Ursa Minor Cave is part of Sequoia National Park, a naturally formed system of caves in California's Sierra Nevada mountains. The cave was discovered in August 2006 by four professional cave explorers from the Cave Research Foundation who found a grapefruit-sized hole on a cliff face in the Sierra Nevada mountains. After widening the hole to allow for human entry, the explorers discovered one of the most spectacular caves in the western U.S. The cave has since been named Ursa Minor, because of the large bear skeleton found in the cave.
The cave was featured in the September 2007 issue of the National Geographic magazine and has attracted many scientists and researchers interested in finding new species of troglobites, organisms that live in the complete darkness afforded by caves. Similar caves such as the Kaweah cave and Lost Soldiers cave have yielded over twenty new species of these exotic and rare species, which are sometimes limited to only a single pool of water or room of a cave.
Famous quotes containing the word minor:
“If, for instance, they have heard something from the postman, they attribute it to a semi-official statement; if they have fallen into conversation with a stranger at a bar, they can conscientiously describe him as a source that has hitherto proved unimpeachable. It is only when the journalist is reporting a whim of his own, and one to which he attaches minor importance, that he defines it as the opinion of well-informed circles.”
—Evelyn Waugh (19031966)