Gruta do Natal

Gruta do Natal

A passage within the Gruta do Natal system
Location Terceira Island (Azores), Portugal
Coordinates 38°47′28″N 27°17′57″W / 38.79111°N 27.29917°W / 38.79111; -27.29917
Length 697 metres (2,287 ft)
Discovery 1838
Geology Lava tube, Basalt
Entrances 1
Access Tours are available in season

Gruta do Natal (Christmas Cave), also known as Galeria Negra or Gruta do Cavalo, is a cave system in municipality of Praia da Vitória, on the island of Terceira in Portuguese archipelago of the Azores.

History

The caves formation is unclear.[1] Its genesis can be explained by the ancient lava fields that developed from fissural vents, that flowed through the valley between the larger volcanic peaks.[1]

Initially known as the Galeria Negra (Black Gallery), was baptised as the Gruta do Cavalo following the first exploratory investigation, when the explorers discovered the remains of a horse, which may have fallen at the entrance of the cave.[1] Later, after 25 December 1969, with the assistance of the eastern patriarch, D. José Vieira Alvernaz, islanders began referring the cave as the Gruta do Natal.[1] It was on this date that they opened the cave to the public, with a simple access-way and rudimentary lighting. Traditionally, a Christmas mass is held at the site, but there have also been baptisms and at least one marriage on the site.[1]

The sites was the destination of various acts of vandalism, and today its access has bee conditional.[1]

The mountaineering group, Os Montanheiros, constructed a rustic house (typical of the hay-loft/barns) to support activities during the site's exploration.[1] The simple structure was also the centre of vandal attacks and criminal activities over its history, resulting in its degradation.[1] In 1989, the mountaineering group began a project to promote tourist activities at Gruta do Natal, with the construction of a new building, which was integrated into the surrounding landscape.[1] This building was sued to shelter an electric generator, to provide permanent lighting within the cave; protect the site from vandalism; and provide an interpretative centre for visitors to the site. The building includes wash-rooms, generator room, and an access-way and staircase to the Cave.[1] Inaugurated on 1 December 1998, the anniversary date of the mountaineering association, it was public open on 1 June 1999.[1]

The interior circuit was developed so that visitors would not follow the same trajectory coming and going along the route, while providing information about the histo-cultural traditions of this cave, in addition to the scientific and geological history.[1] It is a pedagogic meeting-point used by professors and teachers to present the history of the formative forces that occur in the archipelago of the Azores.[1] The site is open to the public from June to September, everyday, throughout the afternoons, with special openings coordinated through the Montanheiros organization by appointment.[1]

Geography

The Gruta do Natal is located near the Picos Gordos, within the Reserva Florestal Natural da Serra de Santa Bárbara e Mistérios Negros (Santa Bárbara and Mistérios Negros Natural Forest Reserve), an humanized area encircled by pasture-lands and forest of Azorean juniper.[1] With a privileged position, the site is located near a roadway and popular lake-front picnic area of Lagoa do Negro.[1] The roadway is also an access-way for tourist routes; it is being one of the few caves in the Azores that is visibly identifiable, visible from major thoroughfares and publicly signalled.[1] Of all the cave systems in the Azores, Gruta do Natal provides the best conditions for tourist exploration, along with the Algar do Carvão system.[1]

It is a lava tube of 697 metres (2,287 ft) length, with easy access, high ceiling and floor with slight slope.[1] The interior of the cave includes geological structures such as different examples of lava, estalcites and lateral protuberances.[1]

References

Notes
Sources
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 30, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.