Grotta Gigante
Grotta Gigante, also known as Riesengrotte or as Grotta di Brisciachi, is a giant cave on the Italian side of the Trieste Karst, close to the village of Borgo Grotta Gigante or Briščiki in the municipality of Sgonico. Its central cavern is high, wide and long, putting it in the 1995 Guinness Book of Records as the world's largest show cave. This record was broken in 2010 when La Verna cave in the south west of France was opened to tourists, measuring.
Overview
The cave contains many large stalactites and stalagmites. A feature of the stalagmites is their "dish-pile" appearance, formed by water dropping from up to above and depositing calcium carbonate over a wide area.The hall is high, long and wide. A steep path with atmospheric electric lighting allows the visitor to spend about 45 minutes in this underground space, with its rich calcite concretions, the highest of which is high.
Its available space and the constant temperatures throughout the year have led to the placement of scientific instruments, including the two Grotta Gigante horizontal pendulums which hang down from about, and are the longest geodetic pendula in the world.