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By Shirley Streshinsky
C
aves breathe. They inhale and exhale, depending on the vagaries of barometric pressure, and sometimes
they give off the warm, fetid smell of bat guano. It took only a few deep breaths of that telltale
scent to lead cave explorers Randy Tufts and Gary Tenen to the discovery of a lifetimenot just
an enormous cavern filled with spectacular formations, but that rarity, a "live" cave a million
years old and still growing, just below the surface of the southern Arizona desert. Outside, the temperature
can be 100 degrees and rising, but in the cave it is a constant 68 with humidity at 99, a sort
of subtropical rainforest in the dark, wet and dripping, growing stalactites and stalagmites and a
phantasmagoria of preternatural sculptures. The discoverers dubbed it Xanadu; when it opened as a state
park last year, it was Kartchner Caverns, named for the family who owned the property.
Tufts and Tenen, then students at the University of Arizona, first wriggled into the pristine
cavern in 1974. They mapped miles of passageways and two massive rooms, each the size of an opera
house and filled with the kinds of natural treasures, called "speleothems," that set cave lovers' hearts
aflutter. Tufts and Tenen understood the fragility of the cave; its balance could easily be
disturbed. If the desert air were allowed in, the cave would dry up. They knew that human intrusion
would likely sound the cave's death knell and that it was only a matter of time before other spelunkers
would come upon it. "Finding that cave was like having a child," Tufts says. "We felt responsible for
it. We made a sort of promise to the cave, that it could trust human beings."
What happened next would turn out to be a marvel of cooperative conservation. For 14 years,
the cave was kept secret by a coterie determined to preserve it. Along with the two discoverers,
it included the Kartchner family, Arizona's then govenor Bruce Babbitt, and Ken Travous, the state's
director of parks. Early on, they crawled through the mud to experience the cave firsthand. One
of the Kartchner sons, Max, climbed out, covered in mud, to report, "We were in complete disbelief at
the size and beauty of it. It was almost a sacred experience, so exquisite and out of this
world." When their help was needed, geologists, bat biologists, and cave experts were let in on the
secret. Eventually, they concluded paradoxically that the best way to save the cave would be to
open it to the public under carefully controlled conditions.
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Kartchner's piegrave;ce de reacute;sistance, a massive 58-foot column in the Throne
Room called Kubla Khan, looks like an intricate Chinese sculpture that took
centuries to carve.
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Flying into Tucson, I looked down on a sere desert strewn with shrubs that looked like a network
of veins. I tried to remember Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem and got as far as "In Xanadu did Kubla
Khan/A stately pleasure-dome decree:/Where Alph, the sacred river, ran/Through caverns measureless
to man . . . " I was about to encounter such a cavern, somewhere beneath that austere Arizona
landscape. From the airport I drove east on Interstate 10. Near Benson, I could see in the distance
mountains that once sheltered the Chiricahua Apache chiefs Cochise and Geronimo. State Route 90 led to
the new Kartchner Caverns State Park, its buildings tucked into the Whetstone Mountains.
The state has spent $28 million on the park, including air locks to allow people into the cave
while keeping hot air out, misting to maintain moisture, and a complex monitoring system to check the
cave's health. Only 20 people are allowed in at a time, a limit scrupulously observed, to the dismay
of those who arrive without reservations.
I wandered through the sprawling Discovery Center, where a replica of the cave allows children
to squeeze through small openings and touch formations. One exhibit depicts the colony of myotis
bats that returns each summer to use the cave as a nursery for its babies. When my tour was
announced, I made my way to the area where Ranger Carla Mullen started out by assuring us that if
anyone should even think about reaching out and touching a formation, she would not hesitate to
break their arm off. Some in our group giggled. Mullen continued with a litany of
do-nots. Thoroughly forewarned, we hopped onto a tram that carried us up to the cave. On foot,
we entered through what looked like a heavy steel refrigerator door, waiting until everyone was in
before it was shut. A second door opened into the cave, where we found our way along a dim
trail. At specific points we would gather. Lights would be turned on to reveal the formations,
slick and sparklingamazing layers of travertine in rich browns and greens, beautiful, whimsical,
and wondrous. The names given to different forms sounded like a grocery list: turnip shields,
soda straws, cave bacon, carrots, fried eggs. Each had been formed by water dripping, flowing, seeping
through Escabrosa limestone, drop by drop, for thousands of years.
In the Throne Room we waited for the lights to come up to play on the cave's piegrave;ce de
reacute;sistancea massive column 58 feet tall called Kubla Khan. It looked like some intricate
Chinese sculpture that had taken centuries to carve; the lights threw shadows on the walls beyond,
a drop of water, or "cave kiss," landed on my arm.
The park's assistant manage, Frances Adrian, had told me, "Different people have different revelations
in there. Some walk away with tears in their eyes, some people clap. It truly is one of God's
cathedrals." Someone broke the silence to ask how this cave compares to others, like the much larger
Carlsbad in New Mexico. "Carlsbad is to Kartchner," Mullen answered, "as Home Depot is to
Tiffany's."
I walked out with the ranger assigned to pull up the rear; his job was to keep an eye out for
souvenir collectors.
"Surely no one would dare?" I suggested.
"Last week," he told me, pointing to a spot just above our heads, "a woman reached up right
there and snapped off a soda straw." These delicate formations grow one-tenth of a millimeter a
year, so she had made off with a formation already thousands of years in the making.
People are clearly the gravest threat to the cave. In my hour-long visit, I left behind
160 million dust particles from my clothes, shed 60,000 fragments of skin, 2,000 lint particles,
170 watts of heat, and 25 quarts of carbon dioxide. And so do each of the 183,000 visitors who
pass through each year. Parks Director Travous says all of those things have been taken into
account, even to replacing the moisture my clothes had absorbed while underground. But other
cave experts claim there are already signs that Kartchner is drying out; even Tufts and Tenen
worry that the park isn't on top of its data collection. The idea, from the beginning, was to
preserve the cave, alive and growing, for generations to come. I asked Adrian, the assistant
manager, if she felt that had ever been a realistic goal. She answered with conviction, "The people
who work here are passionate about the cave; they will never let it down."
For general information: (520) 586-4100,
www.pr.state.az.us; for tour
reservations, (520) 586-2283.
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