Jade green caves make you cool
The gleaming transparent ice blocks, the blue firefly flock . gave the caves below the enchanting beauty .
Nature always has unbelievably beautiful beauty. With the continuous weathering of thousands of years of wind, water, rain . the emerald green caves below bring beauty that makes you feel "cool" right after viewing the photos.
1. Blue Marble blue cave in Chile and Argentina
This is a cave with unusual beauty created by different shades of blue that look very cool. Blue Marble Cave of General Carrera Lake is located between Chile and Argentina.
The water source of General Carrera is from melting glaciers in the Andes Mountains. These streams contain many small ice particles still suspended in the water, these particles refract blue light in the sunlight, creating an effect that makes the water here have a distinctive green color.
The cave is composed of a massive monolithic marble block, estimated to weigh up to 5 billion tons. Marble is slowly dissolved in water, and the water is dissolved faster.
The reflection of the turquoise light on the wall and ceiling of the cave made it all sink in the soft, attractive blue.
The process of creating caves takes thousands of years, water penetrates into cracks, expands and then dissolves the material. All create countless child caves, forming columns, tunnels, stone faces with curved lines, turning the lower part of the giant marble into a beautiful maze.
2. Crystal Cave, Iceland
Ice caves are 'temporary' caves that appear in glaciers. Belonging to the glacier Svinafellsjokull, Iceland, Crystal Cave is the result of the process of penetrating rainwater on the surface of the glacier into crevices and paving the way for flows to flow.
The sediment particles in the water together with the particulate matter carried by the wind into the cave settle and freeze to form the floor. The special structure of the ice caps absorbs most of the light colors, except for the blue color, which makes the cave a charming turquoise color.
However, caves move frequently along with the flow of glaciers and can collapse at any time. The safest time for visitors to have the opportunity to enjoy the 'aquarium' is the winter, when the temperature drops very low, ensuring the ceiling as well as the cave floor.
3. Firefly caves, New Zealand
Unlike other caves, Waitomo Glowworm attracts visitors thanks to the large number of fireflies living here. Fireflies with the scientific name Arachnocampa luminosa, when luminescent, will produce special green and blue light, only in New Zealand.
The reason for the glowing larvae larvae is to attract the attention of the prey, the small bad animals that fly to are turned into meals immediately. The actual light emitted from larval waste, is 'evaporated' through a complex chain of chemical reactions involving luciferase, adenosine triphosphate . in the digestive tract.
When larvae become pupae at the end, they hang themselves from the ceiling of the cave, forming chains that look like decorative wires. At this time, they will glow continuously. In order to attract mates, the fireflies will be even more brilliant.
The impromptu combination of the spectacular beauty of natural limestone caves and endemic fireflies has created a masterpiece that has a strong appeal to visitors around the world. Sitting on a boat in a cave in the middle of a sparkling 'star' space makes us excited with the feeling of 'cosmic travel'.
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