Caves are like hidden rooms underground that nature builds over time.
Imagine you have a big jar filled with sugar and water. You let it sit for a long time, maybe even years, and slowly, the sugar starts to dissolve and then hardens again in new shapes inside the jar. That’s kind of what happens with caves.
How caves are made
When rain falls, it soaks into the ground. Rainwater can pick up carbon dioxide from the air or soil, turning into a bit like a fizzy drink, it becomes slightly acidic. This acidic water seeps through rocks, especially limestone, which is soft and easy to dissolve.
Over many years, this process happens again and again. The water keeps dissolving parts of the rock, creating empty spaces underground. These spaces grow bigger and bigger until they become caves, like giant rooms or tunnels beneath our feet!
It’s like if you kept dropping sugar into a jar with water day after day, eventually, something cool and new would form inside!
Examples
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See also
- How Do Caves Form?
- How Does The River Erosion Process Work?
- What is Weathering?
- What is erosion?
- What are rivers like as slow-moving sculptors?