Online: | |
Visits: | |
Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
Caves are more than the sites of mines and ancient hieroglyphs, the burial places of giants, and homes for bats. They can also be haunted. And, why not? In desperate times, caves were utilized for sanctuary and sometimes standoffs and, given the geology, they seem like ideal vessels in a feng shui sort of way, to retain and hold a kind of amplified haunting that is held captive in a cul-du-sac formation. I am utterly fascinated with the haunted cave phenomena. I cannot think of a better spirit vessel.
Let's have a look at some more infamous haunted caves….
There are vague reports of sounds, giggling, talking, laughter and more within the cave, as well as belief that the Bell Witch monitors the occupants or a woman is seen sometimes within the caverns. There has been a lot of hype around this site. There could be some genuine haunting going on, but the source of the haunting may not be a supposed Bell Witch, but something perhaps more ancient, as the robbed grave might provide.
Now, this may be a “haunted cave” you are more likely to visit – the infamous “Haunted Cave” in Lewisburg, Ohio; a popular attraction!
Here's a cave movie to put you in the mood -
Other awesome cave-themed movies:
And then, there's always the world's largest cave in Vietnam - At more than 200m high, 150m wide and 5km long, the Hang Son Doong cave in Vietnam is so big it has its own river, jungle and climate.
What about the creatures you might encounter? There are some very unusually adapted critters crawling and scampering around the caves -
Spirit Cave Mummy – the oldest in the US, found in Nevada.
The Spirit Cave mummy is part of an ongoing dispute between the Paiutes who say it is their ancestor (although the find is 9000 years old, way before they came to those lands and bears no resemblance to their appearance or technology). If there is some justice, a DNA survey will be done – as they have already dated it and further analysis of hair or tooth or other material is of little consequence. The fact is, once this is proven to be of the First Migration to the Americas, we will have to rethink what we consider Native, as most anthropologists recognize three migrations to this continent.
The same could be said for the finds in Lovelock Cave which do not resemble in looks or technology what the local tribes can attribute to their ancestors. Even the Natives in Wisconsin admitted to another race of people being here when their people arrived, that race being the one that did the mining of copper there very long ago.
What about horrifying things that occurred in caves?
This Virginia cave has a lot of local legends including a farmer who killed a tinker and threw him into the hole, a couple who couldn't marry, so they drove a cart into the hole, a man in a caving club whose rope broke, sending him falling to his death. Since then, dozens of people have gotten trapped, but no more deaths. All in all, it's a good idea to avoid this cave nicknaked “Murder Hole.”
Discovered in 1821 in Texas, it was a crazy sinkhole, but nothing special until the Civil War Era when Unionist sympathizers were thrown down it by Confederates. The bones of 17 people were found. In 1951, with gas masks (poisonous gas below), men descended into it to look around. A commemorative plaque was left behind for those who died there.
This cave in the Niagara Gorge in New York has had a reputation way back starting with the Iroquois. They believed there to be a demonic serpent in the cave called “Evil One.” People were said to not come out of the cave and, if they did, their hair was white.
It doesn't end there. In 1763, the Seneca ambushed an English wagon train and threw the bodies into the hole. Many dozens were killed there.
This cave in Cambodia is referred to as the “Killing Cave.” The Khmer Rouge in the 1970s used it as a torturing and killing place. The bones, clothing, electrical devices for torture are still there on display.
Skeleton Cave, Arizona: Site of a horrible massacre of Native Americans.
Hellfire Caves, UK: A curious and fabled site of potential secret rituals.
Lovelock Cave, Nevada: Believed site of ancient red-haired giants massacre
I hope this has gotten you interested in learning more about what goes on in caves – in the past, the present, and in caves we have yet to find with treasures of science and history!