Cathedral Caves should not be confused with Te Whanganui-A-Hei (Cathedral Cove) Marine Reserve.
Cathedral Caves | |
Type: | Cave |
Geology: | Sandstone |
Map: | New Zealand |
Map Relief: | yes |
Coordinates: | -46.6084°N 169.3813°W |
Age: | 160 mya |
Operator: | Kāi Tahu |
Website: | https://www.cathedralcaves.co.nz/ |
The Cathedral Caves are two connected limestone sea caves located on Waipati Beach, south of Papatowai, on the Catlins Coast in the southeast corner of New Zealand's South Island.[1] The two main entrances join together within the cliff to form one big cave. One arm of the cave has a high ceiling.[2] Often blue penguins will emerge from the gloom at the far end of the cave. And occasionally a sealion might be around.
The 199m-long cave is formed in Jurassic sandstone (about 160 million years old) of the Murihiku Terrane, though the cave itself is much younger, ten to hundreds of thousands of years old. They were named by Thomas Hocken who noted how the caves reverberated noise[3] and their resemblance to European cathedrals.[4] The caves are open during summer - about mid October to mid April and only accessible when conditions are safe - see Cathedral Caves website for opening times. They are managed by Kāi Tahu descendants.[5] A small entry charge is payable by card only.