Temperature regime of Kateřinská Cave

Authors

  • Tomáš STŘEDA Mendel University in Brno, Czech Republic
  • Hana STŘEDOVÁ Mendel University in Brno, Czech Republic
  • Miroslav VYSOUDIL Palacký University Olomouc

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2478/v10126-012-0010-y

Keywords:

cave microclimate, thermal monitoring, rock temperature, attendance

Abstract

Air and rock surface temperature regime was monitored in Kateřinsk´a Cave in Moravian Karst (Czech Republic, South Moravia). Highly accurate temperature sensors with data logger were used for air temperature measurement. Rock surface temperature was monitored by infrared thermometer and infrared thermal camera. Statistical and graphical processing and 2D map were carried out. The rock surface and air temperature increase as the distance from the entrance increases. The highest dynamics of interior air temperature (amplitude 14.3 °C) and the lowest average temperature (4.03 °C) were detected near the entrance. At a distance of 10 m from the entrance the minimum rock surface temperature was –8.74 °C and maximum 8.60 °C. Rock temperature amplitude decreases
as the distance from the entrance increases (at the distance of 271-280 m reached the minimum value 1.19 °C). The strongest correlation between internal temperature in remote part of the cave and external temperature was found when external data series shifted 22 days backward. Maximum temperatures in remote part are affected by attendance. Maximum daily amplitude (MDA) in remote parts reached up to 0.69 °C while MDA near the entrance (up to 4.27 °C) is caused by external weather.

Author Biography

  • Miroslav VYSOUDIL, Palacký University Olomouc

    17. listopadu 12, 771 46 Olomouc, Czech Republic

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Published

2012-09-30

Issue

Section

original research papers

How to Cite

STŘEDA, T., STŘEDOVÁ, H., & VYSOUDIL, M. (2012). Temperature regime of Kateřinská Cave. Contributions to Geophysics and Geodesy, 42(3), 243-254. https://doi.org/10.2478/v10126-012-0010-y