First enacted in 1966, the Cave Protection Act was established to protect the cave and karst resources of the Commonwealth. Click here to read a paper by the current Chairman of the Cave Board, The Virginia Cave Board: The First Fifty Years (1966-2015), which summarizes the Act and enforcement actions taken over the more than 40 years of its existence. This article was published in The Journal of Cave and Karst Studies, v. 71, no. 3 (December 2009), p. 204-209 and used with permission of the National Speleological Society (www.caves.org).
§ 10.1-1000. | Definitions. | § 10.1-1005. | Pollution; penalties. |
§ 10.1-1001. | Cave Board; qualifications; officers. | § 10.1-1006. | Disturbance of naturally occurring organisms; scientific collecting permits; penalties. |
§ 10.1-1002. | Powers and duties of Cave Board. | § 10.1-1007. | Sale of speleothems; penalties. |
§ 10.1-1003. | Permits for excavation and scientific investigation; how obtained; penalties. | § 10.1-1008. | Liability of owners and agents limited; sovereign immunity of Commonwealth not waived. |
§ 10.1-1004. | Vandalism; penalties. |
As used in this chapter, unless the context requires a different meaning:
"Board" means the Cave Board.
"Cave" means any naturally occurring void, cavity, recess, or system of interconnecting passages beneath the surface of the earth or within a cliff or ledge including natural subsurface water and drainage systems, but not including any mine, tunnel, aqueduct, or other man-made excavation, which is large enough to permit a person to enter. The word "cave" includes or is synonymous with cavern, sinkhole, natural pit, grotto, and rock shelter.
"Cave life" means any rare or endangered animal or other life form which normally occurs in, uses, visits, or inhabits any cave or subterranean water system.
"Commercial cave" means any cave utilized by the owner for the purposes of exhibition to the general public as a profit or nonprofit enterprise, wherein a fee is collected for entry.
"Gate" means any structure or device located to limit or prohibit access or entry to any cave.
"Material" means all or any part of any archaeological, paleontological, biological, or historical item including, but not limited to, any petroglyph, pictograph, basketry, human remains, tool, beads, pottery, projectile point, remains a historical mining activity or any other occupation found in any cave.
"Owner" means a person who owns title to land where a cave is located, including a person who owns title to a leasehold estate in such land, and including the Commonwealth and any of its agencies, departments, boards, bureaus, commissions, or authorities, as well as counties, municipalities, and other political subdivisions of the Commonwealth.
"Person" means any individual, partnership, firm, association, trust, or corporation or other legal entity.
"Sinkhole" means a closed topographic depression or basin, generally draining underground, including, but not restricted to, a doline, uvala, blind valley, or sink.
"Speleogen" means an erosional feature of the cave boundary and includes or is synonymous with anastomoses, scallops, rills, flutes, spongework, and pendants.
"Speleothem" means a natural mineral formation or deposit occurring in a cave. This includes or is synonymous with stalagmite, stalactite, helectite, shield, anthrodite, gypsum flower and needle, angel's hair, soda straw, drapery, bacon, cave pearl, popcorn (coral), rimstone dam, column, palette, flowstone, et cetera. Speleothems are commonly composed of calcite, epsomite, gypsum, aragonite, celestite, and other similar minerals. (1979, c. 252, §10-150.12; 1988, c. 891.)
§ 10.1-1001. Cave Board; qualifications; officers.
A. The Cave Board is continued within the Department of Conservation and Recreation and shall consist of the Director of the Department of Historical Resources, or his designee, serving in an ex officio capacity and eleven citizens of Virginia appointed by the Governor for four-year terms. Appointments shall be made on the basis of activity and knowledge in the conservation, exploration, study and management of caves.
B. The Cave Board shall meet at least three times a year. Six members shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. The Board shall annually elect a chairman, vice-chairman and recording secretary and such other officers as the Board deems 745; 1984, c. 750; 1985, c. 448; 1988, c. 891; 1989, c. 656.)
§ 10.1-1002. Powers and duties of Cave Board.
A. The Cave Board may perform all tasks necessary to carry out the purposes of this chapter, including the following:
1. Accept any gift, money, security or other source of funding and expend such funds to effectuate the purposes of this chapter.
2. Serve as an advisory board to any requesting state agency on matters relating to caves and karst.
3. Conduct and maintain an inventory of publicly owned caves in Virginia.
4. Provide cave management expertise and service to requesting public agencies and cave owners.
5. Maintain a current list of all significant caves in Virginia and report any real and present danger to such caves.
6. Provide cave data for use by state in other governmental agencies.
7. Publish or assist in publishing articles, pamphlets, brochures or books on caves and cave-related concerns.
8. Facilitate data gathering and research efforts on caves.
9. Advise civil defense authorities on the present and future use of Virginia caves in civil defense.
10. Advise on the need for and desirability of a state cave recreation plan.
11. Inform the public about the value of cave resources and importance of preserving them for the citizens of the Commonwealth.
B. The Cave Board shall have the duty to:
1. Protect the rare, unique and irreplaceable minerals and archaeological resources found in caves.
2. Protect and maintain cave life.
3. Protect the groundwater flow which naturally occurs in caves from water pollution.
4. Protect the integrity of caves that have unique characteristics or are exemplary natural community types.
5. Make recommendations to interested state agencies concerning any proposed rule, regulation or administrative policy which directly affects the use and conservation of caves in this Commonwealth.
6. Study any matters of special concern relating to caves and karst. (1979, c. 252. § 10-150.11; 1979, c. 433, §§ 9-152.1, 9-152.3 to 9-152.5; 1980, c. 745; 1984, cc. 734, 750; 1985, c. 448; 1988, c. 891.)
§ 10.1-1003. Permits for excavation and scientific investigation; how obtained; penalties.
A. In addition to the written permission to the owner required to by § 10.1-1004 a permit shall be obtained from the Department of Conservation and Recreation prior to excavating or removing any archaeological, paleontological, prehistoric, or historic feature of any cave. The Department shall issue a permit to excavate or remove such a feature if it finds with the concurrence of the Director of the Department of Historical Resources that it is in the best interest of the Commonwealth and that the applicant meets the criteria of this section. The permit shall be issued for a period of two years and may be renewed upon expiration. Such permit shall not be transferable; however, the provisions of this section shall not preclude any person from working under the direct supervision of the permittee.
B. All field investigations, explorations, or recovery operations undertaken under this section shall be carried out under the general supervision of the Department and in a manner to ensure that the maximum amount of historic, scientific, archaeologic, and educational information may be recovered and preserved in addition to the physical recovery of objects.
C. A person applying for permit pursuant to this section shall:
1. Be a historic, scientific, or educational institution, or a professional or amateur historian, biologist, archaeologist or paleontologist, who is qualified and recognized in these areas of field investigations.
2. Provide a detailed statement to the Department giving the reasons and objectives for excavation or removal and the benefits expected to be obtained from the contemplated work.
3. Provide data and results of any completed excavation, study, or collection at the first of each calendar year.
4. Obtain the prior written permission of the owner if the site of the proposed excavation is on privately owned land.
5. Carry the permit while exercising the privileges granted. D. Any person who fails to obtain a permit required by subsection A hereof of shall be guilty of the Class 1 misdemeanor. Any violation of subsection C hereof shall be punished as a Class 3 misdemeanor, and permit shall be revoked.
E. The provisions of this section shall not apply to any person in any cave located on his own property. (1979, c. 252, § 10-150.16; 1982, c. 81; 1984, c. 750; 1988, c. 891; 1989, c. 656.)
§ 10.1-1004. Vandalism; penalties.
A. It shall be unlawful for any person, without express, prior, written permission of the owner, to:
1. Break, break off, crack, carve upon, write, burn, or otherwise mark upon, remove, or in any manner destroy, disturb, deface, mar, or harm the surfaces of any cave or any natural material which may be found therein, whether attached or broken, including speleothems, speleogens, and sedimentary deposits. The provisions of this section shall not prohibit minimal disturbance for scientific exploration.
2. Break, force, tamper with, or otherwise disturb a lock, gate, door, or other obstruction designed to control or prevent access to any cave, even though entrance thereto may not be gained.
3. Remove, deface, or tamper with a sign stating that a cave is posted or citing provisions of this chapter.
4. Excavate, remove, destroy, injure, deface, or in any disturb any burial grounds, historic or prehistoric resources, archaeological or paleontological site or any part thereof, including relics, inscriptions, saltpeter workings, fossils, bones, remains of historical human activity, or any other such features which may be found in any cave, except those caves owned by the Commonwealth or designated as Commonwealth archaeological sites or zones, and which are subject to the provisions of the Virginia Antiquities Act (§ 10.1-2300 et seq.).
B. Entering or remaining in a cave which has not been posted by the owner shall not by itself constitute a violation of the section.
C. Any violation of this section shall we punished as a Class 1 misdemeanor.
D. The provisions of this section shall not apply to an owner of a cave on his own property. (1979, c. 252, § 10-150.13; 1982, c. 81; 1988, c. 891.)
§ 10.1-1005. Pollution; penalties.
A. It shall be unlawful for any person, without express, prior, written permission of the owner, to store, dump, litter, dispose of or otherwise place any refuse, garbage, dead animals, sewage, or toxic substances harmful to cave life or humans, in any cave or sinkhole. It shall also be unlawful to burn within a cave or sinkhole any material which produces any smoke or gas which is harmful to any naturally occurring organism in any cave.
B. Any violation of this section shall be punished as a Class 1 misdemeanor. (1979, c. 252, § 10-150.14; 1982, c. 81; 1988, c. 891.)
§ 10.1-1006. Disturbance of naturally occurring organisms; scientific collecting permits; penalties.
A. It shall be unlawful to remove, kill, harm, or otherwise disturb any naturally occurring organisms within any cave, except for safety or health reasons; however, scientific collecting permits may be obtained from the Department.
B. Any violation of this section shall be punished as a Class 3 misdemeanor. (1979, c. 252, § 10-150.15; 1988, c. 891.)
§ 10.1-1007. Sale of speleothems; penalties.
It shall be unlawful for any person to sell or offer for sale any speleothems in this Commonwealth, or to export them for sale outside the Commonwealth. Any violation of this section shall the punished as a Class 1 misdemeanor. (1979, c. 252, § 10-150.17; 1982, c. 81; 1988, c. 891.)
§ 10.1-1008. Liability of owners and agents limited; sovereign immunity of Commonwealth not waived.
Neither the owner of a cave nor his authorized agents acting within the scope of their authority are liable for injuries sustained by any person using the cave for recreational or scientific purposes if no charge has been made for the use of the cave, notwithstanding that an inquiry as to the experience or expertise of the individual seeking consent may have been made.
Nothing in this section shall be construed to constitute a waiver of the sovereign immunity of the Commonwealth or any of its boards, apartments, bureaus, or agencies. (1979, c. 252, § 10-150.18; 1988, c. 891.)