Nakilango Cave
-8.469639,38.822278
Location
Massive tree trunks are rammed into the entrance of Nakijango Cave, which is located at 8°28'10,7° S - 038°49'20,2" E - 320 m a.s.l.
Description
Passing the tree trunks one reaches an entrance chamber that continues straight ahead to the NW into narrow fissures with a small daylight hole. The maze of fissures connect to a meandering river passage that crosses on a lower level from E to W under the entrance chamber. To the E this passage is low and it is filled with nearly stagnant and muddy water and sumps after about 30 m in an area with bad air (supposedly carbon dioxide from rotten organic substances). To the W the river passage is well proportioned and leads a small rivulet to a waterfilled rift passage, which has Some sharp turns. Finally, the river passage widens into a chamber directed E-W and sumps at the SW end of this room. The cave has an overall length of 268 m and is most likely hydrologically connected with Likolongomba, Calcitic formations are absent. A small bat colony lives in Nakilango Cave. The cave fauna is rich due to the accumulation of wood and other organic substances inside the cave. Sheat-fish that survive the several month long dry season inside Nakilango Cave are abundant in the pools of the waterfilled section of the cave.
Caves nearby
Distance (km) | Name | Length (m) | Depth (m) |
---|---|---|---|
0.4 | Likolongomba | 93 | |
0.7 | Nawanja Cave | 13 | |
0.8 | Ngunde Cave | 681 | |
1.5 | Mampombo | 1250 | |
1.9 | Maji-Maji Cave | 259 | |
6.7 | Mtumbukiae Cave | 13 | |
6.7 | Miumbukiae Cave | 13 | 3 |
7.0 | Mpatawa | 1160 | |
7.8 | Kilindima | 36 |