Jade-green lake inside strange cave in America

Inside a strange complex cave in Carlsbad Caverns National Park, the US is a turquoise lake located at a depth of more than 210 meters below the ground .

The new explorers discovered a strange network of unexplored cave deep in the Carlsbad Caverns National Park , New Mexico, USA.

Picture 1 of Jade-green lake inside strange cave in America
The emerald-green lake is usually hidden deep in the cave.

Remarkably, an extraordinary emerald-green lake is hidden deep in the cave and lies more than 210 meters above the ground. Water in the lake is really clear and can be formed by rainwater since ancient times.

According to the DS, staff at Carlsbad Caverns National Park in New Mexico described the lake as a "wonderful spectacle".

Expedition discovered the lake when exploring caves with complex structures filled with wax-like stalactites. The lake is opaque green completely isolated at a depth of more than 210 meters below the ground and has never been touched by anyone.

Picture 2 of Jade-green lake inside strange cave in America
Road to the inside of the strange cave in America.

Explorer Carlsbad Caverns has announced the discovery found in the Lechuguilla cave system is completely pristine.

Geologist Max Wisshak, who led the expedition, wrote: "The lake looks like a thumb, possibly a place where many bacteria operate without human presence."

Picture 3 of Jade-green lake inside strange cave in America
Long stalactites inside complex caves in Carlsbad Caverns National Park, USA.

Max Wisshak led the expedition in October 2019, at the same time as a team of experts exploring outside the waters dubbed the "liquid sky" - the place discovered in 1993.

Max Wisshak said: "The goal of the expedition was long gone. We have now taken special precautions to ensure that no contaminants fall into the lake. The influence of the outside is very important scientifically because there are almost no pollutants, the microorganisms that can live in that lake are definitely things that only belong here. "

Rodney Horrocks, Director of Cultural and Natural Resources at Carlsbad Caverns National Park, is pleased to share with the media: "This lake has been isolated for hundreds of thousands of years and no one has ever discovered it."

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