Waterfall in a rock cave in Scotland
Smoo Cave (Scotland) is divided into 3 parts and the most attractive part is the 3rd cave with beautiful waterfall hidden among the green and gray limestone floors.
Smoo Cave (Scotland) is divided into 3 parts and the most attractive part is the 3rd cave with beautiful waterfall hidden among the green and gray limestone floors.
Cave waterfalls are a testament to the continuous erosion in the Early Stone Age to create extraordinary natural architectures. Often the water flow will flow continuously on the same stone surface for hundreds of years until it corrodes the penetration layer and allows the water to flow through to form a waterfall.
Another theory is that the stone surface has a gap and the stream just flows. In addition, corrosion at Smoo Cave is a combination of seawater flow and freshwater continental crevices crept between limestone floors. Although very popular in games or virtual worlds, the waterfall in the cave is very rare in real life.
Here are some pictures of Smoo cave:
- The oldest rock art in Australia
- 10 most majestic waterfalls on the planet
- Waterfalls are the most intense in Europe
- The largest waterfall ever existed on Earth
- Cam Ly Waterfall smells bad
- Interesting: The waterfall has water ... flowing up and down the sky
- 13 phenomena of miraculous light make you not believe your eyes
- Unique turnaround waterfall in Western Australia
- Beautiful scenes come to
- 'Paradise Falls' appeared in midair
Spectacular artificial waterfall in the heart of a city in China 150m high waterfall disappears due to the death pit Deciphering the blood waterfall 'mystery in Antarctica Use natural waterfalls to produce ice Beautiful waterfalls in the world The mystery of the waterfall flowing in Unique turnaround waterfall in Western Australia The 'alien' world is underground