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Caves are so important to their inhabitants and surrounding ecosystems, both above and below ground, that they are protected by state and federal laws. Caves form in Virginia primarily in the limestone regions of the Appalachian mountains. Water combined with carbonic acid can enter the limestone through cracks and slowly eat away at the rock. Eventually large rooms, passages and drip stone formations can form over thousands of years.
In addition to displaying cave formations, the museum exhibits some common cave creatures that live part of their lives in caves, such as pack rats, long-tailed salamanders and cave crickets and those animals, called troglobites, that spend their entire lives inside caves. |