Longest underground river found

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MichiganDiver

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Longest underground river found

Cave divers in Mexico's Yucatan peninsula have discovered what may be the world's longest underground river, connecting two cave systems with a waterway at least 95 miles long.

A group of foreign divers exploring the area near the Caribbean beach resort of Playa del Carmen have yet to name the stretch, but believe it could be connected to two other major systems, adding more than 125 miles to its length.

"It's a bit of the Star Trek syndrome: the thrill of exploration, to go where no one has gone before," said diver Steve Bogaerts, who helped find the underground river.

Prior to the discovery, the Palawan underground river in the Philippines and Vietnam's Son Trach River vied for the record as the world's longest.

The area in southeast Mexico is home to tourist resorts Cancun and Cozumel, as well as Mayan ruins Chichen Itza and Tulum. It sits on a Swiss-cheese subsoil of limestone dotted with deep wells that are entrances to tunnels that have fascinated divers for decades.

The local tourism board said 24,000 visitors went diving in the caves last year.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070302/sc_nm/mexico_river_dc_1
 
How do you explore an underground river that is tens or hundreds of miles long? I can't imagine.
 
One section at a time. When you get on route 1 in Key West you are not stuck on it until you get to Maine. That is not to say that one section is always small. I think they have gone in as far as 22,000 -23,000 feet.They find new entrances to the systems all the time.Also all the miles are not in a straight line. They are adding the distances of all the branches.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

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