The area numbers divide the country hierarchically, the four digits representing successively smaller areas delineated mainly by natural physical boundaries. CUCC work in area 1623, in which the "1000" (the Großeinheit) represents the Northern Limestone Alps, "1600" (the Hauptgruppe - major mountain group) represents the Totes Gebirge, a mountain area 100km east of Salzburg. The Totes Gebirge falls naturally into three massifs, and some smaller outlying blocks. "1620" (the Untergruppe or massif) is the western massif, and within that, "1623" (the Teilgruppe or part of the massif) is the Loser Augst-Eck plateau.
A cave which CUCC are currently exploring is named "Kaninchenhöhle", which has the number 1623/161. There are presently six entrances, and these are labelled 1623/161A, 161B, 161C, 161D, 161E and 161F. On older discoveries, these numbers were typically painted on the entrance. This has become deprecated with the increase in area of the Nature Reserve (Naturschutzgebiet), and now a more permanent, but less obtrusive, stainless steel tag is bolted on. These numbers enable anyone coming across an entrance not only to see that it has been explored, but also to be able to identify it and look up a description or survey for any cave in Austria. Each area has one locally-based person responsible for allocating "official" numbers in the kataster.
Cavers actually exploring caves in an area may use their own provisional names or numbers (many of which appear in these pages). CUCC use easily fabricated aluminium tags with our own internal number as a temporary measure during early exploration.
If caves have been explored by groups not recognised by the local cavers, or caves have been inadequately documented and may be rediscoveries, then they may still be known only by old provisional numbers. In our area, there are a few insignificant caves found by CUCC which have numbers like "B8" (though we are currently documenting the ones we can actually find more fully to give them "proper" numbers). Further north, there are numbers like "LA23" or "BS17" explored by Lancaster University Speleological Society and the University of Bristol Spelaeological Society respectively.
The Austrians periodically publish summary lists of caves for each area, and within these lists, each cave has a status code, such as "3/S/E +". The number represents the extent of the cave on a scale from 0-9, the letters denote the sort of cave it is, and the symbol at the end stands for the current state of exploration.
Length | Depth | code |
unknown | unknown | 0 |
5m but <50m | 5m but <50m | 1 |
50m but <500m | 50m but <100m | 2 |
500m but <5km | 100m but <200m | 3 |
5km but <10km | 200m but <500m | 4 |
10km but <25km | 500m but <750m | 5 |
25km but <50km | 750m but <1000m | 6 |
50km but <100km | 1000m but <1250m | 7 |
100km but <500km | 1250m but <1500m | 8 |
500km or over | 1500m or over | 9 |
If length and depth give different codes, then the cave gets the greater of the two.
So, for instance, the Kaninchenhöhle, 1623/161, gets the code "5/S/E ×", because it is 22 km long and just over 500m deep (both rate a "5"), is principally a vertical cave, but also has passages with ice, and been extensively explored, but there are still many leads to push.
Some of our older cave descriptions (mostly for caves we have not explored and know little about) use an older system: