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Al Hoota Cave[1] (Arabic: كَهْف ٱلْهُوْتَه, romanizedKahf Al-Hūtah) is a cave located in Al-Hamra', Ad Dakhiliyah Governorate, Oman, that is 5 km (3.1 miles) long. The cave was first discovered by locals several hundred years ago and was officially opened as a tourist destination in December 2006.

The cave houses over 100 animal species, including Omani blind cave fish, bats, arthropods, mollusks, snails and water beetles.[2] Stalagmites from this cave yield data on the palaeoclimate.[3] It is believed to be the longest cave in Oman.

The visitors were brought with an electric train into the cave; a dedicated entrance to tha cave was built for that purpose. Meanwhile, the train line is dismantled and the visitors are brought on an asphalt road by golf carts into the cave.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b AlHoota Cave, Oman Tourism
  2. ^ https://theculturetrip.com/middle-east/oman/articles/al-hoota-inside-omans-stunning-two-million-year-old-cave%7C TheCultureTrip.com - Al hoota cave
  3. ^ FLEITMANN, D., J. Haldon, R. Bradley, S. Burns, Hai Cheng, R. Edwards, C. Raible, M. Jacobson, A. Matter 2022. Droughts and societal change: The environmental context for the emergence of Islam in late antique Arabia, Science 376, 1317–21.
  4. ^ https://www.drehscheibe-online.de/foren/read.php?030,11070170, retrieved on: 2025-03-08.


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