Sarawak chamber
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The Sarawak Chamber is a huge chamber in a cave Gua Nasib Bagus, in Gunung Mulu National Park, in the Malaysian state of Sarawak on the island of Borneo.
It was discovered by three Englishmen in January 1981. Andy Eavis, Dave Checkley & Tony White (all experienced cave explorers) had been exploring the dense, unpopulated area of the Gunung Mulu National Park jungle in Sarawak, in the north of Borneo, in an expedition led by fellow Englishman Ben Lyon. While they were surveying some of the newly found caves in the region, they stumbled into what seemed to be a huge cavern. Even with their powerful lamps, the other end of the chamber couldn't be seen through the thick darkness.
Although they did not know it yet, the three explorers had walked into the largest known enclosed space in the world, which they later named the Sarawak Chamber. It was three times the size of the Carlsbad Cavern in New Mexico, previously thought to be the largest underground cave. The Sarawak Chamber measured 2,300 feet (700 m) long, 1,300 feet (396 m) wide and at least 230 feet (70 m) high. The chamber is so massive it could hold 38 football fields or 10 jumbo jets nose-to-tail in it. The chamber is now firmly situated in the record books.
The cave was in a region filled with at-that-time newly-discovered caves in the Gunung Mulu National Park, and this particular one is called Lubang Nasib Bagus or Good Luck Cave. To reach the Sarawak Chamber one must follow the river upstream from the cave entrance. This long passage has a roof of at least 230 metres high, and does require some swimming and a traverse along a ledge. The story of how it was discovered is told in a 1985 book "Underground Worlds" by Donald Jackson and also in "Giant Caves of Borneo" by Meredith, Wooldridge and Lyon.