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Subterranea: Discovering the Earth's Extraordinary Hidden Depths

by Chris Fitch, Matthew Young (Author)

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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284844,362 (4.4)1
Subterranea is where the world's remaining mysteries are yet to be found. For millennia, across nations and cultures, it has been a hotbed of fantastical stories. It's where humans have kept their most sacred treasures and their darkest secrets. It's where we have found evidence of our past and may, at some point, find an escape route for our uncertain future. But what would we find there today? From the underground cities of Cappadocia to smuggling tunnels on the US-Mexico border, caves full of tiny blind dragons and a seed vault located 1300km inside the Arctic circle, Subterranea demonstrates that the world below our feet is every bit as vivid and evocative as the world we see around us.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
Subterranea is a 200 pages long travel through the depths of the Earth, courtesy of Chris Fitch. After donning a rock-climbing helmet, Chris takes us on a worldwide tour featuring both natural and artificial caves, with an eye for the lesser-known ones.


[Keep reading @ Bookshelves & Teacups] ( )
  TissieL | May 3, 2023 |
The wide variety of underground venues makes for interesting reading. ( )
  MarthaJeanne | Mar 16, 2023 |
Why is it that some people are fascinated by what lies under the surface of the earth.....or more to the point what MIGHT lie under the earth. Maybe it really harks back to our prehistoric ancestors and their ilk who wormed their way into pitch black caverns to draw animals in charcoal and oche on the walls of caverns. The association of the underworld with a spirit world ...and with hell.
Anyway, I confess, I am one of those people who are fascinated with this underworld. I track my own fascination back to adventure stories (especially those written by Enid Blyton) where an intrepid group of kids (and a dog) found their way into long abandoned or secret caves/tunnels to foil smugglers or gangsters or kidnappers.
My actual experience of the underworld is pretty limited, though I have been deep underground in coal mines in Asturias (Spain) and in Australia....and I must confess....some of the mystery and glamor wore off very rapidly when I heard and saw part of the walls of coal collapsing under the weight of a kilometre of rock above...with an almighty crack. At that moment, I reckoned that the coal miners deserved all the pay they were getting and then some.
But back to Chris Fitch's book. He's produced a fascinating grab-bag of examples of interesting stuff happening underground. A lot of it relates to caves or tunnels but there is also discussion of other curious things; trees in the Pando Forest in Utah that have cloned themselves and are linked underground by a root system into an area of 43 hectares ...a single tree in effect that may be 14,000 years old. Aztec buildings and ruins buried under modern Mexico City ...and an incredible flaming gas crater in Turkmenistan, accidentally created by Soviet gas explorers. You've just gotta love the story of the miners finding the ground collapsed into a crater which was burping methane and somebody thought it would be good idea to drop in a match and "burn it off in a few weeks". Half a century later, it's still burning fiercely. It's a good collection of stories ...and it's supported with some great diagrams and location maps. Many of the locations, I already knew about but many of them were totally new to me......the deepest high altitude cave for example....in Uzbekistan near to the Afghan border with a top to bottom depth of 939 metres....and still 2651 m above sea level.
Unfortunately, with many collection like this there is a limit (usually about 4 pages...and that includes pictures and a map) on the details about the places. Sometimes I found myself wishing for a bit more information but on the whole, I think Fitch has done a workman (should that be work-person)-like job and it's easy reading. Happy to give it four stars. ( )
  booktsunami | Jul 7, 2022 |
SUBTERRANEA by Chris Fitch

This has beautiful pictures of beautiful places, complete with a few pages that tell about what each place is when it was discovered and what if any, humans used it for. As a former caver, I have a great appreciation for the subterranean world.

I am sure I did not appropriately appreciate the splendor of this book since I had an electronic version. A hard or softcover version would be coffee table worthy, to awe family members and visitors, alike.

Highly recommend.

I consider myself fortunate to have received a complimentary copy of #subterranea from #netgalley I was under no obligation to post a review. ( )
  HuberK | May 18, 2021 |
Showing 4 of 4
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Chris Fitchprimary authorall editionscalculated
Young, MatthewAuthormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Löffler, DieterTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Subterranea is where the world's remaining mysteries are yet to be found. For millennia, across nations and cultures, it has been a hotbed of fantastical stories. It's where humans have kept their most sacred treasures and their darkest secrets. It's where we have found evidence of our past and may, at some point, find an escape route for our uncertain future. But what would we find there today? From the underground cities of Cappadocia to smuggling tunnels on the US-Mexico border, caves full of tiny blind dragons and a seed vault located 1300km inside the Arctic circle, Subterranea demonstrates that the world below our feet is every bit as vivid and evocative as the world we see around us.

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