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'This is a major discovery': Explorers find massive ice-age cavern beneath Montreal
By Jaela Bernstien, CBC News
December 2, 2017
Cathedral-like chamber, formed more than 15,000 years ago, features underground lake
The cave is so far down that it reaches the aquifer. The explorers had to use an inflatable
canoe to navigate part of the cavern, containing water five metres deep. (Submitted by
Soci?t? qu?b?coise de sp?l?ologie)
Explorers have just discovered a new underground passage, complete with stalactites and a lake, all buried beneath the city of Montreal — and they don't know where it ends yet.
Until a couple months ago, no one had ever set foot inside.
CBC crews were among the first people who had the chance to explore the cathedral-like chamber, which was formed more than 15,000 years ago during the ice age.
Cavers Luc Le Blanc and his friend Daniel Caron couldn’t believe
their eyes when they knocked through limestone and discovered
this massive chamber beneath Montreal. (Submitted by
Soci?t? qu?b?coise de sp?l?ologie)
The spectacular find is connected to Montreal's Saint-L?onard Cavern, which lies underneath Parc Pie XII, not far from Highway 40.
The main portion of the cavern has been open to members of the public for decades, but tour guides had no idea there had been a massive section hidden behind a limestone wall.
The passageway, formed more than 15,000 years ago during the last ice age, runs at least 200 metres long, six metres high, and about three metres wide. "This is a major discovery we made. This doesn't happen many times in a lifetime," said Luc Le Blanc, who found the passageway along with his friend Daniel Caron.
The chamber is so deep that it reaches the aquifer.
The explorers waded through as much of it as possible, before using an inflatable canoe to navigate the five-metre-deep water.
"It keeps going. We haven't reached the end yet," Le Blanc said.
Le Blanc and Caron said they were able to pinpoint the location of the passageway using a dowsing rod, similar to the wooden divination tools sometimes used to find groundwater.
The two men, who first got into caving as a hobby, said they've been searching for an unknown branch of the Saint-L?onard cavern for years.
They succeeded in October, when they started to dig through a unremarkable wall, one cave that tour groups shuffle past every summer.
"We started digging in a decomposed layer of limestone that was much softer ... We managed to open a window through which we could see the void beyond," Le Blanc said.
Now that small window has been expanded to a narrow tunnel, only large enough for an adult to crawl through.
Crawling through this narrow hole leads you to the ceiling of a massive chamber,
which you then access by climbing down a ladder. (CBC)
Le Blanc said the discovery is significant not just because of the chamber's size, but because of the way the cave was formed. "The walls opened through the pressure of the glacier above … it's a mechanical process through a glacier. It's been called glacial tectonism."
Le Blanc can't wait to keep exploring the rest of the cave. "It's just beautiful."
Borough officials do hope to eventually open it up to the public, once the proper surveys and reports have been completed.
By Jaela Bernstien, CBC News
December 2, 2017
Cathedral-like chamber, formed more than 15,000 years ago, features underground lake
The cave is so far down that it reaches the aquifer. The explorers had to use an inflatable
canoe to navigate part of the cavern, containing water five metres deep. (Submitted by
Soci?t? qu?b?coise de sp?l?ologie)
Explorers have just discovered a new underground passage, complete with stalactites and a lake, all buried beneath the city of Montreal — and they don't know where it ends yet.
Until a couple months ago, no one had ever set foot inside.
CBC crews were among the first people who had the chance to explore the cathedral-like chamber, which was formed more than 15,000 years ago during the ice age.
Cavers Luc Le Blanc and his friend Daniel Caron couldn’t believe
their eyes when they knocked through limestone and discovered
this massive chamber beneath Montreal. (Submitted by
Soci?t? qu?b?coise de sp?l?ologie)
The spectacular find is connected to Montreal's Saint-L?onard Cavern, which lies underneath Parc Pie XII, not far from Highway 40.
The main portion of the cavern has been open to members of the public for decades, but tour guides had no idea there had been a massive section hidden behind a limestone wall.
The passageway, formed more than 15,000 years ago during the last ice age, runs at least 200 metres long, six metres high, and about three metres wide. "This is a major discovery we made. This doesn't happen many times in a lifetime," said Luc Le Blanc, who found the passageway along with his friend Daniel Caron.
The chamber is so deep that it reaches the aquifer.
The explorers waded through as much of it as possible, before using an inflatable canoe to navigate the five-metre-deep water.
"It keeps going. We haven't reached the end yet," Le Blanc said.
Le Blanc and Caron said they were able to pinpoint the location of the passageway using a dowsing rod, similar to the wooden divination tools sometimes used to find groundwater.
The two men, who first got into caving as a hobby, said they've been searching for an unknown branch of the Saint-L?onard cavern for years.
They succeeded in October, when they started to dig through a unremarkable wall, one cave that tour groups shuffle past every summer.
"We started digging in a decomposed layer of limestone that was much softer ... We managed to open a window through which we could see the void beyond," Le Blanc said.
Now that small window has been expanded to a narrow tunnel, only large enough for an adult to crawl through.
Crawling through this narrow hole leads you to the ceiling of a massive chamber,
which you then access by climbing down a ladder. (CBC)
Le Blanc said the discovery is significant not just because of the chamber's size, but because of the way the cave was formed. "The walls opened through the pressure of the glacier above … it's a mechanical process through a glacier. It's been called glacial tectonism."
Le Blanc can't wait to keep exploring the rest of the cave. "It's just beautiful."
Borough officials do hope to eventually open it up to the public, once the proper surveys and reports have been completed.