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COLOSSAL CAVE

by Janet Webb Farnsworth


It's always perfect weather for touring Colossal Cave, just twenty two miles southeast of Tucson, Arizona. One of the largest dry caves in North America, it maintains a pleasant seventy degrees Fahrenheit temperature year-around. Located in the Rincon Mountains at an elevation of three thousand seven hundred feet, the entrance commands a panoramic view of the Sonoran Desert. The cave is not fully explored, but scientists estimate that there are at least thirty nine miles of natural tunnels inside the cavern. Due to the enormously complex three-dimensional maze, it took over two years to map the two miles of passageway that are fully explored.


Groundwater seeping through the Escabrosa limestone formed the cave. Over millions of years, stalactites, stalagmites, columns and draperies formed slowly from water dripping from the ceiling. As the climate became more arid, the cave gradually dried up. Today, Colossal Cave is "dry," or dormant, and the formations are no longer growing.

Colossal Cave Mountain Park is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and it certainly has a history. The cave was officially "discovered" in 1879, but artifacts and soot-blackened ceilings testify to use by prehistoric cultures. Recent studies show it once served as a Hohokam shrine.

Today visitors take a fifty-minute, one-half mile guided tour down six stories into Colossal Cave to see the beautiful formations. Tours leave from the gift shop at the entrance. There is a ramp to the gift shop, but the cave itself is not wheelchair accessible.

Deep inside the cave, tour guides explain how the cave formed, point out the beautiful formations, and tell the "Bandit Legend," the favorite part of the tour for many guests. According to the legend, the cavern served as a bandit hideout twice in 1887, after two exciting train robberies. In one holdup, the robbers disconnected the train's engine, mail and express cars and took off for Tucson, leaving the rest of the train and passengers stranded in the desert. In the second robbery, the bandits turned the locomotive over on its side with the engineer still in it. According to rumor, up to sixty thousand dollars were hidden away in the cave then later retrieved by one of the robbers. What finally happened to the money is still murky. Wells Fargo never did reveal exactly how much money was actually stolen.

The one hundred and twenty-year-old historic La Posta Quemada Ranch, a working cattle ranch, is located within the park. There is a second gift shop, a snack bar and a gemstone sluice along with a butterfly garden and tortoise enclosure. Many people enjoy hiking the trail system and birding along the riparian area. Trail rides are also available from the ranch.

Hours
September 16 through March 15: Monday through Saturday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Sundays and holidays, 9 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
March 16 through September 15: Monday through Saturday 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sundays and holidays, 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Directions
Scenic route: From East Broadway in Tucson, turn south onto scenic Old Spanish Trail and follow it about seventeen miles to Colossal Cave.
Alternate route: Take Interstate Highway I-10 east from Tucson to Exit 279 (Vail Exit), turn north, and follow signs for about six miles to Colossal Cave.

Rates
Admission to park: Five dollars per auto (up to six people, one dollar for each additional person in the same vehicle.)

Admission fees for guided cave tour: Adults, eight dollars and fifty cents; children six through twelve, five dollars; children five and under, free. No reservations needed.

Things to Do
Horseback trail rides
Picnic
Camping

Wher to stay
Tucson, AZ
Benson AZ

For More Information
Colossal Cave Mountain Park
16721 E. Old Spanish Trail
Vail, Arizona 85641
520-647-7275
info@colossalcave.com

Related DesertUSA Pages
Desert caves and Caving

Other Stories
The American West
Scottsdale
Desert Queen Ranch Tour
Apache Spring


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