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Gouffre Berger

The Gouffre Berger is a cave in the French alps within the commune of Engins high on the Vercors Plateau. It was discovered on 24 May 1953 by Joseph Berger, Georges Bouvet, Ruiz de Arcaute and Marc Jouffrey. From 1953 to 1963, it was regarded as the deepest cave in the world at , relinquishing this title to the previous contender, Pierre Saint Martin, in 1964, after further exploration. The Gouffre Berger, the first -1000, is now ranked 39th deepest cave in the world, and the 4th in France.

To return from the bottom of the cave back to the surface can take between 15 and 30 hours, without long breaks.

In 1967, Ken Pearce, a metallurgy lecturer from Britain, descended with the Pegasus Caving Club team from Nottingham UK, organised and led by Peter Watkinson, and along with a dive, reached a depth of . They emerged after 13 days underground, having set a new world record at the time. In 1968, B Leger and J Dubois reached a depth of . This record was held until July 1982, when Patrick Penez attained . In 1990, a breakthrough was made, connecting the cave to the nearby "Scialet de la Fromagère". This gives the current recorded depth as In June 2011 the terminal sumps were dived and in 2014 another attempt was made to pass the sumps.

In recent years there have been six fatalities in this cave, five due to water. During a storm or heavy rain, the Gouffre Berger can become a dangerous trap and the water levels rise very quickly. In 1996, Englishwoman Nicola Perrin (née Dollimore) and Hungarian Istvan Torda died due to violent flooding in the cave.

The water that flows through the cave has been traced to re-appear in the flooded sections of the . As of 2017 the system was estimated to contain approximately thirty-seven kilometres of passage with eleven entrances.

Since 2013, clean-up actions have been carried out by cavers. At the end of 2018 the Gouffre Berger has become clean again.

In 2014, attempts to join by siphons continued and an eleventh entrance, which communicates with the Fromagère, was created in September 2016; this is the "goufre Delta 35"

During the year 2022 a new network named "the Sardine Star", located at the level of the large waterfall of 27 metres, is being explored.

A link was finally made on December 28, 2024 between the Gouffre Berger and the gouffre de la Fromagère, avoiding the last sump.

Location

The entrance is within the commune of Engins high on the Vercors Plateau. In June 2000, the commune lifted a two-year ban on exploration.

Cross section survey

Image gallery

See also

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Opération -1000 by Jean Cadoux, Jean Lavigne, Géo Mathhieu, Louis Potié. - Grenoble : Edition de Grenoble, 1955.
  • Réédition : Opération -1000, idem. - Marseille : Édition Jeann Lafitte. 261 pages;
  • .
  • Gouffre Berger premier -1000. 1956-2016 by Serge Caillault. - Corenc, édition Spéléo Magazine 94. 36 pages; 2016;
  • Gouffre Berger, l'esprit d'équipe by Mark Wright, Robbie Shone and others.- Sheffield: published by Vertebrate Publishing, 2014. 254 pages;
  • .
  • Envers et contre tout - Gouffre Berger 68 by Claude De Broyer, Philippe Delescaille, Alain Marbach, Georges Marbach and Lambert Martin-Bruxelles: published by Librairie Spéléo; mai 2020; 216 pages; .

External links