovery and initial descent CUCC 1993 (Adam Cooper), bottomed in three trips in 1998 (Wookey, Andy Waddington).","Found in 1993, it was intended to mark the cave but not descend. However Adam Cooper's rucksack (containing the rope), placed unwisely near the edge, made the first descent. Adam followed on a ladder to retrieve it, then placed a bolt for a further descent on rope. The shaft continued beside a snow plug, but was deemed unsuitable for further exploration in shorts. The find was not relocated in 1993, so exploration stopped. Found again in 1995 whilst marking other known entrances, and probably seen again in 1996.</p><p>After a first descent placing a bolt again showed it unsuitable for exploration in shorts, a determined effort by Wookey in 1998 pushed the second pitch, between hanging death ice and snow to a definite choke. However, partway down this pitch was a window with a draught, leading to a third pitch (one bolt at takeoff, another just below). This was nn metres to a final choke.</p><p>The whole cave is formed on a fault which forms a SE-facing scarp on the surface. A short distance NE of the entrance, the fault line cuts a lower-lying area. The draught, which was mostly outward through the head of the third pitch during the final exploratory trip, periodically reverses for 10-15 seconds. It would appear to be powered by surface breezes via various other small windows to the surface, most probably including ones lower down in the depression to the NE.",,,,,,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""others/200.png""><img alt=""1998 survey 27k gif"" width=""645"" height=""662"" src=""others/200.png"" /></a></div><p>",,,"45m",,,,,,"t200",,,,"Surface survey","gps98.1993_01 gps98.1993_01a","gps00.93_01a gps00.93_01b",,,,,,"700m north of Schwarzmoossattel.","From  <a href=""164.htm"">164</a>, avoid <a href=""189.htm"">189</a> (easiest 15m to its right over a small ridge, but OK immediately on its right edge), then go roughly NNW (a few cairns - 1996 vintage orange paint has completely faded). This leads up onto the right edge of a ridge (the main part of which is deep L&auml;tchen), passing right of the OAV ski marker pole. This is an easy walk above a short (climbable) cliff looking down onto <a href=""210.htm"">210</a>. When this easy walk is interrupted by a step down, head leftish over a series of limestone steps to reach a descent into a large broken area (near <a href=""173.htm"">173</a>). Climb steeply left up boulders to a large cairn, then along a sloping limestone shelf. Shortly ahead is an abrupt headwall, below which is the shaft of <b>Lost Rucksack Cave</b> (given temporary number CUCC 1993 01). The area could also be reached (with more difficulty) from the ""central"" plateau area towards <a href=""76/76.htm"">76</a>, and also via the ""Geologists' walk"" which passes much further left via <a href=""171.htm"">171</a> and <a href=""172.htm"">172.</a> ",,"</p><div class=""centre""><a href=""../plateau/others/l/lrh.htm""><img alt=""Photo of 1993 descent"" src=""../plateau/others/t/lrh.jpg"" width=""123"" height=""169"" /></a><p>Adam Cooper descending to place a bolt below the lip in 1993</p></div><p>","M6 stud with alloy tag ""CUCC 1993 01"" on flat rock NE of shaft. This will be replaced with the correct kataster number in due course."
 201,"1/S +",,"1998/01",,"smkridge/201.htm",,"Haftefelle Schacht","Ski-skin shaft",,"2b","CUCC 1998 - a single descent.","2m diameter shaft drops 25m to a boulder floor - a short second pitch follows immediately leading to a too-tight rift. A 40m rope is sufficient.",,,,,"In dataset","? pic","caves/201/201.svx","15m","15m",,,,,,,"p201",,,"Surface survey",,"gps00.201",,,,,,"NW flank of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel. 20m N of Laser 0/1","Follow the cairned path which ascends the Vorder Schwarzmooskogel from the NW. Shortly before the obvious open rift entrance of <a href=""156.htm"">1623/156</a> (which is 50m south of Laser Point 0/1) is a small (2m diameter) open shaft.",,,"metal tag stamped ""CUCC 201"" fixed by M6 stud epoxied into horizontal surface on NW side of main entrance (stud placed 1998, proper kataster number tag replaced provisional one in 1999)."
 202,,,,,"noinfo/smkridge/202.html",,"Dominoschacht",,,"2b",,,,,,,"In dataset",,"caves/202/202.svx",,,,,,,,,"p202",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,,,,
 203,,,,,"noinfo/smkridge/203.html",,"Sonnenscheinschacht",,,"2b",,,,,,,"In dataset",,"caves/203/203.svx",,,,,,,,,"p203",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,,,,
-204,"5/S x","a b c d e f","CUCC 1999/03","yes","smkridge/204/204.html",,"Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle",,,"2b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1999 to length 1365m, depth 226m</li><li>CUCC 2000 to 2.5km, depth 368m</li><li>CUCC 2001 to 4.7km, depth 368m</li><li>CUCC 2002 to 5.3km, depth 454m</li><li>CUCC 2003 to 7.2km, depth 510m</li><li>CUCC 2004 to length 9.1km,  depth 542m</li></ul><p>","</p><ul><li><a href=""entrance.html"">Entrance and The Near End passages</a></li><li><a href=""midlevel.html"">Mid-level passages (including Wolpertinger Way)</a></li><li><a href=""nopain.html"">No Pain No Gain and Pleasuredome</a></li><li><a href=""treeumphant.html"">Trunk way through Treeumphant Passage to Cave Tree Chamber and beyond</a></li><li><a href=""swings.html"">Swings and Roundabouts area</a></li><li><a href=""rhino.html"">Rhino Rift</a></li><li><a href=""uworld.html"">The Underworld</a></li><li><a href=""millennium.html"">Millennium Dome / White Elephant area</a></li><li><a href=""ariston.html"">Deep routes via the Ariston Series</a></li><li style=""margin-top: 1em""><a href=""gallery.html"">Photo gallery</a></li></ul><p>",,"<a href=""qm.html#qmextant"">Question mark list</a> and <a href=""qm.html#qmdone"">Completed question mark list</a>.  ",,,"In dataset; download <a href=""204.3d"">.3d file</a> or <a href=""surveydata.tgz"">Raw survey data</a>","</p><ul><li><a href=""surveys/plan2002.png"">Plan, post-2002 Expo</a> [702k; approx 2400x3200 pixels, greyscale] or <a href=""surveys/plan2002.ps.gz"">1.8M gzipped postscript</a></li><li><a href=""surveys/plan2001.png"">Plan, post-2001 Expo</a> [511k; approx 2500x3500 pixels, greyscale]</li><li><a href=""surveys/plan2000.png"">Plan, post-2000 Expo</a> [79k; approx 2300x3300 pixels, monochrome]</li><li><a href=""surveys/elev2000.png"">Elevation, post-2000 Expo</a> [22k; approx 1900x2200 pixels, monochrome]</li><li><a href=""surveys/plan1999.gif"">Plan, post-1999 Expo</a> [26k; approx 582x783 pixels, greyscale]</li><li><a href=""surveys/elev1999.gif"">Elevation, post-1999 Expo</a> [16k; approx 432x586 pixels, greyscale]</li></ul><p>","caves/204/204.svx","9147m","542m","645m (approximately N-S)",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The cave is situated on the west side of the col between the <span lang=""de-at"">Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel</span> and <span lang=""de-at"">Nieder Augst-Eck</span>.  It is currently one of the main areas of exploration for CUCC, who in 2001 established a <a href=""bivvy.html"">bivvy site</a> under the  <a href=""bridge.html"">stone bridge</a> opposite the entrance.","The route from Top Camp used since 1999 (probably near optimal) is a cairned path via <span lang=""de"">Wolfh&ouml;hle</span> (<a href=""../../plateau/145.htm"">1623/145</a>) and Laser Point 5, then up to the top of the bare patch of white limestone visible from Top Camp, passing <a href=""../195.htm"">195</a> and <a href=""../196.htm"">196.</a> The path used in 2001 then skirts around the contours, passing the unmistakable arched entrance of <a href=""../234/234.html"">Hauchh&ouml;hle</a>, to arrive  <a href=""sbview.html"">directly opposite the stone bridge</a> after which the cave was named (in previous years a route slightly higher up towards the Hinter was used, which some people still prefer; this is also cairned). Alternatively, the cave may be approached from the summit of HSK - probably the optimal route if you are coming from any of the <a href=""../161/top.htm"">161</a> entrances.",,,"Tags on entrances A-F."
+204,"5/S x","a b c d e f","CUCC 1999/03","yes","smkridge/204/204.html",,"Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle",,,"2b","</p><ul><li>CUCC 1999 to length 1365m, depth 226m</li><li>CUCC 2000 to 2.5km, depth 368m</li><li>CUCC 2001 to 4.7km, depth 368m</li><li>CUCC 2002 to 5.3km, depth 454m</li><li>CUCC 2003 to 7.2km, depth 510m</li><li>CUCC 2004 to length 9.1km,  depth 542m</li></ul><p>","</p><ul><li><a href=""entrance.html"">Entrance and The Near End passages</a></li><li><a href=""midlevel.html"">Mid-level passages (including Wolpertinger Way)</a></li><li><a href=""nopain.html"">No Pain No Gain and Pleasuredome</a></li><li><a href=""treeumphant.html"">Trunk way through Treeumphant Passage to Cave Tree Chamber and beyond</a></li><li><a href=""swings.html"">Swings and Roundabouts area</a></li><li><a href=""rhino.html"">Rhino Rift</a></li><li><a href=""uworld.html"">The Underworld</a></li><li><a href=""millennium.html"">Millennium Dome / White Elephant area</a></li><li><a href=""ariston.html"">Deep routes via the Ariston Series</a></li><li style=""margin-top: 1em""><a href=""atoz.html"">Glossary of passage names</a></li><li><a href=""gallery.html"">Photo gallery</a></li></ul><p>",,"<a href=""qm.html#qmextant"">Question mark list</a> and <a href=""qm.html#qmdone"">Completed question mark list</a>.  ",,,"In dataset; download <a href=""204.3d"">.3d file</a> or <a href=""surveydata.tgz"">Raw survey data</a>","</p><ul><li><a href=""surveys/plan2002.png"">Plan, post-2002 Expo</a> [702k; approx 2400x3200 pixels, greyscale] or <a href=""surveys/plan2002.ps.gz"">1.8M gzipped postscript</a></li><li><a href=""surveys/plan2001.png"">Plan, post-2001 Expo</a> [511k; approx 2500x3500 pixels, greyscale]</li><li><a href=""surveys/plan2000.png"">Plan, post-2000 Expo</a> [79k; approx 2300x3300 pixels, monochrome]</li><li><a href=""surveys/elev2000.png"">Elevation, post-2000 Expo</a> [22k; approx 1900x2200 pixels, monochrome]</li><li><a href=""surveys/plan1999.gif"">Plan, post-1999 Expo</a> [26k; approx 582x783 pixels, greyscale]</li><li><a href=""surveys/elev1999.gif"">Elevation, post-1999 Expo</a> [16k; approx 432x586 pixels, greyscale]</li></ul><p>","caves/204/204.svx","9147m","542m","645m (approximately N-S)",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The cave is situated on the west side of the col between the <span lang=""de-at"">Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel</span> and <span lang=""de-at"">Nieder Augst-Eck</span>.  It is currently one of the main areas of exploration for CUCC, who in 2001 established a <a href=""bivvy.html"">bivvy site</a> under the  <a href=""bridge.html"">stone bridge</a> opposite the entrance.","The route from Top Camp used since 1999 (probably near optimal) is a cairned path via <span lang=""de"">Wolfh&ouml;hle</span> (<a href=""../../plateau/145.htm"">1623/145</a>) and Laser Point 5, then up to the top of the bare patch of white limestone visible from Top Camp, passing <a href=""../195.htm"">195</a> and <a href=""../196.htm"">196.</a> The path used in 2001 then skirts around the contours, passing the unmistakable arched entrance of <a href=""../234/234.html"">Hauchh&ouml;hle</a>, to arrive  <a href=""sbview.html"">directly opposite the stone bridge</a> after which the cave was named (in previous years a route slightly higher up towards the Hinter was used, which some people still prefer; this is also cairned). Alternatively, the cave may be approached from the summit of HSK - probably the optimal route if you are coming from any of the <a href=""../161/top.htm"">161</a> entrances.",,,"Tags on entrances A-F."
 ,,"a",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p204a",,,"Nils",,,,,,,,,,,,"tag"
 ,,"b",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p204b",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,,,,"tag"
 ,,"c",,"entrance",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"p204c",,,"Surface survey",,,,,,,,,,,,
diff --git a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc
index 8e6a16e33..0941f35ec 100644
Binary files a/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc and b/noinfo/CAVETAB2.sxc differ
diff --git a/plateau/76/histry.htm b/plateau/76/histry.htm
index bcd4010f9..01341506c 100644
--- a/plateau/76/histry.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/histry.htm
@@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ in Andy Waddington's personal caving log:</p>
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../76.htm">Back to cave description</a></li>
+<li><a href="76.htm">Back to cave description</a></li>
 <li><a href="../../index.htm">Back to Expedition Intro page</a></li>
 <li><a href="../../indxal.htm">Full Index</a></li>
 <li><a href="../../areas.htm">Other areas</a></li>
diff --git a/plateau/76/l/gents.htm b/plateau/76/l/gents.htm
index f689c3d2b..52c59eb17 100644
--- a/plateau/76/l/gents.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/l/gents.htm
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ bottoming trip, 13th August 1979.</p>
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../../76.htm#p16">Back to cave description</a>
+<li><a href="../76.htm#p16">Back to cave description</a>
 <ul>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-76-11">Logbook write-up</a>
 of this trip</li>
diff --git a/plateau/76/l/hotgk.htm b/plateau/76/l/hotgk.htm
index 3ac2c513d..a5647eaf0 100644
--- a/plateau/76/l/hotgk.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/l/hotgk.htm
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ Eislufth&ouml;hle (1623/76).</p>
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../../76.htm#hgk">Back to cave description</a>
+<li><a href="../76.htm#hgk">Back to cave description</a>
 <ul>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-76-11">Logbook write-up</a>
 of this trip</li>
diff --git a/plateau/76/l/p16.htm b/plateau/76/l/p16.htm
index 755ea7567..a64db28a6 100644
--- a/plateau/76/l/p16.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/l/p16.htm
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ taken on the final bottoming trip, 13th August 1979.</p>
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../../76.htm#penult">Back to cave description</a></li>
+<li><a href="../76.htm#penult">Back to cave description</a></li>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-76-11">Logbook write-up</a>
 of this trip</li>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/report.htm">Report</a> in
diff --git a/plateau/76/l/penult.htm b/plateau/76/l/penult.htm
index 2f2331d5c..f11f92c7d 100644
--- a/plateau/76/l/penult.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/l/penult.htm
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ shaft.</p>
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../../76.htm#penult">Back to cave description</a>
+<li><a href="../76.htm#penult">Back to cave description</a>
 <ul>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-76-11">Logbook write-up</a>
 of this trip</li>
diff --git a/plateau/76/l/scf.htm b/plateau/76/l/scf.htm
index b31a554b2..4711a4c53 100644
--- a/plateau/76/l/scf.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/l/scf.htm
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ Simon Farrow at 1623/76
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../../76.htm#scf">Back to cave description</a>
+<li><a href="../76.htm#scf">Back to cave description</a>
 <ul>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1977/report.htm#youth">"Team Youth" report</a>
 in Cambridge Underground 1978</li>
diff --git a/plateau/76/l/sump.htm b/plateau/76/l/sump.htm
index d8a94184a..d13f022c0 100644
--- a/plateau/76/l/sump.htm
+++ b/plateau/76/l/sump.htm
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ Waddington, Ben van Millingen) 13th August, 1979.</p>
 <hr />
 <!-- LINKS -->
 <ul>
-<li><a href="../../76.htm#penult">Back to cave description</a></li>
+<li><a href="../76.htm#penult">Back to cave description</a></li>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/log.htm#id1979-76-11">Logbook write-up</a>
 of this trip</li>
 <li><a href="../../../years/1979/report.htm">Report</a> in
diff --git a/plateau/index.htm b/plateau/index.htm
index e3a530016..dc709fecc 100644
--- a/plateau/index.htm
+++ b/plateau/index.htm
@@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ last one - I found 171 whilst looking for 190 (as B9)...</p>
 <tr><td><a id="id38">38</a></td>
 <td><a href="../noinfo/plateau/38.htm">Algenh&ouml;hle</a></td></tr>
 <tr><td><a id="id76">76 a b c</a></td>
-<td><a href="76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> 506m deep</td></tr>
+<td><a href="76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> 506m deep</td></tr>
 <tr><td><a id="id89">89</a></td>
 <td><a href="89.htm">Schwa schacht 89</a></td></tr>
 <tr><td><a id="id97">97</a></td>
diff --git a/smkridge/234/234plan.png b/smkridge/234/234plan.png
index 0d33a8213..7dedfbf8a 100755
Binary files a/smkridge/234/234plan.png and b/smkridge/234/234plan.png differ
diff --git a/survey.html b/survey.html
index 0ca43f5e4..4ae42cee6 100644
--- a/survey.html
+++ b/survey.html
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ cave-by-cave basis; the first batch of caves are those under active exploration
 by CUCC as of summer 2004, namely <a
 href="smkridge/204/204.html">Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle</a> (1623/204), <a
 href="smkridge/234/234.html">Hauchh&ouml;hle</a> (1623/234) and <a
-href="plateau/76.htm"> Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76).</p>
+href="plateau/76/76.htm"> Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> (1623/76).</p>
 
 <h3>Drawn-up surveys</h3>
 
diff --git a/update.htm b/update.htm
index 3a83dbd2f..f80a3eabf 100644
--- a/update.htm
+++ b/update.htm
@@ -23,9 +23,20 @@ Martin Green; DL - David Loeffler)</em></p>
 
 <dl>
 <dt>2004.09.19 DL</dt>
-<dd>After an interval of several years it is again possible to obtain <b>survey data</b> from this site. At present only the caves we are currently exploring have survey data publically available (<a href="smkridge/204/204.html">Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle</a>, <a href="smkridge/234/234.html">Hauchh&ouml;hle</a>, and <a href="plateau/76.htm">Eish&ouml;hle</a> &endash; look at the bottom of the description pages), but it is planned to include more in the near future. (CUCC users knowing the password may naturally access the entire dataset as a <a href="noinfo/all.3d">.3d file</a> or as a <a href="noinfo/all.tgz">.tar.gz archive of .svx files</a>; this includes data contributed by ARGE and other organisations which we are not in a position to freely redistribute.)</dd>
+<dd>After an interval of several years it is again possible to obtain <b>survey
+data</b> from this site. At present only the caves we are currently exploring
+have survey data publically available (<a
+href="smkridge/204/204.html">Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle</a>, <a
+href="smkridge/234/234.html">Hauchh&ouml;hle</a>, and <a
+href="plateau/76/76.htm">Eish&ouml;hle</a> &ndash; look at the bottom of the
+description pages), but it is planned to include more in the near future. (CUCC
+users knowing the password may naturally access the entire dataset as a <a
+href="noinfo/all.3d">.3d file</a> or as a <a href="noinfo/all.tgz">.tar.gz
+archive of .svx files</a>; this includes data contributed by ARGE and other
+organisations which we are not in a position to freely redistribute.)</dd>
 <dt>2004.08.20 MRS<!--ish--></dt>
-<dd>Merged in everything from Expo 2004. Currently this is very short on descriptions as these haven't yet been written.</dd>
+<dd>Merged in everything from Expo 2004. Currently this is very short on
+descriptions as these haven't yet been written.</dd>
 <!-- From CVS log grovelling: -->
 <dt>2004.04.23 DL</dt>
 <dd>General update, occasioned by having nothing else to do except revision.
diff --git a/years/2003/goals.htm b/years/2003/goals.htm
index 1344364db..017431871 100644
--- a/years/2003/goals.htm
+++ b/years/2003/goals.htm
@@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ the deepest known point in the cave and is no more than 300m away from the Fuzzy
 Kaninchenh&ouml;hle. This area of Kaninchenh&ouml;hle has a number of large unexplored leads which will be
 reexamined in more detail now that a connection to Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle seems possible.
 
-One of the deepest caves in the area is <a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a>, which is to
+One of the deepest caves in the area is <a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a>, which is to
 the southwest of Steinbr&uuml;ckenh&ouml;hle. This was actually one of the first caves explored by CUCC on
 the plateau, in 1977-9. Not all the leads were fully explored at the time, and it is intended to return
 there this year and finish off the exploration.
diff --git a/years/2004/76why.html b/years/2004/76why.html
index 0b772e99c..36eaaf479 100644
--- a/years/2004/76why.html
+++ b/years/2004/76why.html
@@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ dt { font-weight: bold}
 This shows the caves in the area with 4 additional fake vertical shafts
 indicating the entrance locations and depths of (from left to right)
 <a href="../../plateau/97.htm">97 (Schneewindschacht)</a>,
-<a href="../../plateau/76.htm">76 (Eislufth&ouml;hle)</a>,
+<a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">76 (Eislufth&ouml;hle)</a>,
 <a href="../../plateau/107.htm">107 (Gemsh&ouml;hle)</a>, and
 <a href="../../plateau/82.htm">82 (Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle)</a>:
 </p>
diff --git a/years/2004/goals.html b/years/2004/goals.html
index a290bb13f..8c6d239cf 100644
--- a/years/2004/goals.html
+++ b/years/2004/goals.html
@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ interested (Dave) -->
 
 <h3>Eislufth&ouml;hle (1623/76)</h3>
 
-<a href="../../plateau/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> was found on the second
+<a href="../../plateau/76/76.htm">Eislufth&ouml;hle</a> was found on the second
 ever CUCC expedition to the Loser area in 1977.  That year the explorers got
 to -150m with the way on wide open.  They pushed again in 1978, and in 1979
 finally reached a sump at approximately -506m.  They derigged and nobody has
diff --git a/years/2004/index.html b/years/2004/index.html
index 81f5f3ab4..d85e09ba0 100644
--- a/years/2004/index.html
+++ b/years/2004/index.html
@@ -9,14 +9,23 @@
 
 <h1 align=center>Expo 2004</h1>
 
-<p>This is the home page for the 2004 summer expedition to Austria, dates
-for which are as follows:
+<p>Expo 2004 has now happened. Accounts of what was done will filter onto this
+website as fast as people can be persuaded to draw up surveys, write
+descriptions, and so on.</p>
+
+<p>For future reference, there is a list of all the equipment and supplies left
+stashed in Austria at the end of the expo <a
+href="stuffleftbehind.html">here</a>.</p>
+
+<p>For historical interest, here is the pre-Expo information that was
+accessible from this page:</p>
+<h4>Dates of the expo</h4>
 <ul>
 <li><b>Advance party</b> (Dave, Mark, Olly): 6th July - 9th July
 <li><b>Main expedition</b>: 10th July - 14th August.
 </ul>
 
-The following documentation is available:
+<h4>Other information</h4>
 <ul>
 <li><a href="goals.html">Mission statement</a>
 <li><a href="thingstodo.html">Tasks to do in Austria</a>