A scuba diver has been found dead in a notorious underwater labyrinth after vanishing during a trip.

Police were called to Twin Caves in the Blue Springs Recreation Area in Florida on Tuesday after three people failed to return to the surface on time.

Twin Caves extends back hundreds of feet and has three passages that drop to even greater depths. The cavern descends in stages going from 20ft to 100ft deep. It also features multiple ‘jump tunnels’ that run off into wider tunnels.

Rescue teams quickly swooped and dragged two of them out of the complex cavern to safety at around 1.15pm on Tuesday.

But the third diver, who has not been named, was found dead in the system. The coroner is working to determine the cause of death.

Sheriff Donnie Edenfield thanked Jackson County Fire & Rescue, Florida Fish and Wildlife, and the staff at Cave Adventures for their help with the rescue.

He also urged the community to ‘please keep the families of the divers in your thoughts and prayers’.

The Twin Caves are located at the bottom of Merritt’s Mill Pond, situated in a park in Marianna, located roughly 65 miles northwest of Tallahassee. 

The Twin Caves are located at the bottom of Merritt’s Mill Pond, situated in the Blue Springs Recreation Area in Marianna, Florida located roughly 65 miles northwest of Tallahassee (file photo of divers exploring the Twin Caves)

Twin Caves appears to be a notoriously dangerous diving spot, with social media users this week saying it is ‘very sad’ to learn the cavern has ‘claimed another life’ (file photo)

Merritt’s Mill Pond is a popular swimming and diving spot due to its clear, light blue waters and lack of vegetation. 

The two caves can be found roughly 88ft away from the swimming platform at the man-made pond, according to Cave Atlas.

Cave Adventures warns the cave system is a ‘low flow cave’ that can easily become filled or blocked with silt if divers are not careful.

The cavern is also very tight, with officials noting ‘if you get nervous in small places, this isn’t the passage for you’.

The cave system at Merritt’s Mill Pond appears to be a notoriously dangerous diving spot, with several deaths reported over the years.

One social media user, commenting on Tuesday’s tragedy, said it is ‘very sad’ to learn the cavern has ‘claimed another life’. 

Merritt’s Mill Pond (pictured) is a popular swimming and diving spot due to its clear, light blue waters and lack of vegetation

The Twin Caves system extends back hundreds of feet and has three passages that drop to even greater depths. The cavern descends in stages going from 20ft to 100ft deep and up to 3,000ft underground. It also features multiple ‘jump tunnels’ that run off into wider tunnels

Clyde Douglas Rorex, 68, who frequently went diving in the pond area, died in July 2020 after getting trapped in the Hole in The Wall cave.

Rorex’s family reported him missing on the morning on July 8 after he took off from a public boat ramp around 6am and failed to return by 10 am, as scheduled.

His body was recovered from the pond by world renowned diver Edd Sorenson later that afternoon, News 13 reported at the time. Sorenson revealed Rorex had gotten trapped inside the cave. 

Rorex had been diving ‘for close to 20 years’, police said, adding that he would dive in the area ‘almost every day’.

Four years earlier, almost to the day, a 17-year-old boy drowned in Merritt’s Mill Pond while attending a birthday party.

Jeremiah Sabeff was swimming near two large floats several with other children on July 9, 2016 when he vanished out of sight, NWF Daily News reported.

One of the other children tried to pull Sabeff to the surface but ‘was not strong enough to keep him there and continue swimming’, investigators said.

Clyde Douglas Rorex, 68, who frequently went diving in the Merritt’s Mill Pond area, died in July 2020 after getting trapped in the Hole in The Wall cave

Jeremiah Sabeff, 17, drowned in Merritt’s Mill Pond while attending a birthday party on July 9, 2016

A child informed their parent that Sabeff had gone under water and could not be found, prompting a search for the teen. 

His lifeless body was found hidden in the sediment at the bottom of the pond by a parent whose child had attended the party. 

Sabeff was pulled out of the water and was given CPR, according to the incident report, which notes how he had ‘turned blue’ and appeared to have ‘lungs full of water’.

Paramedics took the teen to a nearby hospital, where he was later pronounced dead.

DailyMail.com has approached the sheriff’s office and the regional medical examiner for comment. 



Source link

Share.
Exit mobile version