Tshombe picked up Jordan for a Daddy / Daughter Date. He took her to the Flordia State Caverns in Marianna, Fl. They had a fabulous time !
I'm glad Jordi got to see the "CCC" sign, she learned about the public work relief program under Roosevelt's New Deal Program this past school year in Social Studies.
Sweet.
Going into the cave .... there's no turning back now !
The park’s caves have a long and interesting geologic history beginning about 38 million years ago when sea levels were much higher and the southeastern coastal plain of the United States was submerged. Shells, coral and sediments gradually accumulated on the sea floor. As sea levels fell, these materials hardened into limestone. During the last million years, acidic groundwater dissolved crevices just below the surface creating cave passages large enough to walk through. Dazzling stalactites, stalagmites, flowstone and other fragile cave-drip formations were by a similar dissolving process by the naturally acidic rainwater. The park’s bluffs, springs and caves are referred to as karst terrain, and the caves provide habitat for the blind cave crayfish, cave salamanders and three species of cave roosting bats.
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