# Underground
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Cave Without A Name!
Hello everyone, today we are visiting Cave Without a Name. Nestled just outside of Boerne is one of the most beautiful cave systems in Texas. Opened for public tours in 1939 and was named by a little boy who said it was too beautiful for a name. You can climb down the stares and see the history where at one time the cave was used to produce moonshine during the prohibition and then go further to see the amazing rooms and formations. They regularly cave concerts in the cave as well. It has amazing acoustics and tickets sell out fast. If you haven't visited this cave yet you should put it on your list of places to visit. After your tour you can visit the gift shop and buy a geode to break or go sluice a bag of dirt to collect gems and fossils. Affilate link to walmart: <a href="https://brandcycle.shop/r2py2">https://brandcycle.shop/r2py2</a> Affiliate link to shop Disney: <a href="https://brandcycle.shop/4j3wi">https://brandcycle.shop/4j3wi</a> Affiliate links to the camera equipment we use: Cannon G7X: <a href="https://amzn.to/3wcZFjw">https://amzn.to/3wcZFjw</a>
Buried Under 175 Water Street in New York City is An 18th Century British Merchant Ship
In 1982, the excavation of a preconstruction site at 175 Water Street in Manhattan, New York revealed the hull of an 18th-century merchant ship that was buried 21 feet under the street level.
The Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern is one of the most unique places you can go in the Lone Star State
Mystical Park PhotoPhoto by Lerone Pieters from Burst. “Descending into the Cistern the first time was like discovering some ancient ruin,” said Larry Page, the principal architect of the redesign, per Houstonia.