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Did people live in Mammoth Cave?

Native people visited these caves year-round. They carried out a wide range of activities within the caves: habitation, exploration, mineral mining, ceremonies/rituals, and burial.



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Native people visited these caves year-round. They carried out a wide range of activities within the caves: habitation, exploration, mineral mining, ceremonies/rituals, and burial.

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What is the temperature inside the cave? Temperatures inside the cave vary somewhat, but usually hover around 54°F (12.2°C), year-round.

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Buried here is Stephen Bishop, a famous 19th Century African-American cave guide. The Old Guide's Cemetery also contains the burials of three tuberculosis patients who died during the Mammoth Cave Tuberculosis cave treatment experiment of 1842.

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The deepest point in Kentucky's Mammoth Cave is called the “Bottomless Pit.” Despite its name, this pit is not actually bottomless. It is estimated to be around 140 feet (42.7 meters) deep.

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The Rotunda is one of the largest rooms in Mammoth Cave.

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Mammoth Cave was formed in Mississippian-age limestone rock. The cave is 379 feet (118 m) deep, and contains at least 5 levels of passages.

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In addition to this rich diversity of primitive sharks at Mammoth Cave, two partial cartilaginous skeletons of different species of sharks occur within Mammoth Cave. One specimen was discovered by a caver with the Cave Research Foundation and the other has been known by the park guides for years.

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Mammoth Cave is considered a dry cave. Above all the layers of limestone rock there are two more layers of sedimentary rock, sandstone and shale. These layers of rock were created long after the development of the limestone. A river flowed over this area leaving behind sand, silt and mud.

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