Kungur Ice Cave
Kungur Ice Cave is a karst cave located in the Urals, near the town Kungur in Perm Krai, Russia, on the right bank of the Sylva River. The cave is noted for its ice formations and is a popular tourist landmark.
History and archaeology
Kungur Ice Cave has been known since 1703, when Peter the Great issued the decree sending a well-known geographer Semyon Remezov from Tobolsk in Kungur. He worked out the Uyezd plan and made the first sketch of the cave.The cave has been an excursion site since 1914, and it is equipped with three tour routes of different length:
- The examination of a large excursion ring covers and takes around 1 hour and 20 min
- The second is and takes 1 hour 40 min
- The third is the biggest, and around 1.5 hour. On this tour, there is a laser show and the route is more difficult.
In the eastern part of "The Ice Mountain" there are two sites of ancient settlements from the 7th-9th centuries, relating to Lomovatov culture. Yermakov's site of ancient settlement has been known since the 19th century.