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Snail Shell Cave explored by MTSU students

MTSU News Services
Posted 7/31/21

MTSU geosciences professor Mark Abolins recalls that moving from his native California to Tennessee centered around caves.   Rutherford County is home to 129 known caves, including the most well-known and impressive system: Snail Shell Cave in Rockvale, Tennessee, 14 miles from campus. It is also at the heart of a preserve administered by the nonprofit Southeastern Cave Conservancy. ...

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Snail Shell Cave explored by MTSU students

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MTSU geosciences professor Mark Abolins recalls that moving from his native California to Tennessee centered around caves.  

  “It makes the most sense if I came to Tennessee to involve students in cave studies,” said Abolins, an instructor of the Geoscience of Caves and Field Methods in Geology courses. “There are more caves in Tennessee than in any other American state!” 

  And MTSU specifically is serendipitously located in cave-rich territory.  

Rutherford County is home to 129 known caves, including the most well-known and impressive system: Snail Shell Cave in Rockvale, Tennessee, 14 miles from campus. It is also at the heart of a preserve administered by the nonprofit Southeastern Cave Conservancy. 

Through these courses, Abolins has been able to get students up close and personal with caves, bringing them to Snail Shell Cave in fall 2020 and with more cave explorations to come. 

“This fall I’ll take students to Mammoth Cave (in Kentucky) as part of MT Engage Week, and I hope to take students to a Swiss cave next year as part of an MTSU Education Abroad Experience,” he said.  

The Geoscience of Caves course also gave undergraduate students access to another important university experience: research.  

Students helped with data entry on a project that digitally assessed and mapped the geologic folds — rock structures made by flat rock deformed by stress and pressure — at Snail Shell Cave. National Science Foundation and Faculty Research and Creative Activity Committee grants funded the project. 

In spring 2021, the International Journal of Speleology published the research, a first for MTSU. Speleology is the scientific study or exploration of caves. The paper can be downloaded. Albert Ogden, emeritus geosciences professor, contributed to the research and co-authored the paper.  

New opportunities for students 

Michelle Moore, a senior geoscience major, had never worked on a research project before her experience in the geosciences course.  

“I had no idea the course would involve research,” Moore said. “When he (Abolins) sent the email about it during the semester, I was pleasantly surprised.”  

A Hohenwald native, Moore did not enroll in the course with a particular interest in caves, either. She took the class “because I needed an elective, and I wanted something completely online, not remote, during the pandemic. Geoscience of Caves seemed interesting.” 

Now, Moore’s interest in both caves and research has been piqued.  

“Geosciences of Caves [has] definitely made me want to pursue caves in my future,” she said. “[And] I absolutely want to participate in more research. Working on different research projects would just make me feel like all the knowledge that I’m learning throughout the years at MTSU would be put to use.” 

The online course is offered to sophomores, juniors and seniors and will be available again in spring 2022.  

Moore explained that Abolins assigned each student with a different section of a cave field survey notebook/journal from the 1970s and 1980s to work with.  

“We used information on our (journal) pages to help transcribe numbers, directions and side notes,” she said. “After that, we used a Google Doc to plug in our information to help map out the directions of the caves we were assigned. Once all information was approved, it allowed a virtual map of the cave system to be created.”  

Since students used and entered data collected by hand, Abolins explained that they learned about the challenges of illegible handwritten entries, the importance of quality assurance and control, the nature of survey data and built basic computer literacy.  

Moore added, “I definitely think that I have a better understanding of different aspects of these types of projects, especially since it was a group effort and not a solo project. Being able to work with a group and communicate properly are always good skills to keep practicing.” 

She highly recommends the course to other students.  

“I still talk about it even if people don’t ask me my opinion. Being exposed to the different areas in geoscience is what college is all about,” she said. 

To learn more about undergraduate research opportunities, visit the website and follow the Undergraduate Research Center on Facebook.