Ruby Falls in Lookout Mountain
Ruby Falls is a
145-foot high underground waterfall located within Lookout Mountain, near
Chattanooga, Tennessee in the United States. It is one Most Incredible Cave Waterfalls on Earth.
The cave which
houses Ruby Falls was formed with the formation of Lookout Mountain. About 200
to 240 million years ago (in the Carboniferous period, at the end of the Paleozoic era) the eastern Tennessee area was covered with a shallow sea, the sediments of
which eventually formed limestone rock. About 200 million years ago, this area
was uplifted and subsequent erosion has created the current topography. The
limestone in which the cave is formed is still relatively horizontal, just as
it was deposited when it was below sea level. The Lookout Mountain Caverns,
which includes Ruby Falls Cave, is a limestone cave. These caves occur when
slightly acidic groundwater enters subterranean streams and eats away at the
relatively soluble limestone, causing narrow cracks to widen into passages and
caves in a process called chemical weathering. The stream which makes up the
Falls entered the cave sometime after its formation.
Ruby Falls Cave
features many of the more well-known types of cave formations (or speleothems) including
stalactites and stalagmites, columns, drapery, and flow stone.
The Falls are
located at the end of the main passage of Ruby Falls Cave, in a large vertical
shaft. The stream, 1120 feet underground, is fed both by rainwater and natural
springs. It collects in a pool in the cave floor and then continues through the
mountain until finally joining the Tennessee River at the base of Lookout
Mountain.
In 1905 the natural entrance to Lookout
Mountain Cave was closed during the construction of a railway tunnel. In the
1920's a chemist and cave enthusiast named Leo Lambert thought that he could
re-open the cave as a tourist attraction, and formed a company to do so. He
planned to make an opening further up the mountain than the original opening
and transport tourists to the cave via an elevator. For this purpose, his
company purchased land on the side of Lookout Mountain above Lookout Mountain
Cave and in 1928 began to drill through the limestone. In doing so, they
discovered a small passageway about 18 inches high and four feet wide.
Exploring this opening, Lambert discovered the formerly hidden Ruby Falls Cave
and its waterfall. On his next trip to visit the cave, Lambert took his wife
Ruby, and told her that he would name the falls after her.
In 1954, the
pathway around the basin was cut in order to allow tourists a better view of
the falls. This began the tour-related quip regarding not drinking the falls'
water. Though pure and thus safe to drink, it has large concentrations of
magnesium from the strata of the mountain, which makes it a natural laxative.
In 1975, the
secondary exit from the falls to the base of the mountain was cut. This was to
comply with recreation regulations in Tennessee. The secondary exit is used in
the event that the main shaft elevator fails.
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