Jewel Cave National Monument: 180 miles (so far) of underground adventure
Park ranger and tour guide Brad Yoder, right, guides visitors through Jewel Cave National Monument, located south of Custer, S.D.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Jewel Cave is the third-longest documented cave on Earth.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)So far, 180 miles of cave have been found, but experts think Jewel could extend as far as 5,000 miles.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Mapped routes are displayed at the Jewel Cave National Monument visitors center.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Examples of rock and mineral formations are on display at the visitors center.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Park ranger and tour guide Brad Yoder greets visitors before the group takes an elevator down to the cave.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Park ranger and tour guide Brad Yoder, center, escorts a group to the elevators that will bring the tour to the cave.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Park ranger and tour guide Brad Yoder brings visitors to the entrance of the cave via a 239-foot elevator ride.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Park ranger and tour guide Brad Yoder guides visitors through the cave.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Forty-two flights of stairs help to guide more than 70,000 annual visitors to the cave.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Visitors explore Jewel Cave’s vast network of tunnels.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Jewel Cave is a discovery in progress.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)The majority of Jewel Cave’s passages were formed about 65 million years ago.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Jewel Cave’s geologic features include stalagmites and stalactites, a variety of crystals and rare silver-colored globules called hydromagnesite balloons.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Park Ranger and tour guide Brad Yoder turns off all visible light before using a single flame to show how early visitors and explorers saw Jewel Cave.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)There are hidden gems throughout Jewel Cave.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)The incredibly winding and intricate layout of routes and openings have been formed by the slow movement of water seeping through sandstone on the surface.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)The wind and water create beautiful rock formations underground.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Two permanent camps have been established in the cave so that teams of explorers are able to work from the base camps, as it takes between seven and nine hours to reach the sites.
(Kristina Barker / For The Times)Just 30 miles from Jewel Cave, Wind Cave National Park features the sixth-longest documented cave on Earth, with 145 miles of passages. Above the cave, the park’s nearly 500 bison graze in the straw-colored grasslands.
(Mark Newman / Getty Images/Perspectives)