The Peterborough Examiner

Newly discovered cave in B.C. park might be the largest in Canada

- HINA ALAM

VANCOUVER — A newly discovered cave in a remote valley in British Columbia’s Wells Gray Provincial Park might just be the country’s largest.

The feature was spotted by a helicopter crew from the province’s Ministry of Environmen­t and Climate Change in March, when they were conducting a caribou census through the northeaste­rn part of the park.

Geologist Catherine Hickson, who first went to the cave in September, said the discovery promises a dramatic new chapter in the story of Canadian cave exploratio­n.

“It was absolutely amazing,” she said. “I immediatel­y recognized that this was very significan­t.”

Before making the trip, Hickson and fellow researcher­s including John Pollack, a cave expert, spent months studying satellite imagery and rocks in the area, she said.

The entrance pit to the cave is about 100 metres long and 60 metres wide, and while its depth is hard to measure because of the mist from a waterfall, initial examinatio­ns show it is at least 135 metres deep.

“It’s about the size of a soccer field,” Hickson said. “So, if you think of a soccer field and you put that soccer field on its end so you have this pit going down. Think about this giant circular or oval hole that just goes down and down and down. It is truly amazing.”

The cave is the largest known of its type, a variety of “striped karst,” which is marble interspers­ed with other types of ancient ocean rock, she said. “It’s in an area where this size of a cave is unusual. It’s an important landmark — an important feature for Canadians to be proud about.”

The people who first spotted the cave from the helicopter named it Sarlacc’s Pit because of its similarity to the lair of Sarlacc, a creature from “Star Wars: Return of the Jedi.” But a formal naming of the cave will happen after consultati­ons with First Nations, she said.

The feature was formed underneath glaciers for potentiall­y tens of thousands of years, so there is no way of knowing the real age of the cave right away, Hickson said. “Right now, because of the recession of the glaciers, it is open to the sky,” she said, adding that as ice retreats from the landscape due to climate change, more such features might be discovered.

Caves support a very unique ecosystem because they are dark, so the flora and fauna living in such areas are acclimatiz­ed to those conditions, Hickson said.

With this cave, the flowing water is at such a rapid rate that it may not allow many creatures to call the area home, but further research is needed, she said.

Although the cave is in a remote, rugged valley covered with snow and ice for a greater part of the year, Hickson said researcher­s are keeping the exact location a secret so as to preserve the unique area.

 ?? CATHERINE HICKSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The cave in a remote valley in Wells Gray Provincial Park is hard to measure. Initial examinatio­ns show it is at least 135 metres deep.
CATHERINE HICKSON THE CANADIAN PRESS The cave in a remote valley in Wells Gray Provincial Park is hard to measure. Initial examinatio­ns show it is at least 135 metres deep.

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