Category: Blog Posts

How do you take pictures in a cave?

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Especially a WILD cave?

Taking stunning photos inside a cave is usually as easy as taking out your cell phone. Most modern cell phones have strong enough low-light settings which make it easy to catch the cave’s good side. It can be a little tougher to include yourself in the photo since our formations are carefully and artfully lit, and you standing in front of them are not. It’s a problem we usually solve by encouraging guests to use their flash or a second phone with a flashlight on to add your own spotlight.

The Cathedral Room's colors are significantly more visibile thanks to the new lighting on the Hidden Wonders tour at Natural Bridge Caverns
The Cathedral Room’s colors are significantly more visibile thanks to the new lighting on the Hidden Wonders tour at Natural Bridge Caverns

But when you go into the wild parts of the cavern system like our expedition team there are no multi-million dollar lighting systems showcasing the formations. Plus in our cave there is so much mud, it can be tough to get a clean shot (pun intended).

Muddy boot in the foreground of photo while two cavers look at a pool lit with a bluish light.
From a recent expedition to the Dome Pit. Note muddy boot in the foreground.

Fortunately we’ve worked with amazing professional cave photographers that have traveled the world capturing these incredible dark places and they’ve shared some tips and tricks for catching images deep in the dark underground.

Caver on rope
WildCat Expedition – Descending into the Cave to recover ancient wildcat bones. photo by Chris Higgins

Chris Higgins (https://www.instagram.com/chrishigginsphoto/) has captured stunning images on several of our expeditions and we’ve noted several key techniques:

Stunning pool of blue water in the wild area of the cavern is in the foreground as a caver stands in the background.
Stunning pool of blue water in the wild area of the cavern is in the foreground as a caver stands in the background. Photo by Chris Higgins

First you have to bring in lights. We carry in LED panel lights that are battery operated and capable of varying “warmths” which is rated on a Kelvin scale (fun article on that topic here). We also have smaller lights that can be placed under water which is critical to get a shot like the one above.

Caver descends into pool
Travis Wuest jumps into the pool at the bottom of the northern passage.

Next you have to be an experienced caver to recognize cool moments that are there to be captured like this descent into a watery area. Having an artist’s eye for framing a shot helps too, with enough light to capture the splash, the dark cave and shadow drawing your eye to the action and another caver in the background for perspective.

Cavers exploring
Brad Wuest watches as T. Dexter Soechting descends from the entrance squeeze into the room.

Next you need patience all the way around. Setting up lights takes time and getting everyone in the perfect position isn’t always easy. When you can “see” what isn’t quite there, you still have to paint (and repaint) the scene with light. Having a deep understanding of your camera’s capabilities is critical.

Skill, experience, a patient crew, and a beautiful cave. That’s all it takes! Curious about the wild areas of the cave? We do lead adventure tours through parts of it – learn more on our website.

Here’s a few more of our favorite shots from the wild areas in our cavern.

Searching for cave critters in the upper passage in a wild cave section of Natural Bridge Caverns
Searching for cave critters in the upper passage in a wild cave section of Natural Bridge Caverns
Flowstone and pools at the end of the northern formation passage.
Flowstone and pools at the end of the northern formation passage.
T. Dex Soechting among the sodastraws and stalactites in the northern passage.
T. Dex Soechting among the sodastraws and stalactites in the northern passage.
Caver and fossilized bones
J Morettie examining wildcat bones in Natural Bridge Caverns during Wildcat Expedition

Cavern Cat Update!

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Scientists Closing in on Answers About ‘Lost’ Prehistoric Cats of Natural Bridge Caverns – an update from the University of Texas at Austin

Last January, a team of cavers along with a paleontologist from The University of Texas at Austin rappelled into two deep chambers at Natural Bridge Caverns to retrieve rare fossil finds: the bones of two small prehistoric cats, each about the size of a house cat.  

A year later, the bones of the Natural Bridge Cats are beginning to reveal their secrets.

Wild cat bones
This is part of the original wildcat bone discovery from the 1960s found in Natural Bridge Caverns

Researchers have determined their age – about 11,500 years old – and have successfully extracted fragments of ancient DNA. They have also determined the cats are not a common bobcat, as was previously proposed, but likely a species of Neotropical cat, such as an ocelot, margay or jaguarundi.

“This puts these cats into a Neotropical group, which are all endangered today. Only ocelots are left in Texas,” said John Moretti, a doctoral student at the UT Jackson School of Geosciences leading the research. “This gets us into a really interesting group of cats – including a species that is now possibly extinct.”

Although the researchers don’t yet know what species of small cat slinked through the cave’s passageways thousands of years ago, they are closing in on answers.

Moretti is working with UT Assistant Professor Melissa Kemp, who is part of the Jackson School and the College of Natural Sciences, to apply state-of-the-art methods to prepare the ancient DNA fragments for sequencing that can definitively identify the cats. He is also conducting a systematic comparison of the bones from the Natural Bridge Cats to bones from Neotropical cats living today.

Close-up of two small bone fragments in clear display boxes, believed to be jawbones of ancient Ice Age cats. The bones are resting on a black surface, with a weathered yellow book partially visible nearby.
Ancient remains of Ice Age cats, recently discovered at Natural Bridge Caverns, offer scientists a rare glimpse into Texas’ prehistoric wildlife. These jawbones, carefully preserved and studied, help piece together the fascinating story of the region’s ancient ecosystem.

Discovering the cats’ identity could reverberate beyond the Texas cavern and popular tourist destination. The Natural Bridge Cats could serve as a literal skeleton key – providing a reference that could help with identifying the bones of ancient small cats around the world.

“They are prompting us to revisit questions about old specimens that have just been sitting on the shelf,” said Moretti. “Without them, there’s not an impetus to wrestle with these problems.”

The remains of the Natural Bridge Cats were found in two chambers called the Dungeon and the Inferno Room which are almost a mile from the current entrance of the cavern and 200 feet underground. Portions of the Dungeon cat were discovered in 1963 and brought to the UT collections for study and safe keeping.

Paleontologist and bones in cave
John Moretti, with UT Jackson School of Geosciences, was part of the retrieval expedition at Natural Bridge Caverns

But in 2022, cavers discovered more cat bones in the Dungeon and a brand-new cat specimen in the Inferno Room. The openings into those two pit-like chambers are surrounded by small muddy pawprints that indicate it’s possible the cats fell into the chambers from above – and couldn’t get out.

“For decades, we’ve wondered about these bones – then we discovered the second cat. We have so many questions, including how these cats could have gotten so deep in the cave,” said Brad Wuest, president and CEO of Natural Bridge Caverns. “Discovery and exploration is at the heart of everything we do here at the caverns. Being involved with John and the team at UT Austin in this process of understanding more about the Natural Bridge Cats has been both rewarding and fascinating.”

In January 2023, Moretti led a recovery mission to bring the cats back to the surface after thousands of years underground. Research over the past year has helped to uncover some of the cats’ secrets.

Moretti matched the newly discovered bones in the Dungeon to the specimen sitting in the UT collections the past 60 years, showing that the two sets of bones came from the same skeleton. And two different dating techniques have placed the age of the cats in the ballpark of about 11,500 years ago. Radiocarbon dating on collagen extracted from the bones has the specimen at slightly older than that age. Uranium-thorium dating led by Jackson School scientists Staci Lowey and Alex Janelle on flowstone covering part of the specimen has it slightly younger.

But most important for figuring out the identity of the ancient cats is the successful extraction of ancient DNA. As expected, the DNA is in rough shape after spending thousands of years in a cave. But Moretti is hopeful about eventually being able to get a species identification.

“Like bones and other organic materials, DNA breaks down over time into smaller and smaller pieces,” Moretti said. “There’s still information stored in those fragments but it takes a lot of work to reconstruct and read the genetic code again.”

The DNA and collagen samples came from the Dungeon cat. The Inferno Room cat did not have DNA or collagen preserved. But based on the bones, Moretti thinks that what’s learned about one cat can be applied to the other.  

“They’re the same shape and size,” Moretti said. “I feel confident that what we learn about the age and molecular identity of one skeleton is applicable to the other.”

Having two ancient cats of the same kind found together – not to mention, with pawprints nearby – is incredibly rare. The cat from the Dungeon is the most complete specimen of a small Neotropical cat from the last ice age in North America. And together the two specimens make up a nearly complete skeleton with all its major parts in place.   

An illustration of an ancient cat skeleton with specific bones shaded in red, indicating the bones retrieved intact. The red-shaded bones include parts of the spine, skull, shoulders, and leg bones, while the rest of the skeleton is outlined without shading. The cat skeleton is depicted in a walking stance, showing the full skeletal structure from skull to tail.

Illustration of the skeletal remains of an ancient cat discovered at Natural Bridge Caverns, estimated to be around 11,500 years old. The red shading highlights the bones that were found intact, providing valuable insights into the physical structure of this possibly extinct Ice Age feline.

If the Natural Bridge Cats can be definitively identified as a certain species, their bones could help with classifying other ancient cat fossils – which are notoriously few in number and look very similar to one another.

For example, the bones brought back from the Dungeon in 1963 were identified in the UT collection as belonging to a bobcat until the additional bones brought back by Moretti disproved that.

The new bones are also raising interest around an old hypothesis that the Dungeon specimen is an extinct species of margay called a ‘river cat.’ The hypothesis was proposed by Lars Werdelin, a world-renowned expert on extinct cats based out of the Swedish Museum of Natural History, who examined the bones while conducting a national survey of small wildcat fossils in 1985.

Moretti is closely comparing the bones of the Natural Bridge Cats to skeletons from margays and other Neotropical cats on loan to UT from other institutions to identify what’s natural variation versus a distinguishing anatomical feature.

The research team is also deploying a custom-built imaging device designed to capture high-resolution, 3D images of the cat tracks. Data obtained from those images will provide a way of testing if those ancient paw prints were made by the Dungeon and Inferno Room cats.

Ancient wild cat tracks
Ancient tracks of a wildcat found in the mud within Natural Bridge Caverns

But until the DNA sequencing results are in, he expects the Natural Bridge Cats – who are now together in the UT collections – to continue keeping their identity a secret.

Our deepest thanks to John Moretti and Monica Kortsha from UT Austin for this wonderful update on our cave cats – who may have had a tough final journey in the cavern, but who now live on in scientific study!

Butterflies and Blooms Returns to Natural Bridge Caverns

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Now in its third year, this free event is designed to inspire habitat building for butterflies and other pollinators

Natural Bridge Caverns is celebrating the migration of the Monarch butterflies with its 3rd annual Butterflies and Blooms event on September 21 and 22nd. This free event will include presentations on butterfly habitats from the in-house landscape team, hundreds of free seeds, a scavenger hunt, crafts, educational displays, live music and more. Designed to create more diverse habitats for pollinators like butterflies, bees, moths, and hummingbirds, the event is part of Natural Bridge Caverns’ ongoing mission to connect people with nature.

Butterflies and Blooms chalk art
Celebrating pollinators is the best part of this free Butterflies and Blooms event

“Pollinators rely on native habitats throughout their local habitat and migratory path,” said Joye Wuest, CFO for Natural Bridge Caverns and ardent supporter of pollinator habitats. “We’ve committed to ensuring our landscaping doesn’t just look lovely, but also feeds native pollinators. Now we’re helping people to do the same in their own backyards and gardens.” The seeds gathered by the park’s  in-house landscape team are specifically selected to provide easy to grow plants that support multiple stages of a butterfly’s life cycle. Natural Bridge Caverns also has an extensive guide on their website to both the types of butterflies and the plants they rely on throughout their time in Texas.

Visit NaturalBridgeCaverns.com for more information on Butterflies and Blooms and more events happening this fall.

Frog Count Reveals Great News: Diverse Species Thrive at Natural Bridge Caverns

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Blackland Environmental and Natural Bridge Caverns announce exciting results of a year long survey to celebrate Earth Day

The land surrounding Natural Bridge Caverns is hopping with a diverse set of frogs according to the results of a recently completed environmental survey. The yearlong effort by the Wuest family and Blackland Environmental identified ten different species of frogs including the Cliff chirping frog, Cope’s gray tree frog, and the spotted chorus frog – to name a few “anurans.” Anurans, which are amphibian species including frogs, toads, and tree frogs, are the most diverse order of amphibians documented across the globe in a wide array of habitats. Local volunteers joined the hunt over the last year, armed with flashlights, recording devices, and muck boots.

“To find this diverse number of species just a few minutes’ drive from the urban areas of San Antonio is remarkable,” said biologist Jeremiah McKinney, operating manager of Blackland Environmental. “These results highlight the importance of the aquatic and semi-aquatic habitats as they clearly support a wide variety of species.”

Counting frogs is an excellent measure of the health of an eco-system. “We had several goals with the project including a better understanding the habitats present on the land surrounding the caverns,” said Brad Wuest, president of Natural Bridge Caverns. “Our mission includes responsible stewardship. To that end, we have a goal to serve as a safe haven for a wide range of wildlife. These amphibians are indicator species, this study will help steer our future management practices and provide a valuable opportunity to educate family, friends, neighbors, and our community.”

Since much of an anuran’s life cycle occurs in or near water, they are sensitive to environmental changes. This is why scientists consider Anurans an indicator species. Indicator species are those whose presence, absence or abundance can be evaluated to assess the quality or condition of the surrounding habitat. Accordingly, a survey of anurans was an ideal start to the overall biodiversity assessment.

Listen to the frogs here: Frog Chorus (90 seconds)

Listen to conversations with Jeremiah McKinney during our frog hunt (5 minutes, 40 seconds)

Listen to What’s up with cricket frogs? (3 minutes)

Volunteers scour land around Natural Bridge Caverns for frogs.

Green tree frog counted during Natural Bridge Caverns biological survey

Green tree frog counted during Natural Bridge Caverns biological survey.

Cope’s grey tree frog calls out for a mate during the frog hunt at Natural Bridge Caverns.

This baby Northern Cricket frog found a helping hand during one of the frog hunt survey expeditions at Natural Bridge Caverns.

Location of frog hunt

Natural Bridge Caverns biological survey above ground hunted for frogs in an effort to better understand and care for habitats surrounding the cavern system.