WAH BSEIÑ 1 (Krem)
25.429900,92.623000
Description
In addition to two informal cave entrances, which ARBENZ, T (2012: 231 cave plan) disguises as daylight (Krem Bsein 1d) and daylight in roof (Krem Bsein 1e), there are three official cave entrances (Krem Bsein 1, 1b, and 1c) which give access to a true tunnel cave, which represents the hydrographically subsequent but sportsmen's-wise disjunct downstream continuation of Krem –>Bsein 2. The known part of the cave consists of two seasonal sinks which drain a perennial stream cave (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…) to a seasonal spring and contained on 14th February 2011 not only a sandy, cobbled floor with occasional pools of water but also seasonally dry relic [secondary calcite] formations and [a relatively] large formation canopy sticking out from the cave wall. Parts of the stream has dry shelves and water in a trench (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…). ETYMOLOGY: No autochthonous, indigenous or locally known name ha been identified for this Cave [on the] Snake Stream (in Khasi: Krem Wah Bsein), which somebody reduced to a Snake Cave as if it the cave itself were associated, which it is not, with a snake or two when actually it is the stream after which the cave is called. Among the three or six known cave entrances (note 1) of the cave on the Wah Bsein is a south-east-facing, triangular-shaped and stooping-sized cave entrance (1.5 m high, unidentified width). This was understood to represent a case of another [cave] entrance which lies below a relatively large boulder of unidentified size and at an estimated distance of 30 m (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday) up to the left in an unidentified direction over [relatively] large boulders (i.e. Krem –>Bsein, Sah Ser 1b) and gives access to the orographical head of the upstream section (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…). SITUATION: All of the three (or four? recorded cave entrances of two known caves on the Wah Bsein (Snake Stream) lie on the eastern flank of a meander spur, which, embraced by the orographically right bank of the Kopili River, lies at a linear distance of about 3 km approximately east from the village of Kseh (St. Joseph church near 25°25’24.0”N: 92°35’32.9”E: circa 880 m) and in an area that had been reached after a forty minutes' walk through sunny meadows (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday) because, as Bailey, N. (2011.02.14 Mss: Krem Bsein 1.doc) clearly explains, the walk from the Kopili to the cave [again on the Kopili] takes about 40 mins (note 2). The first cave entrance to the first Krem Wah Bsein lies at an estimated distance of 30 m in an unidentified direction from an unidentified cave entrance, which can be deduced from the statement relating to two cave entrances close to each other, about 30 metres apart (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 unated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday) and is, perhaps, identical with the likewise unidentified another entrance up to the left over large boulders (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…), which may be the same as the cave entrance to Krem –>Wah Bsein 2 (note 3). Unidentified remains not only a) the unspecified spacial relation of the cave entrance to Krem Wah Bsein 1 to the streambed and watercourse of the Wah Bsein but alsob) the unspecified spatial relation to the unpositioned cave entrance and spring (i.e. Krem –>Wah Bsein 1b) or resurgence (note 4) which had been identified as an exit [sic!] at the Kopili River (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…). APPROACH: To reach the cave entrances on the Wah Bsein from the village of Kseh (St. Joseph church near 25°25’24.0”N: 92°35’32.9”E: circa 880 m), get yourself about 1.5 km in a direct line transported to a jetty (25°25'49.1”N: 92°36'15.1”E: 717 m), which lie on the orographically left (locally western) bank of the Kopili River (26°15'N: 92°10'E) and proceed being transported, now by boat (ask one of the u briew lieng, in short: u 'riewlieng; a boatman), across the river for the opposite, orographically right (locally eastern) bank. Here, however, you have to … proceed [for a walking distance of 40 minutes] on a footpath east to [an unspecified, so-called] the farm [at an unidentified GPS position]. Continue east over a rise and downhill into a depression (clearing work in 2011). The depression leads to a (dry) stream bed. Following the river for a short distance (upstream) roughly east a [cave] entrance of stooping size is found in [an unspecified] the gully. The walk from the Kopili to the cave takes about 40 mins (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…) and can be covered in the course of a forty minute’s walk through sunny meadows (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14thFebruary 2011, Monday). CAVE DESCRIPTION 2011a: At a surveyed distance of 238 m from the cave entrance, a 6 m-drop down intersects a streamcave passage. A few metres downstream, there was a maze, and another passage to the left going to the surface (Nicola Bayley after Phrang Kupar -Teddy- Mawlong in: anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday)CAVE DESCRIPTION 2011b: The cave starts off with a w3m x h3m passage with a [relatively] small stream [draining into an unidentified direction]. The passage is meandering and bears relic stalactite- and stalagmite formations. There are several holes to daylight in the roof. The cave closes down [sic! qua: leads to] to a 6 m drop into a [relatively] smaller wet passage. This was followed-on to an exit [sic! qua: the second known cave entrance, allegedly] at the Kopili River [sic!] (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…) but, more likely, above the Wah Bsein. CAVE POTENIAL: The known parts of the cave were interpreted as Terminated exits to the Kopili River (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…).CULTURAL HISTORY: None known (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…). CAVE LIFE: Nicola Bailey (2011.02.14 Mss: Krem Bsein 1.doc) noticed on 14th February 2010 the presence of bats (small hypposideros), heteropoda spiders, rats, snails, small fish which some would interpret as Arachnida: Aranea: conf. Heteropodina (Sparassida), unspecified snails, relatively small and unspecified fish (Pisces) of unidentified size that were perhaps less than 5 m long, unidentified rodents (conf. Rodentia), and unspecified, relatively small Chiroptera (conf. Hipposideros) of unidentified size but probably with a wing-span smaller than 1.25 m (mere guesswork).February 2011, Monday). CAVE DESCRIPTION 2011a: At a surveyed distance of 238 m from the cave entrance, a 6 m-drop down intersects a streamcave passage. A few metres downstream, there was a maze, and another passage to the left going to the surface (Nicola Bayley after Phrang Kupar -Teddy- Mawlong in: anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday)CAVE DESCRIPTION 2011b: The cave starts off with a w3m x h3m passage with a [relatively] small stream [draining into an unidentified direction]. The passage is meandering and bears relic stalactite- and stalagmite formations. There are several holes to daylight in the roof. The cave closes down [sic! qua: leads to] to a 6 m drop into a [relatively] smaller wet passage. This was followed-on to an exit [sic! qua: the second known cave entrance, allegedly] at the Kopili River [sic!] (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…) but, more likely, above the Wah Bsein. CAVE POTENFebruary 2011, Monday). CAVE DESCRIPTION 2011a: At a surveyed distance of 238 m from the cave entrance, a 6 m-drop down intersects a streamcave passage. A few metres downstream, there was a maze, and another passage to the left going to the surface (Nicola Bayley after Phrang Kupar -Teddy- Mawlong in: anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday)CAVE DESCRIPTION 2011b: The cave starts off with a w3m x h3m passage with a [relatively] small stream [draining into an unidentified direction]. The passage is meandering and bears relic stalactite- and stalagmite formations. There are several holes to daylight in the roof. The cave closes down [sic! qua: leads to] to a 6 m drop into a [relatively] smaller wet passage. This was followed-on to an exit [sic! qua: the second known cave entrance, allegedly] at the Kopili River [sic!] (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…) but, more likely, above the Wah Bsein. CAVE POTENIAL: The known parts of the cave were interpreted as Terminated exits to the Kopili River (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…).CULTURAL HISTORY: None known (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1…). CAVE LIFE: Nicola Bailey (2011.02.14 Mss: Krem Bsein 1.doc) noticed on 14th February 2010 the presence of bats (small hypposideros), heteropoda spiders, rats, snails, small fish which some would interpret as Arachnida: Aranea: conf. Heteropodina (Sparassida), unspecified snails, relatively small and unspecified fish (Pisces) of unidentified size that were perhaps less than 5 m long, unidentified rodents (conf. Rodentia), and unspecified, relatively small Chiroptera (conf. Hipposideros) of unidentified size but probably with a wing-span smaller than 1.25 m (mere guesswork).
History
EXPLORATION HISTORY: 2011.02.14, trip 1: Mynlin Manar, in February 2011 the Kseh village headman, guided Brian D. Kharpran Daly, Cdr. Vijay Chhikara, Phrang Kupar “Teddy” Mawlong, Melquire Laitphlang and Nicola Bayley to the cave entrance to a first Krem Bsein where they commenced surveying selected tropograhical aspects and measured 238 m of distances (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1 / Krem Bsein (downstream) 14.2.2011). Nicky, Vijay, Brian, Teddy and Mel, led by the headman Mynlin Manar, went across the river Kopili into Assam. After a forty minute’s walk through sunny meadows, the team arrived at Wah Bsein where they found two cave entrances close to each other, about 30 metres apart. The downstream entrance (Krem Bsein 1) yielded about 238 metres, till a 6 m-drop was reached which needed some tackle. Teddy, however, descended the drop and explored further. There were two ways on, both with some water. A few metres downstream, there was a maze, and cave passage [which leads in an unidentified direction] to the left going to the surface … [above the banks of] the Kopili River. The upstream cave entrance (Krem Bsein 2) yielded 255 metres of survey length, initially cave passage of stooping height to eventually emerge into a dry, wide and high passageway, where, in a bypass at a high level bypass, a lot of animal droppings (porcupine, confirmed by Manuel) was found and photographed. No further survey was done because the battery of the DistoX ran out (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 14th February 2011, Monday). According to Anonymous (2011.03.27 table 2011 Logbook.xls), however, it was only on 15/02/2011: NB, BKD, VC, ML, TM: Krem Bsein 1 (238 m) surveyed up to 6 m drop in the main passage ¬ Krem Bsein 2 (255 m) surveyed but continues 1st into a narrow passage, 2nd a highlevel oxbow with two cave passages. 2011.02.15, trip 2: Cdr. Vijay Chhikara, Brian D. Kharpran Daly, Phrang Kupar “Teddy” Mawlog, Melquire Laitphlang and Henry B. Dawson continued surveying and succeeded in measuring selected topographical aspects of another 77 m (Arbenz, T 2011.03.27 Mss ”Nicola Bayley 2011.02.21” Krem Bsein 1 / Krem Bsein (downstream) 14.2.2011). Brian, Henry, Vijay, Teddy and Mel were again led across the Kopili by Mynlin … They then surveyed on in Krem Bsein 2, starting at the last survey station of the previous day. After a couple of legs the DistoX conked out and precious time was lost. Henry fiddled with the DistoX and got it functional for measuring the length but not the direction and inclination. Survey was then carried on using the Suunto instruments till 4.15 PM and 210 m were logged. The team had to stop and retreat for the 40-minute’s walk to the Kopili to cross back to camp in time. The cave is still ongoing. A lot of porcupine dung strewn along the passage was observed and photographed (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: Tuesday, 15th February 211). 2011.02.17, trip 3: It rained quite a bit during the night and the day started off with a rather cloudy morning, which cleared around 8am. Rain started again around 4pm and persisted until about 7pm. … Thomas, Peter and Brian left Nicky, Vijay, Manuel and Oana who were on their way to Krem Bsein … where Cdr. Vijay Chhikara and Nicola Bayley attempted identifying some of the obvious survey blunders … as the loops were not closing. The resurvey of the main passage revealed no error. The problem was eventually found in the magnetic compass readings of 15 February, which were likely caused by the lamp on the compass. Another error was an incorrect numbering in the number 5 series. The two had lunch with Oana [Oana Chachula] and Manuel [Manuel Ruedi] and Oana used us for photos and a comedy video in the entrance to Bsein 1. The team returned to camp almost dry but they got caught on the wrong bank of the Kopili by the rain. Nicky was a little concerned when Vijay had to paddle her acrss the river in a thunderstorm as, despite being a naval officer, he had very nearly capsized the boat yesterday. They got across safely, albeit backwards (anonymous Arbenz, T et al. 2011.03.27 undated Mss: 2011 Diary.doc: 17th February 2011, Thursday). According to Anonymous (2011.03.27 table 2011 Logbook.xls) 17/02/2011: VC, NB: Krem Bsein 1 & 2 (688.8 m) resurveyed section done with traditional instruments, new passages surveyed.
Caves nearby
Distance (km) | Name | Length (m) | Depth (m) |
---|---|---|---|
0.0 | WAH BSEIÑ 1b (Krem) | ||
0.0 | WAH BSEIÑ 2 (Krem) | ||
0.2 | WAH BSEIÑ 1d (Krem) | ||
0.2 | WAH BSEIÑ 1e (Krem) | ||
0.2 | WAH BSEIÑ 1c (Krem) | ||
0.6 | KHLAW SONG (Krem) | ||
0.8 | UM U SIAR 3 (Krem) | ||
1.0 | UM U SIAR 4 (Krem) | ||
1.0 | Um u Siar 2 (Krem) |