Sunday, 21 December 2014

Bone bonanza: Chamber of secrets yields human remains

 28 November 2014 by Catherine Brahic - New Scientist - Issue No.1997

How 12 early humans ended up deep inside a South African cave is a mystery. Getting them out of it certainly wasn't easy

ALIA GURTOV was still in bed when she saw the job advert in her Facebook feed. "The catch is this," it read, "the person must be skinny and preferably small. They must not be claustrophobic, they must be fit, they should have some caving experience, climbing experience would be a bonus." She applied within an hour.

Gurtov wasn't the only one drawn to the post. Within minutes, it was being liked, re-liked, shared and blogged around the world. Elen Feuerriegel saw it on Tumblr. Marina Elliott received a link by email.
"OH. MY. GOD," wrote one blogger. "LOOK AT WHAT LEE BERGER JUST POSTED TWO MINUTES AGO GUYS." "What did they fiiiiiiiiiind?" wondered a commenter.

At this stage, Berger himself had little idea. The South African fossil hunter famed for his discoveries of early hominids was going on a few photographs. The pictures had been taken a few days earlier by two young cavers, deep inside the Rising Star cave system, 30 kilometres north-west of Johannesburg and 30 metres below ground. The cave is in an area dubbed the Cradle of Humankind because so many hominid fossils have been found there. The last big find was made by Berger in 2008: at nearby Malapa, he discovered two partial skeletons of a previously unknown species with a strange mix of apelike and human features – the 2-million-year-old Australopithecus sediba.

Now he was on the brink of another major discovery. The photos showed a jaw that Berger instantly recognised as belonging to some kind of early human – and there were more bones around it. That was enough to make Berger suspect this could be a big find, but what's been unearthed in this small chamber in the caves has surpassed even his wildest expectations. Back then, though, the immediate question was how on earth to excavate the bones properly in such an inaccessible location.

Set beneath the undulating veld of northern South Africa, the Rising Star cave system has been a playground for cavers for nearly half a century. Thick bush conceals the large opening to the cave. On 13 September last year the two cavers, Steven Tucker and Rick Hunter, made their way down into the maze of dark passages. The pair were hoping to find tunnels that no human had ever set foot in before.


                                          The Rising Star Cave System was certainly not your average office.                                                                                                                                                                                                                        
Beneath the Dragon's Back
Having crept up a narrow ridge known as the Dragon's Back, with 15-metre drops on either side, Hunter and Tucker arrived in a chamber thought to be a dead end. They had been here before, but on this particular day they found something new. Right at the back of the room, the pair came across a crack in the floor. Peering down, they discovered a narrow chute that appeared to lead into another chamber. "To me that's really exciting," says Tucker, "because you have no idea what you're going to find down there."

At around 20 centimetres wide, the chute is so narrow that Tucker had to point his toes just to get in. Undaunted, he began the descent. Falling down Alice in Wonderland-style was not likely: Tucker's body was jammed up against the rock in every direction. Inch by inch he wriggled deeper.

Tucker's gamble on his small frame and years of experience paid off. Twelve metres down the chute, he emerged through the roof of another chamber and climbed down to the floor. The room was barely 3 metres wide. Flowstones and stalactites dripped from the ceiling and walls, and shimmered in the beam of his head-torch. Looking up, he judged that the ascent would be harder than the descent but – fortunately – not impossible. A narrow passage leading out of the jewelled chamber and on to another was just wide enough to pass through, so he called out for Hunter to join him.

The first thing Tucker remembers seeing when they shuffled through into the next chamber was yet another passageway leading out of it. The bones came second. They were sticking out of the cave floor. "The first thing you think is [the bones] aren't something small like a bat," he recalls. "So you wonder, 'If I struggled that much to get in here, how did these get in?' That was probably the thing that made us look at them properly."

Berger had been asking caving clubs to get their members to look out for fossils. So when Tucker and Hunter spotted a jawbone with what looked like human teeth, they snapped a few pictures before moving on. "We had no idea how important that discovery was," recalls Tucker. "I'm not sure how many fossils we saw that first time, but when you think of other fossils like Lucy – these didn't look as impressive."

Three days later, the pair were in Berger's office at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. When he saw the pictures, his jaw dropped. "I immediately recognised that I was looking at a mandible, and that it was notHomo sapiens," Berger recalls. The jawbone alone would have been thrilling. We know so little about our ancestors that even a single bone can give up a host of secrets.

But it was the fact that there were more bones in the background that made Berger really excited. There might be at least part of a skeleton. "That meant getting those bones out was worth every effort," he says. "You've got to remember that we spend tremendous effort and good old-fashioned money trying to find just bits and pieces of these things. We might spend three months in the field and be very happy if we come back with a single mandible. That's how rare these objects are."

Before the week was out, Berger went to see the cave. He couldn't fit down the chute, so he sent his teenage son in with Hunter and Tucker. When Matthew saw the bones, his hands began to shake. It was minutes before he could steady them enough to take pictures. "Daddy," he said after shimmying back up, "it's beautiful."



Underground astronauts
Berger's Facebook appeal for particularly petite potential palaeoanthropologists went online just days later. "Dear Colleagues," it began, "we need perhaps three or four individuals with excellent excavation skills for a short term project that may kick off as early as November 1st 2013." It was 6 October.

A year on from Berger's post, the excitement is still fresh among the six women he recruited – including graduate students Gurtov, of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Feuerriegel, of the Australian National University in Canberra. Berger affectionately refers to them as "underground astronauts". In separate emails and conversations, with moments of intoxicated laughter and genuine passion, they all convey incredulous wonder at what happened in such a short period of time. People were interviewed over Skype, and invited to pack their bags and hop on planes. They flew in from around the world, still mostly clueless about the adventure ahead, thinking simply that it would be fun.

Barely eight weeks after Tucker and Hunter had shimmied down the chute, the expedition was on the ground. They set up camp during the first week of November. In a matter of days, 20 tents went up. Generators powered a collection of computers, lights and cameras, linked to the inner sanctum by a mess of cables. The plan was for the six recruits to retrieve as many bones as they could find, assisted by experienced cavers including Tucker and Hunter. Above ground, a team of somewhat larger senior palaeoanthropologists could watch and supervise everything that was happening beneath their feet, in real time.




                   Slimness was an essential requirement for retrieving the bones.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
Marina Elliott, a PhD student from Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada, was first into the chute. "From the top looking down, the rock looks like a narrow tunnel full of shark's teeth coming out at odd angles," she recalls. "Like you're descending into a jaw. It was kind of terrifying." At its narrowest, the chute pinches down to 18 centimetres, so narrow that Elliott had to turn her head to the side to get through.

She compares entering the inner chamber to accounts of Howard Carter opening Tutankhamun's tomb. "Someone behind him said 'What do you see?' And Carter whispered, 'Things, wondrous things'... It was breathtaking. Everywhere you turned, your headlamp fell on fossil material... the more you looked the more you found. And it just got crazier from there. Every day was one of those days where you just think, 'My god, is this real?'"

The six worked in shifts of four or five hours, picking the bones clean with toothpicks before carefully packing them into bubble wrap and Tupperware to begin the long ascent. It quickly became clear that the entire floor of the chamber was underlaid with bones, so they padded around barefoot to cause minimal damage. Lifting each fragment was like a delicate game of pick-up-sticks, says Becca Peixotto, a PhD student in anthropology at the American University in Washington DC. "The longer you looked, the more bones you saw. To the point that we'd think we had cleared a whole area, and then we'd sit there for a few minutes and see more fossils."

She recalls having to lift the first piece of bone out of the ground – it was the jaw spotted by the cavers – aware that it had not been moved for thousands of years, and that some of the world's biggest experts on prehumans were watching her every move over CCTV.

For Berger, finally seeing the bone for himself was a huge relief. Until that moment, he had not known for sure that the find justified a major expedition involving 60 people from around the world. That day, 10 November, made it all worth it: the jaw was indeed from a hominid.

The next day blew everyone's expectations away. A femur came up, and then another – and they were both right femurs. In the science tent, heads were shaking in disbelief. There was more than one individual down there. "This just doesn't happen," said Berger. Thousands of hominid fossils have been found but most consist of one or two bones, or the odd tooth. Finding more complete skeletons is extremely rare. Finding several skeletons is rarer still.

And there was more to come. Much more. Before long, the six women were sending a regular stream of Tupperware boxes up to the surface. Hundreds of fossils were carried out of the cave. The senior scientists had expected to have enough time between finds to start analysing the bones, but they could barely log them fast enough.

They ran out of boxes. Someone was sent to buy more. They ran out again. The project bought out the stock of every shop and warehouse that sold Tupperware in the area. The nearby site of Sterkfontein has produced only about 500 hominid fossils after 65 years of excavation. In three weeks, the Rising Star team removed 1200 fossils. Based on the teeth they found, says team member John Hawks of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, there are more than 12 individuals.

It is a mystery how the bones ended up where they did. Tucker, who has explored the passages beyond the bone chamber, doesn't think there is another way in. He also thinks they have ruled out an accidental fall. Nor is there any sign that the individuals fell victim to predators who carried them in – there are no bite marks, and in any case, how would the predators get in? "I don't think anyone has any real idea of how they got there," says Tucker.

Bringing up the first piece of skull was one of the more memorable events during those extraordinary days. Wrapped in pink bubble wrap, nestled inside a cereal bowl and packed into Tupperware, it was passed from hand to hand up a human chain. Hunter lodged himself inside the chute and passed it from Elliott below to another caver above. All the way down the Dragon's Back, the team passed the precious parcel in near silence.

"I think for a lot of people, it was very emotional," says Elliott. "It's extraordinary to think of this animal, that this is an ancestor to all of us." Whether it is a direct ancestor or more distant branch of the human family remains unclear. Beyond the fact that they are definitely early hominids, the team will not say exactly what they have found ahead of the formal publication of their findings.


                          CCTV helped the team above ground guide the momentus work under way below.                                                                                                                                                                                                       
Bone bonanza
In the past, hominid fossils have often been hoarded by the researchers who found them. " Ardi", discovered in Ethiopa in 1994, was only unveiled in 2009, for instance. But we won't have to wait that long this time, as Berger's team is doing things very differently. Around 50 anthropologists were invited to a workshop in South Africa earlier this year. They were given free access to all the fossils – 1500 in total, including 300 unearthed by a second expedition in March – and invited to analyse the heck out of them. Their findings will be announced early next year.

And all the signs point to it being a big announcement. The sheer quantity of fossils is incredible, says team member Steven Churchill of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. And it's nowhere near over. Not only are there still bones in the original chamber, but in November 2013 Hunter and Tucker found more in a different part of the cave.

"At the end of the day," says Churchill, "we will know these hominins very well, and we will likely be able to say much about their biology and their place in the human evolutionary story."


"This article originally appeared in New Scientist, 28 November 2014. Reprinted with kind permission of New Scientist."
 
Catherine Brahic
is a reporter for New Scientist

Wednesday, 17 December 2014

West Driefontein Cave by Gerrie Pretorius

A few years have gone by since SEC last visited West Driefontein Cave.
This wasn’t because we didn’t want to go, but organising access to a cave next to a gold mine can be long process, especially when there are strikes and changes in ownership and personnel, but at last we managed to get access thanks to Pete Kenyon.


On the 9th of November 2014 we set off to visit this beast of a cave.
Unfortunately the action started even before we even reached the cave, as Irene’s car’s exhaust hooked on a railway track that we crossed, and was ripped right off.
Within no time the car was drifting on a giant cushion of air, that we pumped up with John’s Landy’s exhaust and we were took turns with a hacksaw blade to cut the exhaust in half to remove it.


Image: Terence Stewart


With the exhaust tucked away in Pete’s car, we did the last stretch to the cave with Irene’s Westrand Freeflow conversion.
The cave entrance greeted us with the ripe smell of dead dog, and our descent stared.


West Driefontein is a cave with a reputation, and until the start of 2013 it was still the deepest dry cave in South Africa. This cave is not forgiving to anyone with a fear of heights and the climbing starts right at the entrance.


After the first few climbs, we had another pitch where John rigged a ladder.


Image of the ladder pitch by Terence Stewart





I did not trust this ladder so Steven Tucker and I took the alternative route, which turned out to be slightly scary, not because of the climb down, but because of the climb around the ladder pitch.


We took a lunch break in the dining room, a massive chamber with a giant big flat slab that looks like a dining room table in the middle of room. The first glimpse of the size of this cave. This was also where I realised that my lunch was still in the car.


After a dozen more climbs, and a brief visit to the Orange Grove, we made it to our destination: Texas! The biggest cave chamber in South Africa. Texas is absolutely massive and only with cavers positioned on all the furthest corners of this cavity, do you truly get perspective of how big it really is. This was also the perfect place for John to test the worth of his 3500 lumen headlight.


After thrashing around a bit, we decided to go check out what was marked on the survey as “Alabaster fish” and  “the grave”. Alabaster fish must have been a joke or something as Steven returned from a dusty long crawl with nothing to show for it.

Image of "the grave" by Terence Stewart


But “the grave” payed off.  Although this is probably only the product of a bored caver, sitting around while the rest of the team surveyed Texas?

We also found an ancient “Groovy Orange” soda can, probably dating back to the 60’s or 70’s that had a stalagmites starting to form on it.


On the way out we were reminded again, why Dirk van Rooyen is not human. While the rest of us carefully climbed up the pitches, with the reassurance of the handline, Dirk looked like he was flying up the climbs.


Back on the surface a welcoming committee was waiting for us in the form of mine security armed with an R4 Rifle. He obviously didn't get the memo that we were caving there. Luckily this misunderstanding was cleared out without problem.


Thanks to Pete Kenyon for organising the trip.


And the cavers for the the day:
John and Selena Dickie
Steven Tucker
Terence Stewart
Gerrie Pretorius
Irene Kruger
Dirk van Rooyen
and mohawk Yoda, the cave formation.


An unforgettable trip!
Image of the cavers by Terence Stewart

 
Image of mohawk Yoda: Terence Stewart

Thursday, 11 December 2014

Armageddon - Gerrie's Bathole - 14 December

Hi everyone,

Gerrie's Bathole in Armageddon is a near vertical abseil of 50 meters after the initial entrance abseil. So far it has only been briefly explored once, back in March 2013, who knows what might be waiting to be discovered!

John Dickie is organizing a trip to the cave on Sunday the 14th of December to further explore and map this section. You will need to be at the entrance of the cave at 09:00.

With two long abseils to be done, those attending will need to be members of SEC and be SRT proficient.

If you are planning on attending or want more info contact John. Also let him know if you need any equipment.

Enjoy the trip,

Steven

Monday, 1 December 2014

Bank Sinkholes Trip by Gerrie Pretorius

On Sunday the 10th of August 2014, SEC went to check out some Sinkholes marked from Google Earth in the Bank area, in search of new caves.

The first sinkhole that we stopped at could be climbed down on one side without any rigging.

Unfortunately this Sinkhole didn’t lead to any new cave, but this was expected, very few sinkholes will actually have an open entrance into a cave system, especially in this area, where the dolomite is supposed to be far below the surface, although there is no shortage of sinkholes in the area.

After that we moved on to what we now call the “Moonscape”. The area has so many sinkholes in looks like the surface of the moon, expect we have sinkholes instead of craters. There are probably more than a hundred sinkholes here, and a small river stream running into the area, but not out on the other side.

On only the 3’d sinkhole we looked down in the Moonscape, we could clearly see it was going into a cave. The sinkhole was very small, so small it’s basically not even visible from Google Earth, yet it was very deep.

I was so excited. John quickly brought the Landy closer from which we rigged the bipod, while Rick suited up to go down and check it out.
Image: Gerrie Pretorius
I highlighted the sinkhole in yellow, and the bipod in blue, with Selena and Irene standing in front of it. If you walked here in the night, you would probably stumble into it without ever seeing it.

While Rick went down Steven and I checked out the rest of the sinkholes.

We stumbled onto some illegal miners and then where a stream disappeared into the ground we found a small cave in another sinkhole, which went about 15m before ending as it was clogged up with mud. Another sinkhole within a sinkhole was really deep, and disappeared into the blackness, but rigging this was not a viable option as the area around it looked really unstable.

Another sinkhole was rigged with a ladder, but the dark side of it was only a dark side, with no real cave.

Back at Rick’s sinkhole, and unfortunately Rick reported that this is a cave but a very small one, and also doesn’t really go past 20 meters.

Rick, was still full of energy at this point and volunteered to descend another deep sinkhole. Unfortunately this was also dead.
Image: Gerrie Pretorius
We then left the moonscape area to check other sinkholes in the area, with no result, and then moved on to Jockstrap Cave.

After a quick glance down the side of Jockstrap, it was clear that there were new developments since our last trip there in 2008. Besides the main cave that we discovered on our previous trip, there was a second area that seemed to go a bit. John quickly climbed down to check it out. Indeed it went further. After John disappeared for about 10minutes, he came back reporting that although it goes further, it still died out in mud, but noted that we should visit it again in a few years time as it is the sinkhole is still regularly changing.

About 500m behind Jockstrap lies three more sinkholes, all three are positioned around an old house, we named it the Lucky House Sinkholes.
Image: Google Earth
Although I’m not sure how lucky this house really is, as it looks like a part of it definitely disappeared down the sinkhole, not to mention the fact that you can climb down underneath the foundation of the house as the long sinkhole gave away underneath the house.
Image: Gerrie Pretorius
Right there in the long sinkhole we could see a passage disappearing into the dark, going perpendicular to the sinkhole, again I got all excited, Steven went in, but unfortunately this was also only a small 10m cave.

Another 500m behind the Lucky House Sinkholes, were three more sinkholes and they were spectacular. One of these sinkholes formed right underneath a big pipeline, swallowing the ground and the pipeline. From the top it looked like this sinkhole definitely went.

We rigged a tyrolean across, between two cars, and Rick disappeared into the cave.

Image: Gerrie Pretorius
After a long wait Rick was still missing, and Steven decided to go down as well to see what he had found.

Just as Steven finished his descent Rick came from the dark, reporting that this is a cave big enough to be worthy of a survey.

Rick and Steven then disappeared together to survey the cave.

Meanwhile, waiting for rick and steven, John decided to descend second sinkhole 30 metres from Rick and Steven’s pipeline.

He tied off with a 60 metre rope and descended along a nearly verticle slope. A while later he realized that the 60 metres wasn’t enough, and we helped him extend the rope with another 60 metres. The sinkhole went down nearly but near the visible bottom started sloping away into the darkness, it was this slope that caught us off guard, continuing much deeper than we had anticipated.

Image: Gerrie Pretorius
After doing a changeover and the rest of the descent, John came back with a cave of roughly 60 meters passage past the entrance, that also looks promising for the future.

Steven and Rick were still busy surveying the sinkhole next door so we went to the third sinkhole. This one was really massive, although not very deep. It was definitely the oldest one of the three. In the middle of this sinkhole, we found something, and our hopes went up, between some big boulders there was something going down, and it looked really promising, it turned out to be a two ladder pitch for which John volunteered, but soon returned, and unfortunately it didn't go much further after the ladder pitch.

Steven and Rick returned with 150 meters of surveyed passage and we started heading back home while checking a last few sinkholes that were on the way.

Another series of sinkholes formed over the same pipeline although this was about 3 to 4 kilometres away from where the previous ones were and about 300 meters from here right next to the gravel road, we found another sinkhole. The diameter was not massive, but it’s deep... real deep! In fact we could not see the bottom at all.

Image: Gerrie Pretorius
Unfortunately time was against us and we had to leave it for another day.

Thanks all for this trip.

Exploring known caves for new extensions is fun, but known caves are known because someone went to look for them, and found them. Who knows how many are still out there, waiting to be found.

Thanks Steven Tucker, John and Selena Dickie, Irene Kruger and Rick Hunter for an awesome trip!

Gerrie Pretorius

2015 Meetlist

Hi all,

Here’s our official meet list up to June next year. Don’t forget to check Yahoo and Facebook for last-minute changes and additional trips that will arise.

Stay strong and well,

Dave

Meet List:
December 14th Armageddon Cave survey. Leader: Gerrie Pretorius
January 11th Wonderfontein Cave. Leader: John Dickie
February 8th Hidden Cave. Leader: Steven Tucker
March 8th Nico’s II Cave. Leader: John Dickie
April 3rd – 6th Swaziland trip. Leaders: Peter Kenyon and Sharron Reynolds
April 27th To be advised. Leader: Peter Kenyon
May 10th NH3 Cave and/or Summerville Caverns. Leader: Peter Kenyon
June 14th Sink holes old and new. Leaders: Gerrie Pretorius and Colin Redmayne-Smith

Tuesday, 11 November 2014

Westminster 19 November

Hi everyone
Caving next week wednesday 19 Nov.
Westminster, meet at Oaktree 7pm
Please let John know if you will be there

Thanks
Selena

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Stinkhole 12 October 2014

On Sunday the 13th of July we visited this cave which showed massive potential and discovered a possible route onward. This coming Sunday (the 12TH of October) we will be returning to Stink Hole Cave (don't worry the name sounds worse than it is). This trip is open to visitors.(There will be a joining fee of R150 to non members to cover rope costs.)

There is a short abseil into the cave, which makes it ideal for those who are not yet SRT proficient to "learn the ropes".

Meet us at 8:30 at the corner of the N12 and the R28, which is close to Westonaria. There wil be a braai afterwords, so bring chairs and food etc.

If you are planning on joining on the trip, phone Rick on. 


Also please inform him what equipment you will need for the event.