
Rapid Stalactites?
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First published in: Those beautiful stone ‘icicles’ you see hanging from
the ceiling of limestone caves are called stalactites (they ‘stay Although these fantastic features are commonly thought
to represent perhaps tens of thousands of years or more of groundwater
action,1 there is much evidence that they can form rapidly
under certain conditions. For example, Sequoyah Caverns, south of
Chattanooga at Valley Head, Alabama, has fast-growing formations.
Director of the caverns, Clark Byers, cemented a clear plastic panel in
front of some stalactites in April, 1977, to prevent tourists from
breaking them off. In less than 10 years the stalactites grew about 25
centimetres (10 inches or one inch per year). On the ceiling of the
cave, animal tracks can be seen, and there are fossils of many marine
creatures — plus a bird fossil which looks like a chicken. In an
interview in 1985, cavern director Byers made no secret of the fact that
he believes these fossils are a result of Noah’s Flood. So how fast can stalactites and stalagmites form? Bat CaveIn October 1953, National Geographic published a
photo of a bat that had fallen on a stalagmite in the famous Carlsbad
Caverns, New Mexico, and had been cemented on to it. The stalagmite had
grown so fast it was able to preserve the bat before the creature had
time to decompose.2 Stalactites many centimetres long are sometimes seen
under modern-day bridges and in tunnels. Some stalactites have formed
quickly in a tunnel in Raccoon Mountain, just west of Chattanooga,
Tennessee. The tunnel was blasted through the mountain’s limestone
rock to build a power plant in 1977. Water from the plant’s
pump-turbines dissolves the limestone, and stalactites form rapidly. At Australia’s Jenolan Caves in New South Wales, a lemonade bottle was placed below a continually active stalactite in the ‘Temple of Baal’ in 1954. In the following 33 years a coating of calcite about three millimetres thick has formed on the bottle. The same amount of deposit has formed since development in 1932 of the Ribbon Cave in the jenolan system. At this time pathways were cut through areas of flowstone. Water flowing down the sides of these cuttings over the past 55 years has built up the current deposit. A photograph taken in February, 1968, shows a curtain of
stalactites growing from the foundation ceiling beneath the Lincoln
Memorial in Washington DC. Some of the stalactites had grown to five
feet long (a metre and a half) in the 45 years since the memorial was
built in 1923.3 At jenolan Caves and many other places there are examples of stalactites and stalagmites developing from man-made structures. Like the Lincoln Memorial, the jenolan structures contain cement-mortar which is highly permeable, allowing these formations to develop rapidly. The resultant formation is quite powdery and brittle however. Slow Growth?
Stalactites can, and do, grow quickly. A talking point
at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is the fact that
stalactites are growing on the cement wall steps between the
university’s Anderson Hall and Gladfelter Hall. Right below the
stalactites, some stalagmites are forming. Although only several
centimetres high, they have all formed since the concrete stairway of
Gladfelter Hall was built in May, 1973. There are a number of bridges in Philadelphia which have
stalactites growing on them. Some are more than a foot long (30 cm), but
many smaller examples have also formed. One bridge was built in 1931 by
the City of Philadelphia and Pennsylvania Railroad, so all these
formations are less than 56 years old. Formations in the hot water springs in Wyoming’s Yellowstone National Park grow about 2.5 cm (one inch) per year. And there are many examples of rainwater tanks in country areas of Australia that have stalactites growing on them. ConclusionBecause of the evidence for fast-growing stalactites now becoming available, we can safely conclude that the world’s beautiful limestone cave formations may not have needed countless thousands of years to form. These spectacular formations could have formed quite rapidly in just a few thousand years—a time framework consistent with the view that they were formed during the closing stages of, and after, the worldwide Flood of Noah’s time. References
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