CAVES 2013: Karst for astronauts 2 (The resulting surface morphologies)

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Learn with the astronauts on ESA's underground training course CAVES as instructor Jo de Waele introduces astronauts to the karst geology that form caverns and caves.

This is part two of the five-part lecture that was given during ESA's CAVES 2013 training course offering an overview of the environment the astronauts would explore. ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli, Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen, Russian cosmonaut Aleksei Ovchinin, Japanese astronaut Satoshi Furukawa and NASA astronauts Mike Barratt and Jack Fischer were present at the lecture.

CAVES stands for Cooperative Adventure for Valuing and Exercising human behaviour and performance Skills. The two-week course prepares astronauts to work safely and effectively in multicultural teams in an environment where safety is critical -- in caves.

Held each year, CAVES teaches astronauts to explore the underground system of
the Sa Grutta caves in Sardinia, Italy, as a team, delving deep underground to perform scientific experiments as well as chart and document their activities.

Video 2: What does the surface above a carbonatic cave look like? What are sinkholes or dolines? What are the typical large-scale landforms created by dissolution? What are the typical small-scale karst morphologies?

ESA­­­­--V. Crobu & S. Sechi

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