Green Grotto Caves

The Green Grotto Caves are show caves and a prominent tourist attraction on the north coast of Jamaica. Named for the green algae that cover its walls,[3] the structure of the cave is strikingly different from inland systems; the cave is a Flank Margin Cave (old mixing chambers at the edge of the fresh water lens with the sea water) with two well-defined levels apparently indicating two periods with differing sea-levels.[1] The innermost cavern contains a crystal-clear underground lake.[3]

Green Grotto Caves
LocationNorth coast of Jamaica
Coordinates18°25′16″N 77°06′50″W[1]
Depth12 metres (39 ft)[2]
Length1,525 metres (5,003 ft)[2]
EntrancesSeveral[1]

In addition to the publicly accessible sections of the cave there is also a section of "wild caves" with relatively undisturbed ecology.[1] Hydrologically, the cave system is connected with the adjacent coastal waters.[1]

History

At various times they have been known as the Runaway Bay Caves, Hopewell Caves, Cave Hall Caves, Discovery Bay Caves, Dry Harbour Caves, Rum Caves and Dairy Caves.

The first known inhabitants of the caves were Arawak Indians who left pottery fragments and adzes.[2] When Jamaica was a British Colony the caves were used as a hideaway by the Spanish who were being driven out by the British settlers.[2] The caves were also known to have been used by escaped slaves, hence the name Runaway Caves.[3] Between the two world wars they were used by smugglers running arms to Cuba,[2] while in the later years of the Second World War the Government of Jamaica used the entrance of the cave as a storeroom for rum in barrels.[2]

Natural history

The caves are home to nine of Jamaica's 21 species of bat including the Big-Eared Bat, the Mustache Bat, and the Jamaican Fruit-Eating Bat.[3] Numbers are quite high with most of the available roosting space used.[1] Guano is present in large amounts but few of the usual guano dwelling inverts have been recorded; the invasive American Roach is found.[1]

The brackish water in the lower levels is full of marine life including small barnacles and various unidentified small swimming creatures.[1]

Cultural references

The filming of the 1973 James Bond film Live and Let Die, used the caves for villain Doctor Kananga's underground base beneath a cemetery on the fictional island of San Monique. It is most memorable for being the location where Bond (played for the first time by Roger Moore) kills Kananga (played by Yaphet Kotto) by forcing him to swallow a bullet of compressed air, causing him to float up to the ceiling like a balloon and explode.[4]

Ian Fleming's original novel had the villain using the real-life Jamaican caves as part of his SMERSH-funding smuggling operation.

gollark: Oh yes, right, that.
gollark: *I* would give myself future-Wikipedia (the present one fits on a cheap modern USB stick, and obviously the future will have even better storage), all interesting future scientific papers ever, a summary of the big technological/social changes which happen, and whatever future technology trinkets are fairly small and robust.
gollark: Yes. Obviously I would give myself useful information from the future and maybe confuse them in more subtle ways.
gollark: This is perhaps among the most uninteresting possible uses for time travel.
gollark: Or voltage as Watt-seconds per Roentgen-kg.

See also

References

  1. Stewart, R S (2007-02-16). "Green Grotto Cave - Field Notes". Jamaican Caves Organisation. Retrieved 2004-03-29.
  2. "Grenn Grotto Caves". Yardie Tours. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  3. "The Green Grotto Caves". Jamaicans.co m. 2009-01-31. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  4. "Live and Let Die". IMDb.com.
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