MAKC member Ryan R. Maurer, a native of Fayette County and former guide at Laurel Caverns, has completed a book on the cave entitled Cavern in the Clouds. The book will be available in spring 2025; however, pre-orders will be taken starting on March 1. Below, please find his press release about the project along with some illustrations he provided. Congratulations!
Caverns in the Clouds
In early February 2025 the news broke that Laurel Caverns would soon become Pennsylvania’s 125th state park – and their first underground! What timing, as I prepare to release Caverns in the Clouds: a 220 page, full color, publication which I believe will be the seminal work about this celebrated cave.
First discovered in the late-1700s, the labyrinth became known as Delaney’s Cave because its early landowners. Under this name, the cave became popular with tourists through the 1800s and then with cavers in the 1930s-1950s with the establishment of the National Speleological Society and the Pittsburgh Grotto.
In 1964 the cave was developed for commercial tours and opened under the name Laurel Caverns. Mapping efforts in the 1930s, 1970s, 1990s, and 2020s have expanded the known length of the system to a current length of just over four miles. Exploration efforts by digging and probing have found thousands of feet of virgin passage and portions of the cave are so complicated that even as recently as 2024 over 300 feet of unsurveyed passage was found near the commercial tour routes!
Laurel Caverns has a reputation among many in our community as being a relatively boring cave filled with sand and devoid of formations. My time spent working there began with that mindset and ended with the realization that Laurel Caverns still holds a deep and unique beauty when one knows what to look for – and thus the Caverns in the Clouds project began to showcase this.
Cascading nearly 500 feet down the side of Chestnut Ridge, Laurel Caverns is formed in an uncommonly sandy limestone called the Loyalhanna. It’s a very hard, blue rock that weathers to a brown and tan color creating spectacular displays of color and texture throughout the cave. It’s exceptionally high sand content makes it weather more like sandstone and less like limestone, producing caves that look more like slot canyons from the American southwest rather than the Appalachian mountains. In the far recesses of the cave, away from the untold millions of visitors, are speleothems unique to this kind of rock: iron-concentrated boxwork, pearls, and curtains of sand.
All of this geological and historical heritage is about to become Pennsylvania’s 125th state park and I can’t think of a better way to celebrate but with the release of this book. A book release and signing event is planned at Laurel Caverns for Memorial Day Weekend, and copies will be available at Convention.
Pre-orders will open on March 1, 2025 for the full-color Special Edition at $65/book.
After April 1 this cost will increase to $75. A standard black and white edition will be available after Memorial Day at $35/book. You can sign up for notices about the pre-orders by contacting sales@underarockphoto.com.