DIENGJRI, Lumshnong (Krem)
25.178500,92.380700
Description
A relatively small cave entrance faces north and is obstructed by boulders, gives access to a cave passage which descends some 50 m on foot 12 m vertically down and intersects a perennially active stream cave passage with rimstone dams. The upstream branch drains a stream of water from a too tight constriction in the northernmost corner of the known part of the cave to the downstream branch where the stream cave passage continues beyond a rimstone pool (more than 10 m wide and 20 m long) as an about 5 m wide and 0.3 m low unexplored and wet crawl. About halfway up the upstream enters a tributary relic cave passage (abandoned by flowing water) which invites visitors to ascend towards northwest and past a daylight window to sand-plugged continuations near the surface (note 1). ETYMOLOGY: No autochthonous, indigenous or locally known name has been identified for what was initially called Krem Jri (Scherzer H 2015.02.12 Mss: Kremjri) or Rubber Cave (Caoutchouc Cave) but later Krem Dieng Ji (Scherzer, H 2015.04.01 Mss -Tagebuch- Mi 14.01.2015, vormittags) or Rubber Tree Cave due to a rubber tree which stood in January 2015 above the cave entrance (note 2). SETTING: In the base of a depression (unidentified shape, unspecified dimensions) on a slope falling with an unidentified orientation (note 3). SITUATION: At one point (note 4) on a route from a starting point in the village of Lumshnong to the plant and school of the Star Cement works (note 5). CAVE POTENTIAL -- prospects: The surveyed and mapped part of the known cave passage continues unexplored (note 6). A nice surprise may wait in the downstream branch where a non-aquaphobic cave explorer would probably soon achieve success by crossing over the crown of a water pool with 30 cm of airspace (note 7). CAVE LIFE: Franz Lindenmayr noticed on 14th January 2015 in the entrance area of Krem Diengjri, Lumshnong, not only -several geckos- (illustrated by a photograph showing a reptile without adhesive pads on the feet, tht is to say a lizard) but also and -according to locals a poisonous spider- (Lindenmayr, F 2015.04.29 Mss: Anmerkungen …) turned -pseudoscorpion- (Lindenmayr, F 2015 s.a. Mss Liat Hati: cave1_04.JPG) and illustrated by a photograph showing the defunct chitinous exoskeleton of a pre-adult male Heteropoda spider.i (Scherzer, H 2015.04.01 Mss -Tagebuch- Mi 14.01.2015, vormittags) or Rubber Tree Cave due to a rubber tree which stood in January 2015 above the cave entrance (note 2). SETTING: In the base of a depression (unidentified shape, unspecified dimensions) on a slope falling with an unidentified orientation (note 3). SITUATION: At one point (note 4) on a route from a starting point in the village of Lumshnong to the plant and school of the Star Cement works (note 5). CAVE POTENTIAL -- prospects: The surveyed and mapped part of the known cave passage continues unexplored (note 6). A nice surprise may wait in the downstream branch where a non-aquaphobic cave explorer would probably soon achieve success by crossing over the crown of a water pool with 30 cm of airspace (note 7). CAVE LIFE: Franz Lindenmayr noticed on 14th January 2015 in the entrance area of Krem Diengjri, Lumshnong, not only -several geckos- (illustrated by a photograph showing a reptile without adhesive pads on the feet, thi (Scherzer, H 2015.04.01 Mss -Tagebuch- Mi 14.01.2015, vormittags) or Rubber Tree Cave due to a rubber tree which stood in January 2015 above the cave entrance (note 2). SETTING: In the base of a depression (unidentified shape, unspecified dimensions) on a slope falling with an unidentified orientation (note 3). SITUATION: At one point (note 4) on a route from a starting point in the village of Lumshnong to the plant and school of the Star Cement works (note 5). CAVE POTENTIAL -- prospects: The surveyed and mapped part of the known cave passage continues unexplored (note 6). A nice surprise may wait in the downstream branch where a non-aquaphobic cave explorer would probably soon achieve success by crossing over the crown of a water pool with 30 cm of airspace (note 7). CAVE LIFE: Franz Lindenmayr noticed on 14th January 2015 in the entrance area of Krem Diengjri, Lumshnong, not only -several geckos- (illustrated by a photograph showing a reptile without adhesive pads on the feet, tht is to say a lizard) but also and -according to locals a poisonous spider- (Lindenmayr, F 2015.04.29 Mss: Anmerkungen …) turned -pseudoscorpion- (Lindenmayr, F 2015 s.a. Mss Liat Hati: cave1_04.JPG) and illustrated by a photograph showing the defunct chitinous exoskeleton of a pre-adult male Heteropoda spider.
Documents
Bibliography 06/01/2018History
EXPLORATION HISTORY: 2015.01.15: A youth from Lumshnong, Forget-Me-Not by name (no surname mentioned), guided Neville Sootinck, Franz Lindenmayr, and Harald 'Harry' Scherzer into the rubber tree cave Krem Diengjri. Part of the accessible cave passage (survey length 211 m) was instantly explored (note 8) and mapped (Scherzer 2015.04.01 Mss 'Tagebuch' Mi 14.01.2015, vormittags; Lindenmayr 2015.04.29 Mss: Anmerkungen und Ergänzungen).