
BEGINNING OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY
During the continental drift about 600 million years ago, the Americas separated from the continents of Europe and Africa. A broad, shallow depression from Alabama north to Newfoundland was formed. Then, for 400 million years an ancient sea flooded the area that is now the Appalachian Mountains. Layers of water-borne sediments accumulated on the ocean floor, followed by limestone sediments composed of fossilized marine animals and shells. The weight of the sediments eventually compressed the two layers into metamorphic rock. As a result of the eons-old shifting of the earth’s tectonic, or crystal, plates, North America and Africa collided. This elevated and fractured the sea floor, causing the older, underlying layer of metamorphic rock to tilt upward and slide over the younger layer, creating a towering mountain range, the Appalachians.
GROWTH OF FORMATIONS
As the large volumes of water drained away, nature began crafting the stone formations left in the caverns today. Inside a cave created by the shifting earth, a solution of calcium carbonate gave up some of its carbon dioxide, allowing a precipitation of lime to form. This precipitation began as a thin deposit ring of crystallized calcite, but continued to collect, creating stalactites that hung from the ceiling. As water drops flowed down these deposits and fell to the floor, deposits built upwards, forming stalagmites. When a stalactite growing down from the ceiling met a stalagmite growing up from the floor, a column or pillar was formed. The growth process, also called dripstone, continues in Luray Caverns. Ours is an active cave where new deposits accumulate at the rate of one cubic inch every 120 years.
For more than 125 years, Luray Caverns has been renowned as a spectacular natural wonder. Today the caverns remain as magical and majestic as when they were first discovered in 1878 by a tinsmith and a local photographer. Millions of visitors have wandered the subterranean pathways and discovered for themselves the natural draw of Luray Caverns.
BEGINNING OF THE SHENANDOAH VALLEY
During the continental drift about 600 million years ago, the Americas separated from the continents of Europe and Africa. A broad, shallow depression from Alabama north to Newfoundland was formed. Then, for 400 million years an ancient sea flooded the area that is now the Appalachian Mountains. Layers of water-borne sediments accumulated on the ocean floor, followed by limestone sediments composed of fossilized marine animals and shells. The weight of the sediments eventually compressed the two layers into metamorphic rock. As a result of the eons-old shifting of the earth’s tectonic, or crystal, plates, North America and Africa collided. This elevated and fractured the sea floor, causing the older, underlying layer of metamorphic rock to tilt upward and slide over the younger layer, creating a towering mountain range, the Appalachians.
GROWTH OF FORMATIONS
As the large volumes of water drained away, nature began crafting the stone formations left in the caverns today. Inside a cave created by the shifting earth, a solution of calcium carbonate gave up some of its carbon dioxide, allowing a precipitation of lime to form. This precipitation began as a thin deposit ring of crystallized calcite, but continued to collect, creating stalactites that hung from the ceiling. As water drops flowed down these deposits and fell to the floor, deposits built upwards, forming stalagmites. When a stalactite growing down from the ceiling met a stalagmite growing up from the floor, a column or pillar was formed. The growth process, also called dripstone, continues in Luray Caverns. Ours is an active cave where new deposits accumulate at the rate of one cubic inch every 120 years.
THE FORMATIONS
Stalactites are often formed in a fluted and uniformed fashion from the ceiling down. Stalagmites, too, build with distinct mounds and ridges on their way toward the ceiling. Dripstone, in addition to covering the ceilings and floors, is also abundant on cavern walls. Sometimes dripstone results in massive decorations called flowstone, when mineral-bearing water spreads over limestone walls or builds its deposits from a protruding edge. These crystalline deposits can form draperies and stone waterfall formations.
There are many factors that can impact the shape and color of formations, including the rate and direction of the seepage, the amount of acid in the water, the temperature and humidity content of a cave, air currents, the above ground climate, the amount of annual rainfall and the density of the plant cover.
All coloration in Luray Caverns is natural, caused by different minerals in the seeping ground water. White is the color of calcium carbonate in its pure form. Other elements absorbed from the soil and rock layers create impure forms of calcite. Reds and yellows are caused by iron and iron-stained clays, black is the result of manganese dioxide, and blues and greens are the result of solutions of copper minerals.
HOURS AND RATES
Luray Caverns is open every day of the year. Guided tours depart approximately every twenty minutes. General-admission rates include the tour of Luray Caverns and the entrance into the Car and Carriage Caravan Museum.
Hours
Tours begin each day at 9 a.m.
The last tour departs at:
6 p.m., from April 1 to June 14
7 p.m., from June 15 to Labor Day
6 p.m., from the day after Labor Day to October 31
4 p.m., from November 1 to March 31 (5 p.m. on weekends)
The Car and Carriage Caravan Museum opens at 9 a.m. and closes 1 1/2 hours after last Caverns tour.
Rates*
$19.00 Adults
$ 9.00 Children (6 thru 12 years of age)
No charge for children 5 and under when accompanied by a parent or guardian.
$16.00 Senior Citizen (62 years of age or older)
* Special Event Day on August 9, 2008 – add $2 for each adult and each senior citizen.
Group Rates (Minimum 20 or more paying persons)
$ 13.00 Adults
$ 6.00 Children (thru 12 years of age)
Hours and Rates are subject to change.
Special Ticket Plans
Annual Family Fun Pass: $105.00 for 4 persons
Unlimited visits for 12 months
10% discount on all Luray Caverns gift shop purchases
$4.00 ticket discount for each additional adult guest
Adventure Club: an additional $9.00 per child, 12 and under
Member receives an Adventure Club T-Shirt and Membership Card
LODGING
Luray Caverns Motel East
Located across from the Luray Singing Tower at the east entrance to Luray Caverns, this beautiful, native-stone motel offers tranquil views of the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah National Park. Second-floor rooms offer balconies. Free breakfast buffet for two, swimming pool. AAA approved. Golf packages at Caverns Country Club (1½ miles away) available. Excellent dining nearby.
Luray Caverns Motel West
This single-story colonial-style motel at the west entrance to Luray Caverns offers a country setting, with beautiful views of the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah National Park. Free breakfast buffet for two, swimming pool. AAA approved. Golf packages at Caverns Country Club (1½ miles away) available. Excellent dining nearby.
DIRECTIONS
Luray Caverns is located in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, just 90 minutes from Washington, D.C.,10 minutes from the central entrance to Skyline Drive and Shenandoah National Park, and 15 minutes from I-81 at New Market, Virginia. This U.S. Natural Landmark is less than a day’s drive from many east-coast cities and near the principal routes for Washington, D.C.; Williamsburg, Virginia; the Pennsylvania Dutch Region; and the Great Smoky Mountains.
WASHINGTON DC (89 miles):
I-66 West to Gainesville; US 29 South to Warrenton; US 211 West to Luray Caverns (45 minutes from Warrenton, 90 minutes from Capital Beltway).
Luray Caverns
101 Cave Hill Road
Luray, VA. 22835