answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: How deep in feet is jewel cave?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

HOW DEEP is the pit in mammoth cave?

105 feet (32 m)


How deep is the Shenandoah Caverns?

The Shenandoah Caverns cave system is approximately 60 feet deep. The main cavern is about 17 feet tall and has various passages and chambers at different depths within the cave network.


What is the two largest cave systems in north amreica?

One of the largest cave systems in this part of the world is the Mammoth Cave system in Kentucky and measures over 400.000 miles with a depth f 407 feet. The other cave system in this category is the Jewel Cave in South Dakota measuring over 168.600 miles.


How deep is wind cave?

The deepest point so far explored is 654 feet at the Wind Cave, in Wind Cave National Park, ND.


Is the jewel cave a natural site?

yes


Is Jewel Cave National Monument a natural site?

Yes, the cave is natural.


Where in the cave do you find the red jewel?

hope across all the poles in the cave its at the end


Where is the red jewel on nabooti island?

The red jewel is in a cave at the Mountains of the Moon, and you must beat an old man at mancala to enter the cave. (see related questions)


Which jewel is in a cave on Nabooti Island?

The Purple Jewel is at Blue Nile falls, in a cave behind a plant on top of a rock on the right side. You can only go in the cave once you help the woman across the falls with the animals. The Red Jewel is in the old man's icy cave at the Mountains of the Moon. You have to climb the trail and beat him at the Mancala game. (see related questions)


Where is the hidden cave with the purple jewel on Nabooti Island?

in a bush


Which jewel is it in a cave in poptripica nabooti island?

the red one


When did the Jewel Cave National Monument in South Dakota become a designated point of interest?

Jewel Cave was set aside as a National Monument by Theodore Roosevelt on February 7, 1908.