| This
2295Ha national park is unique in that was created to protect
an area of great geological and speleological interest rather
than to conserve a particular habitat. (Speleology is the study
and exploration of caves). The park lies roughly mid-way between
Nicoya and the mouth of the Tempisque River in a highly terrain
punctuated by limestone peaks that have been uplifted into coastal
hills over 500 meters. This area emerged from the sea about 60
million years ago, and since then millennia of rain have eroded
the calcareous rock and filtered below to create underground waterways,
chambers and vaulted ceilings. The series of approximately 42
deep caves, some in excess of 200 meters.
The
caves come complete with stalagmites, stalactites and host of
beautiful and lesser known formations with intriguing names such
as fried eggs, organs, soda straws, popcorn, curtains, columns,
pearls, flowers and shark's teeth. Spectacular stalactites and
stalagmites are at their best in the caves of Terciopelo (55m
deep); Trampa, which have a vertical 52m drop, and Santa Ana,
the deepest with 249m. Pozo Hediondo attracts hundreds of bats
and in Nicoa pre-Columbian human bones and artefacts have been
discovered, although who these people were or how they got into
the caves remains a mystery. Cave creatures including bats, sightless
salamanders, fish in the streams running through the caves, and
a variety of invertebrates live in the underground system.
Outside
these caverns is a very hot, tropical dry forest, best appreciated
from the lookout point above the caves. Wildlife is scarce but
you may spot a racoon or coati-mundi, coyotes, a flock of orange-fronted
parakeets or white-faced monkeys.
22
km east of Nicoya, Guanacaste
Opening hours: Daily, from 8:00 to 16:00 |