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www.speleophilately.com
The Fosse Dionne is a
famous and beautiful spring opening in the centre of Tonnerre, a little
town 197 km south-east of Paris. It does not look much like a cave from
the postmark itself, but on the spot the underground flooded passage is
quite visible. This legendary spring is the outlet of the supposed
second longest subterranean water drainage in France with 43.5 km (after
Fontaine de Vaucluse).
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Cave (spring) opening
Fosse Dionne in Tonnerre (nearby Paris) |
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French Cave Postmark Tonnerre (11-10-1982) |
The cave was explored in 1981 down to its present end by Eric Le Guen of
the Spéléo-Club de Paris (length: 360m; depth: 61m). The cave is
considered as one of the most difficult and dangerous to explore one can
imagine, because of the accumulation of different factors: length, muddy
waters and hence no visibility, very narrow passages, cold water, strong
current, depth and profile with successive ups and downs. In 1962 two
divers died in the very first part of the cave.
A colloquium on cave diving and the speleological sciences was organized
at Tonnerre by the Spéléo-Club de Paris on the 30th and 31st of October
1982.
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Map of cave Fosse Dionne in
Tonnerre (nearby Paris) (by F. le Gven) |
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