By Lido Vizzutti, 11-14-08
In 2001 I was assigned to photograph a cave rescue seminar – part of a Wilderness Medicine Conference to demonstrate cave rescues to other doctors – on the north end of Lookout Mountain in Tennessee. I showed up wearing a waterproof jacket, boots I could get mucky, khaki pants and of course my camera gear. I chatted with the spelunkers who were going to be leading myself and a reporter deep into the limestone caverns and when we were about ready to go, our guide turned to me and said something along the lines of, "Is that really what you're going to wear?" followed by, "Can your camera get wet?"![]() |
I don't remember who sent me these pictures but here you can see myself and reporter Lindsay Riddell hard at work deep underground. |
It is one of my favorite photo memories and it's this kind of not knowing what adventure might be around the corner that keeps me addicted to journalism. I had never been in a real cave before, and I had definitely never scaled an underground waterfall. The caverns we climbed into were massive worlds under the earth. It was humbling and exhilarating.
I was reminded of this adventure after following a link off of one of my favorite blogs, A Photo Editor (here), earlier today. The link took me back, deep into the world below us. Only this time the photos rock. I had never thought about how the only real way to capture underground caves is through photography.
Below are two videos, both by photographer Stephen Alvarez. In the first he describes the project he has been working on for years, "Earth from Below."
Earth From Below from Stephen Alvarez on Vimeo.
The second is maybe only cool to us photo nerds. It's short and awesome.
flashpowder from Stephen Alvarez on Vimeo.
For more of his pictures and bio information, check out his Web site (here).
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