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@ -45,9 +45,9 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<explorers>CUCC 1980-1985</explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/115/115.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>This is the main entrance through which the majority of the <a href="41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a> system was explored. See the separate <a href="41/115.htm#ent115">full guidebook description</a> for details, just an overview is given here.</p>
<underground_description>This is the main entrance through which the majority of the <a href="/1623/41/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a> system was explored. See the separate <a href="41/115.htm#ent115">full guidebook description</a> for details, just an overview is given here.</p>
<img width=70% src="/photos/2018/PhilipSargent/StogerWegCaves-20180718/IMG_20180718_131705967_HDR.jpg"><br />Photo July 2018, Philip Sargent.
<p>The entrance leads to a non-obvious way on to the head of the short <b>Bell Pitch</b>, from where very awkward going leads out to a bigger passage to reach <b>The Ramp</b> a series of off-vertical pitches. The damper but technically easier <b>Inlet Pitches</b> drop to a Big Chamber, from where <b>Pete's Purgatory</b> starts, and leads in 800m of tortuous going to <b>The Confluence</b> and the larger streamway leading to the deepest point.</p><p>Better is the <b>Purgatory Bypass</b> which starts as dry fossil tubes, with a choice of routes to reach <b>Junction Chamber</b> where the <b>Big Rift</b> of <a href="41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a> enters. Opposite, the huge fossil tube of <b>Dartford Tunnel</b> makes for easy progress to the Confluence, about halfway down the system. The continuing main streamway is interrupted by a bypassable sump and numerous pitches before a low airspace duck at the end of an unpromising canal leads to the spectacular <b>Orgasm Chasm</b>. Careful rigging avoids the water in this 140m shaft, ending in muddy passage and another short drop to a deep and terminal sump.
<p>The entrance leads to a non-obvious way on to the head of the short <b>Bell Pitch</b>, from where very awkward going leads out to a bigger passage to reach <b>The Ramp</b> a series of off-vertical pitches. The damper but technically easier <b>Inlet Pitches</b> drop to a Big Chamber, from where <b>Pete's Purgatory</b> starts, and leads in 800m of tortuous going to <b>The Confluence</b> and the larger streamway leading to the deepest point.</p><p>Better is the <b>Purgatory Bypass</b> which starts as dry fossil tubes, with a choice of routes to reach <b>Junction Chamber</b> where the <b>Big Rift</b> of <a href="/1623/41/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a> enters. Opposite, the huge fossil tube of <b>Dartford Tunnel</b> makes for easy progress to the Confluence, about halfway down the system. The continuing main streamway is interrupted by a bypassable sump and numerous pitches before a low airspace duck at the end of an unpromising canal leads to the spectacular <b>Orgasm Chasm</b>. Careful rigging avoids the water in this 140m shaft, ending in muddy passage and another short drop to a deep and terminal sump.
<p>
<figure align=center>
<a href='/1623/115/l/115-1982.html'><img src='/1623/115/t/115-1982.jpg' /></a>

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@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<explorers></p><ul><li>CUCC 1982-85</li><li>Arge/CUCC 1996</li></ul><p></explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/41-142.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>Yet another entrance to <a href="41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>, with two points of connection, and also the first point of connection with Schwabenschacht, a similar cave explored by <a href="/others/arge/index.html">Arbeitsgemeinschaft H&ouml;hle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.</a>. 142 contains a very large chamber, imaginatively named <b>The Big Chamber</b> reached by a 34m pitch from a point adjacent to the connection. A <a href="41/off41.htm#ent142">full description</a> of 142 (but not 78) is one of the components of the Stellerwegh&ouml;hle guidebook, just an overview is given here.</p><p>Note: With apparent perversity, the Austrians have numbered this as 115e in their Kataster. This is likely to give rise to immense confusion in the long term as more caves are connected, and numbers on entrances cannot readily be altered (owing to the obscurity of their location and inaccessibility from within the system).</p><p>After an initial small tube, the cave opens into passages very similar to those in Schwabenschacht and the upper levels of Stellerwegh&ouml;hle. Descent of some of the steep ramps to the right of the main way on may provide further connections into the main cave (and one may have already done so). However, staying high leads through tubes to an inobvious junction. Left is the connection to 78, whilst right leads immediately to the head of a pitch into the <b>Big Chamber</b> - a popular name in the system. A route from this chamber leads to the foot of an 18m pitch in the entrance series of <a href="41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>, and a more obscure route through boulders from the head of the Big Chamber pitch leads to the same place.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<underground_description>Yet another entrance to <a href="/1623/41/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>, with two points of connection, and also the first point of connection with Schwabenschacht, a similar cave explored by <a href="/others/arge/index.html">Arbeitsgemeinschaft H&ouml;hle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.</a>. 142 contains a very large chamber, imaginatively named <b>The Big Chamber</b> reached by a 34m pitch from a point adjacent to the connection. A <a href="41/off41.htm#ent142">full description</a> of 142 (but not 78) is one of the components of the Stellerwegh&ouml;hle guidebook, just an overview is given here.</p><p>Note: With apparent perversity, the Austrians have numbered this as 115e in their Kataster. This is likely to give rise to immense confusion in the long term as more caves are connected, and numbers on entrances cannot readily be altered (owing to the obscurity of their location and inaccessibility from within the system).</p><p>After an initial small tube, the cave opens into passages very similar to those in Schwabenschacht and the upper levels of Stellerwegh&ouml;hle. Descent of some of the steep ramps to the right of the main way on may provide further connections into the main cave (and one may have already done so). However, staying high leads through tubes to an inobvious junction. Left is the connection to 78, whilst right leads immediately to the head of a pitch into the <b>Big Chamber</b> - a popular name in the system. A route from this chamber leads to the foot of an 18m pitch in the entrance series of <a href="/1623/41/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>, and a more obscure route through boulders from the head of the Big Chamber pitch leads to the same place.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey>CUCC plan from surveys 1982-1985, here in several sections:</p><ul><li><a href="41/142ent.png">Entrance area</a></li><li><a href="41/142bc.png">Big Chamber</a></li><li><a href="41/142-41.png">Stellerweg connection</a>...</li></ul><p></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->

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@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<explorers>CUCC 1985 </explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/152/152.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>A vertical entrance which leads, at a depth of -145m, into <a href="113.htm">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> below the Purple Pit, just before M&uuml;sli crawl (-198m from Sonnenstrahl entrance bolt). Entrance pitch <b>Scott</b> is 9m over snow, then a small tube leads down to a short climb down boulders to an 8m pitch <b>Virgil</b>, followed immediately by <b>Alan</b>, another 8m pitch landing in <b>Dump Chamber</b>. A long rift, <b>Boulder Alley</b> leads to a rock bridge and scramble down boulders into <b>Boulder Chamber</b> which ends in a 4m climb and pitches of 5m (<b>John</b>) and 4m (<b>Parker</b>) over boulders. A 5m pitch (<b>Mr. Tracy</b>) drops into the top of a very tall narrow rift. A slight widening allows a short climb down into the canyon, but is soon too tight - <b>Lady Penelope</b>. The rift continues until a fault is met and <b>The Good Pitch Venus</b> is 24m to <b>Behind the Drinks Cabinet</b>. A further rift leads to a 16m pitch which lands in Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle.</p><p>Boulder Chamber appears to correspond with the bouldery Opera House in Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle, while the Good Pitch Venus and following 16m pitch correlate with the Purple Pit.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<underground_description>A vertical entrance which leads, at a depth of -145m, into <a href="/1623/113/113.htm">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> below the Purple Pit, just before M&uuml;sli crawl (-198m from Sonnenstrahl entrance bolt). Entrance pitch <b>Scott</b> is 9m over snow, then a small tube leads down to a short climb down boulders to an 8m pitch <b>Virgil</b>, followed immediately by <b>Alan</b>, another 8m pitch landing in <b>Dump Chamber</b>. A long rift, <b>Boulder Alley</b> leads to a rock bridge and scramble down boulders into <b>Boulder Chamber</b> which ends in a 4m climb and pitches of 5m (<b>John</b>) and 4m (<b>Parker</b>) over boulders. A 5m pitch (<b>Mr. Tracy</b>) drops into the top of a very tall narrow rift. A slight widening allows a short climb down into the canyon, but is soon too tight - <b>Lady Penelope</b>. The rift continues until a fault is met and <b>The Good Pitch Venus</b> is 24m to <b>Behind the Drinks Cabinet</b>. A further rift leads to a 16m pitch which lands in Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle.</p><p>Boulder Chamber appears to correspond with the bouldery Opera House in Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle, while the Good Pitch Venus and following 16m pitch correlate with the Purple Pit.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey>? MISSING (grade 4)</survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->

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@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ framed.</p><h4>Overview</h4><p>The upper part of the system can be best thought
development. The more recently found extensive horizontal development, being easier to traverse, is generally better connected. Although there
are various links between the vertical routes, a given destination will tend to have one 'obvious' approach. These areas are <a
href="france.htm">France</a>, the <a href="lhr.htm">Left Hand Routes</a>, the <a href="rhr.htm">Right Hand Routes</a>, the southernmost part of
the system reached via <a href="136.htm"><span lang="de">Steinschlagschacht</span></a>, routes from <a href="sftotp.htm">Scarface</a>
the system reached via <a href="/1623/136/136.htm"><span lang="de">Steinschlagschacht</span></a>, routes from <a href="sftotp.htm">Scarface</a>
entrance. So rapidly has exploration proceeded from Triassic Park that now more than half the total length is most conveniently reached via
161d.</p><p>The key to all the deepest and most remote parts of the system is the huge collapse chamber of Knossos. This was reached from the
161a entrance via the Right Hand Route, and now via the 161d <a href="sftotp.htm#id161d">"Scarface"</a> entrance through <a

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@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<explorers>Recorded CUCC 1990</explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file></survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>Lies along fracture line from <a href="172.htm">172</a> with several shafts connected by a narrow rift. Most of these are snow plugged - 173 also has a plug but this has shrunk and a large gap is visible around the edges. Fracture trends 024&deg;, shaft is c20m deep and 7m diameter.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<underground_description>Lies along fracture line from <a href="/1623/172/172.htm">172</a> with several shafts connected by a narrow rift. Most of these are snow plugged - 173 also has a plug but this has shrunk and a large gap is visible around the edges. Fracture trends 024&deg;, shaft is c20m deep and 7m diameter.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->

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@ -92,13 +92,13 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<letter>s</letter><!--Leave blank for single-entrance cave. If there is more than one entrace then the letter needs to be given. Generally matches the entranceslug ID. -->
</entrance>
<explorers>The main passages as far as Elephantengang were explored by 1938. Since then a variety of groups have worked here finding numerous extensions, of which Schneevulkanhalle is the most significant.</p><p>Until recently, it has been difficult to come close to a comprehensive survey or even a good estimate of the length of the system because of a lack of contact and some misunderstanding between the groups involved. However, in 1997 a chance encounter (at the International Congress) by Wookey with Denis Motte, of the <a href="/1623/others/gscb/index.htm">G.S.Clerval,</a> led to renewed contacts with one group who explored this area, and Thilo M&uuml;ller of ARGE has contacted the leaders of other groups and obtained all the rest of the 1980s information that survives. This is being merged into a coherent set of information which will guide necessary resurvey work to complete the picture.</p><ul><li>Discovered and main passages explored in 1929 by Ausseer cavers, and surveyed in 1938 by O Schauberger and U Czornig.</li><li>Further exploration 1953, Sektion Ausseerland.</li><li>Wilfried Lorenz, Franz Lindenmayr with Nuremburg and Munich cavers discover the Schneevulkanhalle at the beginning of July 1978 (not yet connected to Eish&ouml;hle).</li><li>In Autumn 1983, Eish&ouml;hle was "1600m long with four entrances".</li><li>After several trips by the Germans in September to November 1983, the system was 2500m long with five entrances [<a href="/1623/others/muenchen/de/841642.htm" lang="de">Der Schlaz, 42</a>, also on site in <a href="/1623/others/muenchen/en/841642.htm">English translation</a>].</li><li>More recently, Reinhard Kieselbach's (M&uuml;nchen/Nurnberg - VfHM) group have linked it to <a href="88.htm">L&auml;rchenschacht</a> (88) (itself 1885m long in April 1995, and apparently giving a combined length of 6km) which they also connected to <a href="../../1623/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a> (5.75 km).</li><li>Our Current estimate of the cave length is 1,863km, from a total surveyed length of 2,463m (600m of the 974m long Schneevulkanhalle survey is not deemed to be part of the cave length).<br />The length comes from:<br />VfHM 1980s survey - 693m: Original part of cave plus extensions<br /> VfHO 1991 survey - 374m: Schneevulkanhalle from 40e entrance<br />CUCC 1998-9 surveys - 751m: Heaven and Hell and persitence of vision SVH extensions<br />Arge 1999 surveys - 130m: K&ouml;nigsschacht and Gr&uuml;ner Eingang</li></ul><p>Stellerwegh&ouml;hle in turn is connected to <a href="78.htm">Schwabenschacht</a> which was over 7km at the time and exploration continues. This must make the combined system at least 19 km long. We have seen figures quoted as high as 25km, but this may involve some double-counting, given the uncertainties involved. Arge's estimate (entirely from extant survey data) was 22.7 km after summer 1999.</explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<explorers>The main passages as far as Elephantengang were explored by 1938. Since then a variety of groups have worked here finding numerous extensions, of which Schneevulkanhalle is the most significant.</p><p>Until recently, it has been difficult to come close to a comprehensive survey or even a good estimate of the length of the system because of a lack of contact and some misunderstanding between the groups involved. However, in 1997 a chance encounter (at the International Congress) by Wookey with Denis Motte, of the <a href="/1623/others/gscb/index.htm">G.S.Clerval,</a> led to renewed contacts with one group who explored this area, and Thilo M&uuml;ller of ARGE has contacted the leaders of other groups and obtained all the rest of the 1980s information that survives. This is being merged into a coherent set of information which will guide necessary resurvey work to complete the picture.</p><ul><li>Discovered and main passages explored in 1929 by Ausseer cavers, and surveyed in 1938 by O Schauberger and U Czornig.</li><li>Further exploration 1953, Sektion Ausseerland.</li><li>Wilfried Lorenz, Franz Lindenmayr with Nuremburg and Munich cavers discover the Schneevulkanhalle at the beginning of July 1978 (not yet connected to Eish&ouml;hle).</li><li>In Autumn 1983, Eish&ouml;hle was "1600m long with four entrances".</li><li>After several trips by the Germans in September to November 1983, the system was 2500m long with five entrances [<a href="/1623/others/muenchen/de/841642.htm" lang="de">Der Schlaz, 42</a>, also on site in <a href="/1623/others/muenchen/en/841642.htm">English translation</a>].</li><li>More recently, Reinhard Kieselbach's (M&uuml;nchen/Nurnberg - VfHM) group have linked it to <a href="/1623/88/88.htm">L&auml;rchenschacht</a> (88) (itself 1885m long in April 1995, and apparently giving a combined length of 6km) which they also connected to <a href="../../1623/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a> (5.75 km).</li><li>Our Current estimate of the cave length is 1,863km, from a total surveyed length of 2,463m (600m of the 974m long Schneevulkanhalle survey is not deemed to be part of the cave length).<br />The length comes from:<br />VfHM 1980s survey - 693m: Original part of cave plus extensions<br /> VfHO 1991 survey - 374m: Schneevulkanhalle from 40e entrance<br />CUCC 1998-9 surveys - 751m: Heaven and Hell and persitence of vision SVH extensions<br />Arge 1999 surveys - 130m: K&ouml;nigsschacht and Gr&uuml;ner Eingang</li></ul><p>Stellerwegh&ouml;hle in turn is connected to <a href="/1623/78/78.htm">Schwabenschacht</a> which was over 7km at the time and exploration continues. This must make the combined system at least 19 km long. We have seen figures quoted as high as 25km, but this may involve some double-counting, given the uncertainties involved. Arge's estimate (entirely from extant survey data) was 22.7 km after summer 1999.</explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/40/40.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>Schwarzmooskogeleish&ouml;hle is an extensive cave over 1600m long before 1983, extended to 2500m by a German group by 1985. The system is mainly horizontal,
though tackle is needed to explore it fully, and crampons are necessary in parts,
because of the substantial quantities of ice in the cave. Was extended by the Germans who worked in the area
in the early eighties, who suggested then that there was potential for extension vertically.
Subsequently linked via a 30m pitch to <a href="88.htm">L&auml;rchenschacht</a> (1623/88) which in turn
Subsequently linked via a 30m pitch to <a href="/1623/88/88.htm">L&auml;rchenschacht</a> (1623/88) which in turn
was connected to the <a href="../../1623/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hlensystem</a>, giving no increase in depth
if the laser-rangefound altitude is correct rather than the old kataster one, which seems likely.</p>
<h4>Translated brief guide</h4><p>From 'L&auml;ngsten und Tiefsten Hohlen in &Ouml;sterreich', translated by Wookey

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<letter>b</letter><!--Leave blank for single-entrance cave. If there is more than one entrace then the letter needs to be given. Generally matches the entranceslug ID. -->
</entrance>
<explorers>Length of CUCC's part is approx 5.75 km, while the Germans had about 6 km in 88 in 1987, and the French (?) connected the Eish&ouml;hle (2.5 km or more) in the same year. This should make the system about 14-15 km all told before 1996. The Stuttgart group, <a href="/1623/others/arge.html">Arbeitsgemeinschaft H&ouml;hle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.</a>, have, early in 1996, connected their cave <a href="/1623/78.htm">Schwabenschacht</a> (1623-78) into a passage in <a href="142.htm">1623/142</a>, one way into the system. This adds no new depth, but considerably increases the overall length. ARGE have also been doing much useful resurvey and some exploration, bringing their estimate of the total length to 22.7 km in 1999.</explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<explorers>Length of CUCC's part is approx 5.75 km, while the Germans had about 6 km in 88 in 1987, and the French (?) connected the Eish&ouml;hle (2.5 km or more) in the same year. This should make the system about 14-15 km all told before 1996. The Stuttgart group, <a href="/1623/others/arge.html">Arbeitsgemeinschaft H&ouml;hle und Karst Grabenstetten e.V.</a>, have, early in 1996, connected their cave <a href="/1623/78.htm">Schwabenschacht</a> (1623-78) into a passage in <a href="/1623/142/142.htm">1623/142</a>, one way into the system. This adds no new depth, but considerably increases the overall length. ARGE have also been doing much useful resurvey and some exploration, bringing their estimate of the total length to 22.7 km in 1999.</explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1623/41-142.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description><p>This description dates from 1999.
<p>As the <a href="41/41.htm">full guidebook description</a> is understandably quite big and is still evolving, just an overview is given here.</p><p>Sub-horizontal passages lead through steeply-hading rifts from this entrance. A lower route was originally explored by a German group before CUCC's first visit, and remains poorly documented and not fully explored. The higher route, explored by CUCC, leads past connections to <a href="142.htm">142</a>, another CUCC find. Passages trend downhill to reach the <b>Big Pitch</b> of 100m vertical.</p><p><a href="/1623/88.htm">L&auml;rchenh&ouml;hle</a> connects at the bottom of the Big Pitch, and a streamway leads down. A roof passage connects to CUCC's <a href="144.htm">144</a>, and another leads on to smaller pitches to the <b>Big Rift</b>, dropping steeply down several pitches to reach <b>Junction Chamber</b> with connections to <a href="115.htm">Schnellzugh&ouml;hle</a> (115).</p><p>The route to 115 also leads to <b>Pete's Purgatory</b>, 800m of awful streamway to <b>the Confluence</b>, much more easily reached by large fossil passages starting with <b>Dartford Tunnel</b> from Junction Chamber. The Confluence is around half the depth of the system, and marks a transition to a single linear streamway leading to great depth, a feature currently unique in the known caves of the area.</p><p>The streamway is interrupted by a bypassable sump and several, mainly short, pitches, before a low-airspace canal appears to mark the end. However, a low duck can be passed to reach a deep and very wet shaft <b>Orgasm Chasm</b> which drops to the final muddy passage and short pitch to a dismal and deep rift sump.</p><p>The sump is 898m below the 41a entrance, and is at just about the same level as Altausseer See, in whose <a href="/1623/0.htm">underwater risings</a> the Stellerweg water is presumed to emerge. The scope for greater depth here seems minimal, but connections to various higher entrances have increased this to c971m, with perhaps a little more potential still to realise (optimistically up to 1058m).</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<p>As the <a href="41/41.htm">full guidebook description</a> is understandably quite big and is still evolving, just an overview is given here.</p><p>Sub-horizontal passages lead through steeply-hading rifts from this entrance. A lower route was originally explored by a German group before CUCC's first visit, and remains poorly documented and not fully explored. The higher route, explored by CUCC, leads past connections to <a href="/1623/142/142.htm">142</a>, another CUCC find. Passages trend downhill to reach the <b>Big Pitch</b> of 100m vertical.</p><p><a href="/1623/88.htm">L&auml;rchenh&ouml;hle</a> connects at the bottom of the Big Pitch, and a streamway leads down. A roof passage connects to CUCC's <a href="/1623/144/144.htm">144</a>, and another leads on to smaller pitches to the <b>Big Rift</b>, dropping steeply down several pitches to reach <b>Junction Chamber</b> with connections to <a href="/1623/115/115.htm">Schnellzugh&ouml;hle</a> (115).</p><p>The route to 115 also leads to <b>Pete's Purgatory</b>, 800m of awful streamway to <b>the Confluence</b>, much more easily reached by large fossil passages starting with <b>Dartford Tunnel</b> from Junction Chamber. The Confluence is around half the depth of the system, and marks a transition to a single linear streamway leading to great depth, a feature currently unique in the known caves of the area.</p><p>The streamway is interrupted by a bypassable sump and several, mainly short, pitches, before a low-airspace canal appears to mark the end. However, a low duck can be passed to reach a deep and very wet shaft <b>Orgasm Chasm</b> which drops to the final muddy passage and short pitch to a dismal and deep rift sump.</p><p>The sump is 898m below the 41a entrance, and is at just about the same level as Altausseer See, in whose <a href="/1623/0.htm">underwater risings</a> the Stellerweg water is presumed to emerge. The scope for greater depth here seems minimal, but connections to various higher entrances have increased this to c971m, with perhaps a little more potential still to realise (optimistically up to 1058m).</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->

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@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<underground_description>The round 8m wide by 10m high entrance leads into an upper level, the Hauptgang, leading north then northeast to Regenhalle, a sizeable chamber apparently formed on a significant SW-NE joint. Immediately right at the start of the chamber, a boulder slope leads up into Teilungshalle, from where a wider slope drops left back into Regenhalle about halfway along. At the highest point of Teilungshalle, a SE-going passage quickly chokes with boulders, but appears to be heading directly for the end of Kleines Loserloch, perhaps 10m away.</p><p>Keeping to the right (SW) wall entering Teilungshalle, a rift leads SW. A passage left after 5m quickly ends too tight. A traverse to the left hand side bypasses a 5m shaft in the floor. 15m beyond, another lead on the left leads up into a small chamber, Kapelle. The continuing rift, S&uuml;dwest-Kluft, gets narrower for c 25m until deemed impassable.</p><p>Back in Regenhalle, a narrow section along the joint between the two ways to Teilungshalle, gives access to a lower series via a sharp turn to the right, due south. This wide passage, S&uuml;dwest-gang, passes under Teilungshalle, and turns SW directly under S&uuml;dwest-Kluft. A narrow rift on the left parallels the main passage for some way. The main way develops into Gr. Dom, 12m wide, with a boulder slope up until the passage chokes comprehensively on a broad front, almost exactly below the cliff outside.</p><p>At the far (NE) end of Regenhalle, stright on enters a draughting boulder choke, but two ways up to the right lead into Stufengang, with a complex of little rifts and an extension NE to a low choked area. </underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey>A4 survey in Mitt. der Sektion Ausseerland 18(4), Oct. 1980, facing p 87: a plan by J V&ouml;llenkle of L.V.H.Linz, 1:250, 1972. As printed, this looks like about a 4th generation photocopy. Also includes <a href="9.htm">Kat. 9</a></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->
<survey>A4 survey in Mitt. der Sektion Ausseerland 18(4), Oct. 1980, facing p 87: a plan by J V&ouml;llenkle of L.V.H.Linz, 1:250, 1972. As printed, this looks like about a 4th generation photocopy. Also includes <a href="/1623/9/9.htm">Kat. 9</a></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->
<kataster_status></kataster_status>
Blank if not, or notes about status such as 'surveyed, but no entrance fix so not yet in dataset'. -->
<notes></notes><!-- Normally empty, but place for anything else that should be noted, such as info on cave maybe being a duplicate, or lost -->

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@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<underground_description>The cave is essentially a single passage for c 60m going NE to a narrowing. To the left at this point is a small extension, with a blind pit to the SW, and a draughting boulder choke to the NE. This is c 10m from a corresponding choke in Teilugshalle of Gro&szlig;es Loserloch.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey>A4 survey in Mitt. der Sektion Ausseerland 18(4), Oct. 1980, facing p 87: a plan by J V&ouml;llenkle of L.V.H.Linz, 1:250, 1972. As printed, this looks like about a 4th generation photocopy. Also includes <a href="8.htm">Kat. 8</a></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->
<survey>A4 survey in Mitt. der Sektion Ausseerland 18(4), Oct. 1980, facing p 87: a plan by J V&ouml;llenkle of L.V.H.Linz, 1:250, 1972. As printed, this looks like about a 4th generation photocopy. Also includes <a href="/1623/8/8.htm">Kat. 8</a></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->
<kataster_status></kataster_status>
<underground_centre_line></underground_centre_line><!-- 'In dataset' if it is in the survex dataset. Blank if not, or notes about status such as 'surveyed, but no entrance fix so not yet in dataset'. -->
<notes></notes><!-- Normally empty, but place for anything else that should be noted, such as info on cave maybe being a duplicate, or lost -->

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@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<survey></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->
<kataster_status></kataster_status>
<underground_centre_line></underground_centre_line><!-- 'In dataset' if it is in the survex dataset. Blank if not, or notes about status such as 'surveyed, but no entrance fix so not yet in dataset'. -->
<notes>This was apparently relocated and reexplored by CUCC <a href="/years/1988/log.htm#id1988-B10-1">in 1988</a>, before they spotted the number. Shown as being near the foot of the Br&auml;uning wall, in the same area as <a href="159/159.html">159</a> and <a href="160.htm">160</a>. Not relocated, however, in a search in 1990, probably because it's further out onto the plateau than the 91,93,94 area where I looked. There are a couple of likely looking holes immediately north of the grassy area containing lower top camp, but no number was visible in 1998.</notes><!-- Normally empty, but place for anything else that should be noted, such as info on cave maybe being a duplicate, or lost -->
<notes>This was apparently relocated and reexplored by CUCC <a href="/years/1988/log.htm#id1988-B10-1">in 1988</a>, before they spotted the number. Shown as being near the foot of the Br&auml;uning wall, in the same area as <a href="159/159.html">159</a> and <a href="/1623/160/160.htm">160</a>. Not relocated, however, in a search in 1990, probably because it's further out onto the plateau than the 91,93,94 area where I looked. There are a couple of likely looking holes immediately north of the grassy area containing lower top camp, but no number was visible in 1998.</notes><!-- Normally empty, but place for anything else that should be noted, such as info on cave maybe being a duplicate, or lost -->
<length></length><!-- Cave length. Can be left blank and system should fill it in automatically from survey data (it doesn't yet) -->
<depth></depth><!--Cave depth. Can be left blank and system should fill it in automatically from survey data (it doesn't yet) -->
<extent></extent>

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@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<letter>d</letter><!--Leave blank for single-entrance cave. If there is more than one entrace then the letter needs to be given. Generally matches the entranceslug ID. -->
</entrance>
<explorers></p><ul><li>Found in 1973 by <a href="/1623/others/gsab/index.htm"><span lang="fr">Groupe Sp&eacute;l&eacute;o Alpin Belge</span></a> under the name T3, but not pushed to any depth.</li><li>Rediscovered in July 1976 by <span lang="fr">J.M.Piron</span> and explored from 12th to 23rd of July by <span lang="fr">A.C.Toulon, S.C.Toulon, Lou Darbon &amp; Sp&eacute;l&eacute;o Ragaie</span> to a depth of 708m. Later sources refer to this group as 'an unheard of group of <span lang="fr">"Sp&eacute;l&eacute;os Proven&ccedil;aux"'.</span></li><li>The same group in 1977 discovered the two lower entrances, using them to explore to the bottom at -913m.</li><li>The Austrian expedition of 1985 set out to connect <span lang="de">Feuertalsystem</span> to <a href="55.htm"><span lang="de">Raucherkarh&ouml;hle</span></a> and found a large horizontal passage, but no connection.</li></ul><p></explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<explorers></p><ul><li>Found in 1973 by <a href="/1623/others/gsab/index.htm"><span lang="fr">Groupe Sp&eacute;l&eacute;o Alpin Belge</span></a> under the name T3, but not pushed to any depth.</li><li>Rediscovered in July 1976 by <span lang="fr">J.M.Piron</span> and explored from 12th to 23rd of July by <span lang="fr">A.C.Toulon, S.C.Toulon, Lou Darbon &amp; Sp&eacute;l&eacute;o Ragaie</span> to a depth of 708m. Later sources refer to this group as 'an unheard of group of <span lang="fr">"Sp&eacute;l&eacute;os Proven&ccedil;aux"'.</span></li><li>The same group in 1977 discovered the two lower entrances, using them to explore to the bottom at -913m.</li><li>The Austrian expedition of 1985 set out to connect <span lang="de">Feuertalsystem</span> to <a href="/1623/55/55.htm"><span lang="de">Raucherkarh&ouml;hle</span></a> and found a large horizontal passage, but no connection.</li></ul><p></explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1626/120/120.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>From the <span lang="fr">Quelli</span> entrance, pitches p8, p19, p83, p33, p24, p17, p5, p33, p24, p9, p33, p27, p103 lead to -400m. Here one reaches a vast passage going up and downhill. The downstream passage emerges at the top of an 84m pitch. Below this a winding canyon interspersed with small pitches gives onto a 15m pitch and the end of exploration in 1976 at -708m.</p><p>The lower entrances lead by large phreatic passages to pitches which drop into a further large horizontal level which undulates between -410m and -500m. At -497m, this links to the main vertical system from <span lang="fr">Quelli.</span> Using these lower ways in, exploration reached a sump at -913m in 1977. Following the large phreatic level away from <span lang="fr">Quelli</span> goes for about a kilometre before breaking into the side of a colossal shaft at -414m. This is a 211m pitch to a choke at -625m. There is a possible way on across this shaft, which is, however, 20m in diameter.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->

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@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ code used in the Austrian kataster e.g '1/S +' - https://expo/.survex.com/katast
<explorers></p><ul><li>Under the aegis of LVHK <span lang="de">Ober&ouml;sterreich,</span> 1961-present,</li><li>Austrian National expedition took place in 1965,</li><li>Both LVHK <span lang="de">Ober&ouml;sterreich</span> and LVHK <span lang="de">Steiermark</span> worked together in 1973.</li></ul><p></explorers><!-- 'CUCC Expo' and year(s) of exploration. To distinguish from caves explored by foreign groups. Individual names can be given too if it was a small cave. -->
<survex_file>caves-1626/55/55-second-dataset.svx</survex_file><!-- Name of top-level survey file for this cave. Relative to the 'loser' survex repository. So for most caves that's "caves-162x/cavenum/cavnum.svx". (e.g. caves-1623/204/204.svx -->
<underground_description>The labyrinthine system contains several levels of development, mostly southwards towards <a href="5.htm"><span lang="de">Nagelstegh&ouml;hle</span></a> (the probable resurgence at 850m). The current deepest point (a sump) has been reached by systematically traversing over pitches of 40 to 90m.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<underground_description>The labyrinthine system contains several levels of development, mostly southwards towards <a href="/1623/5/5.htm"><span lang="de">Nagelstegh&ouml;hle</span></a> (the probable resurgence at 850m). The current deepest point (a sump) has been reached by systematically traversing over pitches of 40 to 90m.</underground_description><!-- Underground description. (description of approach and entrance goes in entrance file). For a small cave this will be the entire description. For larger caves it will be the front page of the description, or a short intro, containing links to other pages with the cave description in, or even nothing but a link. -->
<equipment></equipment><!-- For a small cave, summary of gear needed to descend. For longer caves it could be blank, a table, or just refer to the description/topos. Leave blank if this info is in the description. -->
<references></p><dl><dt>78.2012</dt><dd><cite>(GSAB) <span lang="fr">Sp&eacute;alp</span> 1 (June 1977) pp 33-49</cite>, <b>Totes Gebirge: <span lang="fr">Description des principaux gouffres de la zone ouest du massif</span></b>, <span lang="fr">Jean Claude Hans &amp; Etienne Degrave</span><br /><a href="/1623/others/gsab/en/782012.htm#id55">English Translation</a><br /><a href="/1623/others/gsab/fr/782012.htm#id55" lang="fr">En Fran&ccedil;ais</a></dd></dl><p>The description is translated mainly from reference 78.2012 by Andy Waddington and Jill Gates, with additional info on dates/lengths as cited.</references><!-- References to documentation. Could be Journal articles or Logbook entries. Can be links if the docs are online. -->
<survey></survey><!-- Drawn-up surveys. Scans of paper surveys or images/PDFs of electronic surveys. Should include HTML to display current plan and elevation, with links to larger versions (See section on URLs and files). Could list links to multiple years of survey, or even a separate survey page if it's complicated enough. -->

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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description></location_description>
<approach>This is a hole you step over on the way to <a href="113.htm">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> (113).</approach>
<approach>This is a hole you step over on the way to <a href="/1623/113/113.htm">Sonnenstrahlh&ouml;hle</a> (113).</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>
<!-- marking options: P = Paint,

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Out on plateau, quite near <a href="98.htm">98</a>. </location_description>
<location_description>Out on plateau, quite near <a href="/1623/98/98.htm">98</a>. </location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description> Out on plateau, 50m from <a href="111.htm">111</a>. </location_description>
<location_description> Out on plateau, 50m from <a href="/1623/111/111.htm">111</a>. </location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ though, you do not need to do a data import as it happens automatically -->
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description></location_description>
<lastvisit></lastvisit>
<approach>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.</approach>
<approach>Follow St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) well past turn off for <a href="/1623/41/41.htm">Stellerwegh&ouml;hle</a>. This involves a steep descent, then a long horizontal stretch, crossing the dry valley containing Kat. <a href="/1623/87/87.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="/1623/109/109.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.</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></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></photo>
<!-- marking options: P = Paint,

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@ -11,10 +11,10 @@
<name></name>
<entrance_description>A huge snow-plugged entrance apparently akin to <a href="113.htm">113</a>.</entrance_description>
<entrance_description>A huge snow-plugged entrance apparently akin to <a href="/1623/113/113.htm">113</a>.</entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>about 150m ENE of <a href="154.htm">154</a></location_description>
<location_description>about 150m ENE of <a href="/1623/154/154.htm">154</a></location_description>
<approach>From 154, climb up and right and around a grassy shoulder. Then walk down (heading roughly east), skirting past a choked doline and 155 lies ahead.</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>On plateau, beyond <a href="198/198.html">B11</a> (1623/198). This is a snow-choked shaft next to the very large snow-choked shaft, which has always been blocked with snow and was therefore not explored or numbered for many years, but is now <a href="189.htm">189</a>.</location_description>
<location_description>On plateau, beyond <a href="198/198.html">B11</a> (1623/198). This is a snow-choked shaft next to the very large snow-choked shaft, which has always been blocked with snow and was therefore not explored or numbered for many years, but is now <a href="/1623/189/189.htm">189</a>.</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></p><div class="centre"><a href="others/l/189164.htm"><img src="others/t/189164.jpg" width="121" height="176" alt="entrance picture - 87k jpeg" /></a><p>164 entrance (left of centre) seen over 189 entrance.</p></div><p></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>At foot of SE-facing scar, just NE of a much more obvious (but unmarked) NW-SE rift with snow. Below this scar is a pavement formed in a shelly band of limestone, which dips c 10-15&deg; on a strike of 135-315&deg;. Following the pavement down and dropping down one scar leads to <a href="175.htm">175</a>.</location_description>
<location_description>At foot of SE-facing scar, just NE of a much more obvious (but unmarked) NW-SE rift with snow. Below this scar is a pavement formed in a shelly band of limestone, which dips c 10-15&deg; on a strike of 135-315&deg;. Following the pavement down and dropping down one scar leads to <a href="/1623/175/175.htm">175</a>.</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></p><div class="centre"><a href="others/l/176snr.htm"><img alt="Photo of entrance" src="others/t/176snr.jpg" width="122" height="172" /></a></div><p></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>500m NE of Loser H&uuml;tte, north of <a href="17.htm">B&auml;renh&ouml;hle (1623/17)</a> in Ammereich, a small cliff band below the toll road.<br><br>Guessing that 1623.p18 is the entrance to 1623/18 from survex file <br>; Eingänge absolut positionieren<br>
<location_description>500m NE of Loser H&uuml;tte, north of <a href="/1623/17/17.htm">B&auml;renh&ouml;hle (1623/17)</a> in Ammereich, a small cliff band below the toll road.<br><br>Guessing that 1623.p18 is the entrance to 1623/18 from survex file <br>; Eingänge absolut positionieren<br>
*fix p18 34250 80050 1440 <br>; Daten aus "Karst und Höhle 02/03"</location_description>
<lastvisit></lastvisit>
<approach></approach>

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<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description></location_description>
<approach>From <a href="183.htm">183</a>, go south up the fault until an area of exposed limestone is met on the left (about 20m). Go left (E) along this exposure up to where the bunde starts and locate a surface stream canyon. This becomes 184 when it goes underground (and it's marked). </approach>
<approach>From <a href="/1623/183/183.htm">183</a>, go south up the fault until an area of exposed limestone is met on the left (about 20m). Go left (E) along this exposure up to where the bunde starts and locate a surface stream canyon. This becomes 184 when it goes underground (and it's marked). </approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>
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<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description></location_description>
<approach>From Schwarzmoossattel directly out onto the plateau, keeping to the left edge of a large flat area of karren, passes first Fuchsh&ouml;hle <a href="198/198.html">B11</a>, then <a href="164.htm">164</a>, a snow-plugged shaft below a small north-facing scar. 164 and 189 are both on the same joint going 018-198&deg;: a few metres north of 164 is a fault line on 102-282&deg; with a large open and heavily snow-plugged shaft, noted often since 1976, but not explored and written up until 1994 (or 1993?).</approach>
<approach>From Schwarzmoossattel directly out onto the plateau, keeping to the left edge of a large flat area of karren, passes first Fuchsh&ouml;hle <a href="198/198.html">B11</a>, then <a href="/1623/164/164.htm">164</a>, a snow-plugged shaft below a small north-facing scar. 164 and 189 are both on the same joint going 018-198&deg;: a few metres north of 164 is a fault line on 102-282&deg; with a large open and heavily snow-plugged shaft, noted often since 1976, but not explored and written up until 1994 (or 1993?).</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></p><div class="centre"><a href="others/l/189164.htm"><img src="others/t/189164.jpg" width="149" height="142" alt="Photo - 44k" /></a><p>164 entrance (left of centre) seen over 189 entrance.</p><a href="others/l/189svy.htm"><img src="others/t/189svy.jpg" alt="Photo - 61k" width="200" height="134" /></a><p>The entrance looking north during surface survey in 1996.</p></div><p></photo>
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<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>On large white patch of limestone on NW flank of Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel (visible from Top Camp), quite near the far side of the bare area and just above a larch tree leaning SE.</location_description>
<approach>On cairned path from Top Camp to Steinbruckenh&ouml;hle (204). 60m W of <a href="194.htm">195</a>. Area map NotKH book p 115.</approach>
<approach>On cairned path from Top Camp to Steinbruckenh&ouml;hle (204). 60m W of <a href="/1623/194/194.htm">195</a>. Area map NotKH book p 115.</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></p><div class="centre"><a href="others/l/194.htm"><img alt="context view - 8k jpg" width="143" height="170" src="others/t/194bw.jpg" /></a><a href="others/l/194.htm"><img alt="number - 12k gif" width="170" height="143" src="others/t/194no.jpg" /></a><a href="others/l/194.htm"><img alt="rift to NE - 11 k jpg" width="143" height="170" src="others/t/194rft.jpg" /></a></div><p></photo>
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<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>On large white patch of limestone on NW flank of Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel (visible from Top Camp), quite near the top of the bare area, higher up than <a href="195/195.html">1623/195</a>. </location_description>
<approach>Path from Top Camp to Steinbruckenh&ouml;hle (204) goes past this cave. Close to <a href="194.htm">194</a>, <a href="195/195.html">195</a>, <a href="165.htm">165</a>.</approach>
<approach>Path from Top Camp to Steinbruckenh&ouml;hle (204) goes past this cave. Close to <a href="/1623/194/194.htm">194</a>, <a href="195/195.html">195</a>, <a href="/1623/165/165.htm">165</a>.</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>
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<name></name>
<entrance_description>Unexplored resurgence directly below the western entrance of <a href="1.htm">Li&auml;gerh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.1). At the foot of Steller, a cliff band SE of and directly below the Loser Panoramastra&szlig;e Bergrestaurant.</entrance_description>
<entrance_description>Unexplored resurgence directly below the western entrance of <a href="/1623/1/1.htm">Li&auml;gerh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.1). At the foot of Steller, a cliff band SE of and directly below the Loser Panoramastra&szlig;e Bergrestaurant.</entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>As for <a href="1.htm">Li&auml;gerh&ouml;hle (1623/1)</a>, the altitude is a little suspect. I think it is further below Kat.1 than this. In any case, it is quite impenetrable.</location_description>
<location_description>As for <a href="/1623/1/1.htm">Li&auml;gerh&ouml;hle (1623/1)</a>, the altitude is a little suspect. I think it is further below Kat.1 than this. In any case, it is quite impenetrable.</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo>CUCC were shown some photographs of 1 &amp; 2 in flood, when a truly enormous river emerges from both entrances and numerous impenetrable cracks. This explains the vegetation-free state of the twin river beds leading down towards Altausseer See. </photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>In Scharlingkar. This is the band of cliffs SW of Wei&szlig;e Wand. The cave is SW of <a href="19.htm">Gamsofen</a> (Kat.19) and almost due south of the huts in Br&auml;ning Alm.</location_description>
<location_description>In Scharlingkar. This is the band of cliffs SW of Wei&szlig;e Wand. The cave is SW of <a href="/1623/19/19.htm">Gamsofen</a> (Kat.19) and almost due south of the huts in Br&auml;ning Alm.</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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1623.gps00.93_01a<br>
were attached to this entrance but they are now defunct survey stations.</location_description>
<lastvisit></lastvisit>
<approach>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;rchen), 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.html">76</a>, and also via the "Geologists' walk" which passes much further left via <a href="171/171.html">171</a> and <a href="172.htm">172.</a></approach>
<approach>From <a href="/1623/164/164.htm">164</a>, avoid <a href="/1623/189/189.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;rchen), passing right of the OAV ski marker pole. This is an easy walk above a short (climbable) cliff looking down onto <a href="/1623/210/210.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="/1623/173/173.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.html">76</a>, and also via the "Geologists' walk" which passes much further left via <a href="171/171.html">171</a> and <a href="/1623/172/172.htm">172.</a></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></p><div class="centre"><a href="/1623/others/l/lrh.htm"><img alt="Photo of 1993 descent" src="/1623/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></photo>
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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>South of Egglgrubenalm (it looks to be east of it on the map), north of <a href="19.htm">Gamsofen</a> (Kat.19).</location_description>
<location_description>South of Egglgrubenalm (it looks to be east of it on the map), north of <a href="/1623/19/19.htm">Gamsofen</a> (Kat.19).</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>East of HSK summit, in an area of small shafts (north of CUCC <a href="224.html">96-02</a>, south of <a href="223.html">96-03</a>)</location_description>
<location_description>East of HSK summit, in an area of small shafts (north of CUCC <a href="/1623/224/224.html">96-02</a>, south of <a href="/1623/223/223.html">96-03</a>)</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>East of HSK summit, in an area of small shafts (north of CUCC <a href="224.html">96-02</a> and <a href="222.html">96-04</a>)</location_description>
<location_description>East of HSK summit, in an area of small shafts (north of CUCC <a href="/1623/224/224.html">96-02</a> and <a href="/1623/222/222.html">96-04</a>)</location_description>
<approach>See 2000 survey</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></p><div class="centre"><a href="others/l/9603.htm"><img alt="Photo - 51k" src="others/t/9603.jpg" width="134" height="200" /></a></div><p></photo>

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@
<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>East of HSK summit, in an area of small shafts (south of CUCC <a href="223.html">96-03</a> and <a href="222.html">96-04</a>)</location_description>
<location_description>East of HSK summit, in an area of small shafts (south of CUCC <a href="/1623/223/223.html">96-03</a> and <a href="/1623/222/222.html">96-04</a>)</location_description>
<approach>area map notKH p23.</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>East of Egglgrubenalm, very near <a href="23.htm">Steinbockh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 23).</location_description>
<location_description>East of Egglgrubenalm, very near <a href="/1623/23/23.htm">Steinbockh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat. 23).</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description> In Br&auml;uning Kunntal, next to <a href="26.htm">Kat.26</a></location_description>
<location_description> In Br&auml;uning Kunntal, next to <a href="/1623/26/26.htm">Kat.26</a></location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>West of Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel (exact location unknown) Possibly near <a href="37.htm">Kat.37</a> (q.v.)</location_description>
<location_description>West of Hinterer Schwarzmooskogel (exact location unknown) Possibly near <a href="/1623/37/37.htm">Kat.37</a> (q.v.)</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description>2.2m wide by 1.2m high entrance leads in a gentle slope to where it becomes too tight. </entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>West side of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel according to text. Map shows it on S side, not far from the summit area. Later reference says it is above and south of <a href="36.htm">Kat.36</a>, however the kataster description of the location of 36 is also wrong... </location_description>
<location_description>West side of Vorderer Schwarzmooskogel according to text. Map shows it on S side, not far from the summit area. Later reference says it is above and south of <a href="/1623/36/36.htm">Kat.36</a>, however the kataster description of the location of 36 is also wrong... </location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>In upper Kratzer valley south of the col. Probably in the same entrance doline as <a href="35.htm">Dr. Kerschner H&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.35).</location_description>
<location_description>In upper Kratzer valley south of the col. Probably in the same entrance doline as <a href="/1623/35/35.htm">Dr. Kerschner H&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.35).</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="/1623/45/45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="/1623/45/45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="/1623/45/45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="/1623/45/45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<location_description>Near <a href="/1623/45/45.htm">Dannerschacht</a> Kat.45</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description></location_description>
<approach>12m east and 5m above <a href="3.htm">Gellerofen</a> (Kat.3)</approach>
<approach>12m east and 5m above <a href="/1623/3/3.htm">Gellerofen</a> (Kat.3)</approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>
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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>South of and well below <a href="3.htm">Gellerofen</a> (Kat.3), not marked on the Austrian´s map, but apparently just off the road in Augstbachtal. Must be almost in the village. "Kleine H&ouml;hle mit einer Wasserlacke im Inneren."</location_description>
<location_description>South of and well below <a href="/1623/3/3.htm">Gellerofen</a> (Kat.3), not marked on the Austrian´s map, but apparently just off the road in Augstbachtal. Must be almost in the village. "Kleine H&ouml;hle mit einer Wasserlacke im Inneren."</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Plateau WNW of <a href="83.htm">Kat.83</a></location_description>
<location_description>Plateau WNW of <a href="/1623/83/83.htm">Kat.83</a></location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>Plateau, on higher ground just SE of <a href="82.htm">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.82)</location_description>
<location_description>Plateau, on higher ground just SE of <a href="/1623/82/82.htm">Br&auml;uningh&ouml;hle</a> (Kat.82)</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description>In a dry valley leading up from the St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) shortly after the turn off for <a href="115.htm">Schnellzugh&ouml;hle</a>. In 2001 the hole was seen blowing a large quantity of vapour visible from some way off.</location_description>
<location_description>In a dry valley leading up from the St&ouml;gerweg (path 201) shortly after the turn off for <a href="/1623/115/115.htm">Schnellzugh&ouml;hle</a>. In 2001 the hole was seen blowing a large quantity of vapour visible from some way off.</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>

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<entrance_description></entrance_description>
<explorers></explorers>
<map_description></map_description>
<location_description><span lang="de">Plagitzergrube,</span> NE of <span lang="de">Hangender Kogel.</span> This puts it quite close to <span lang="de">Trunkemboldschacht,</span> <a href="117.htm">1626/117</a> (which is 90m higher) and also near the path.</location_description>
<location_description><span lang="de">Plagitzergrube,</span> NE of <span lang="de">Hangender Kogel.</span> This puts it quite close to <span lang="de">Trunkemboldschacht,</span> <a href="/1623/117/117.htm">1626/117</a> (which is 90m higher) and also near the path.</location_description>
<approach></approach>
<underground_description></underground_description>
<photo></photo>