Grotta del Cavallone
The Grotta del Cavallone, also known as the Grotta della Figlia di Jorio, is a cave located near Lama dei Peligni, in the province of Chieti, Abruzzo, Italy. It is open during the warmer months; an admission fee is charged.
Grotta del Cavallone (Cavallone Cave) | |
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Grotta della Figlia di Jorio[1] | |
Stalactites in Cavallone Cave | |
Location of the caves in Italy | |
Location | Lama dei Peligni and Taranta Peligna (CH, Abruzzo, Italy) |
Coordinates | 42°02′20″N 14°09′17″E |
Elevation | 1,300 m |
Discovery | 1704 |
Geology | Karst cave |
Entrances | 1 |
Access | Public |
Show cave length | 1,000 m |
Website | Official website |
Overview
The cave lies within the mountains of the Majella National Park, and is accessed via cable car. The cave is 10–20 meters wide and nearly the same height throughout, with numerous speleothems including stalagmites, flowstone, and rimstone pools. It has electric lighting with rough paths, concrete steps, and iron bridges.
Gabriele D'Annunzio employed the cave in the first act of his tragedy "La figlia di Iorio".
Gallery
- Arrive station of cable car - Grotta del Cavallone
- Gate of the "Grotta del Cavallone"
gollark: Okay, fine, disengaging orbital antipiracy lasers.
gollark: Yes, which you indirectly pay for.
gollark: Piracy?! ENGAGE ORBITAL ANTI-PIRACY LASERS!
gollark: Observe, my cascading style sheets™.
gollark: You're *meant* to get a license key, and in any case your OEM is likely paying.
See also
References
- i.e. "Jorio daughter's cave"
External links
- (in Italian) Grotta del Cavallone official website
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