Explored an old underground ammunition magazine, Sweden [1500x1001]
Source: http://imgur.com/V9IDqQ9
I thought this was just a joke but nope, that’s literally what the artist named this piece.
Some other gems by Tomislac Jagnjic:
End Of Days by William Patino
Crystal Cave, New Zealand
(Lewis Carroll) Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge, 1832-1898. The rectory umbrella.
Houghton Library, Harvard University
The Gang Goes Cave Diving
“there’s nothing in this cave worth dying for” would make a great refrain line in a villanelle
Beyond this point the cave, and nothing more. This is as far as you were meant to be. There’s nothing in this cave worth dying for.
The signs and every far-off voice implore, The heart, the mind, the flattened lungs agree: There’s nothing in this cave worth dying for.
Just airless dark. Just bones on the sea floor. The fruitless search. Your mother on TV. There’s nothing in this cave worth dying for.
A picture that you saw some years before, A diver in a sea-beneath-the-sea… There’s nothing in this cave worth dying for.
An underwater river in whose bore Were caught the branches of a sunken tree. There’s nothing in this cave worth dying for.
Forget the cord that tugs you to explore, The silver voice that whispers, Come and see The darkling wave, the glowing secret shore. There’s nothing in this cave worth dying for.
johndarnielle challenge accepted
Carl Friedrich Seiffert - La grotte bleue à Capri
Julien Salaud: Stellar Caves
The Castro sisters went to gather wood and fruits in the mountains. They didn’t notice how they approached the damned cave filled with the demons and their satanic beast. The girls were scared. They entrusted themselves the Virgin of San Juan. They started to walk away very slowly because they say if you’d run the beast would attack you. They thank the Virgin for getting home safe and sound.
The Grand Caverns Cryptids
This photo was taken in 1895 by an amateur spelunker/photographer named Oren Jeffries while exploring an unmapped section of Grand Caverns, in Southwestern Virginia. At the time it was taken, Jeffries was conducting photographic experiments, using super long exposures to see if anything at all could be captured in the total absence of light, otherwise known as “cave darkness.” He would situate himself on level ground, extinguish his lantern, and then open the lens of his homemade box camera for as long as he could stand the darkness. During one of these experiments, he heard something approach from the deeper recesses of the cave.
Frightened, Jeffries abandoned his experiment and set off one of the Blitzlicht flashes he used for taking traditional photos underground. According to the report he later gave to a local newspaper, Jeffries saw three “humanoid” creatures staring at him from the shadows and took off running in the other direction and didn’t stop running until he was topside. Several days later, he returned with three other men to retrieve his box camera. This is the image that was recorded on the film inside.
(Source)