Jump to content

Pavel Yevgenyevich Demidov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pavel Yevgenyevich Demidov
Demidov in 2019
Born(1971-08-13)13 August 1971
Died23 August 2020(2020-08-23) (aged 49)
Alma materOdesa Maritime Academy
Years active1994–2020
Known forSpeleology, deep cave projects
Spouse
Elena Demidova
(m. 1994; div. 2013)
Signature

Pavel Yevgenyevich Demidov (Russian: Павел Евгеньевич Демидов; 13 August 1971 – 23 August 2020) was a Russian speleologist, most known for his work in extreme cave exploration, especially as the leader of the Perovo-speleo team expeditions to Veryovkina Cave on Arabika massif in Abkhazia, from 2017 the deepest cave in the world.[1][2][3][4]

Early life, education and career

[edit]

Demidov was born in Moscow to Yevgeny Pavlovich Demidov, a land improvement engineer, and to Elvira Ivanovna Mazeina, an electric assembly technician in missile production. After studying at the School No. 668 (1978–1988) in Moscow, he graduated in navigation at Odesa Maritime Academy (1988–1994).[2] The study included a year and a half at sea, sailing the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Sea on school's training and trading vessels. As there was no suitable job in the Russian merchant fleet for him at the time, he returned to Moscow in 1994. After different jobs, including a 7-month stint aboard a Russian fishing boat in Fiji in 2004 as a representative of ship owner, Tuna Fishing Company, he settled in industrial rope access.[2]

Speleology

[edit]

During school excursions to the mountains of Crimea, Western Caucasus and during yearly trips to the village Verkhnyaya (Upper) Sysert in the southern Ural Mountains, where his grandmother lived, Demidov developed an interest in nature and in mountain climbing.[2] To get better acquainted with rope climbing he enlisted in the caving school of the Perovo caving club in Moscow in 2000. Peshchera Zabludshikh (Cave of the Lost) of Alek mountain range above Sochi, close to the Black Sea was the first cave he visited, in February 2000.[2][5] The cave, discovered in 1966, was often visited by caving schools as it is difficult enough and deep enough, to the terminal siphon at −420 m. Demidov and 3 other caving school participants: Pyotr Lyubimov (Petya), Konstantin Zverev (Kostya) and Roman Zverev managed to bypass the siphon and discovered a new branch of the cave on the other side.[2] They made 5 more expeditions in 2000, 3 to the same cave,[6] one to a cave in the Skalisty Range, North Caucasus – and one to Veryovkina cave which was discovered in 1968, rediscovered in 1982 and in 1986 explored to −440 m. The expedition in 2000 was the first to this cave after the 1992/93 war in Abkhazia, and also the first expedition using the single-rope technique. As there are no suitable caves in central Russia caving excursions are always in form of expeditions which usually last from three weeks to one month.[2]

In 2002 Demidov, Lyubimov and both Zverevs founded the Perovo-speleo team and the first cave where the team made a major contribution was Only Stones cave in August 2002, on Arabika massif, in the Dzou area.[7] The cave, discovered by Italians, is close to a lake, at 2,000 m above sea level, and has a tall entrance. At the time it was 200 m deep and they managed to deepen it to 360 m. During an expedition in August 2004 they discovered Vyatskaya cave, in the same area.[8] Only Stones ended with a large collapse while Vyatskaya continued, so they made several further expeditions into it, after several years it was 453 m deep.[9] After 2001 Demidov and the team were also developing several caves on the Bzyb massif, adjacent to Arabika, such as Khabyu cave in 2001,[10] Napra cave in 2001–2003,[11][12] and Pantyukhinskaya cave in 2008.[13] They also participated in expeditions to caves of other caving clubs, to Krubera-Voronya on Arabika in 2005,[14] to Snezhnaya cave on Bzyb in 2016.[15]

Veryovkina – profile with surface – north-south from the west

Veryovkina Cave

[edit]

When the team started to work in Veryovkina in 2000 it was 440 m deep with a narrow and long meander at the bottom.[16] It was necessary to carry the excavated material very far. In November 2002 there was one more trip to the bottom: Demidov, Kostya, Petya, Grigory Sanevich (Grisha), also with Danila and Filip Cherednichenko from St. Petersburg. They decided to search for some other continuation on the way from the bottom to the entrance. At the depth of 120 m they discovered a narrow meander, where Demidov managed to pass through, to the top of a shaft. It continued.[17] Every year until 2010 the team advanced, on 6 expeditions, following the draft in windows above the blind shaft bottoms. In 2010 they came to a meander at the depth of 320 to 340 m where they stopped and abandoned further exploration of the cave.[18]

In February 2007 Perovo-speleo started to continue the development of Moskovskaya cave. It is also situated in the Dzou area, it was explored in the eighties to a depth of 980 m; the entrance is at 2,307 m above sea level. Yevgeny Starodubov, the only one left of the team who initially explored the cave, left the cave to Perovo-speleo to develop it further. They made 5 expeditions into it. On the second expedition they dug through a narrow meander, bypassed the siphon and reached the depth of 1,000 m.[19][20] Further expeditions brought the depth of 1,250 m where an underground creek flows into a siphon.[21] For the work in Moskovskaya cave the team, led by Demidov, was awarded the A. Morozov medal for 2011, the highest Russian award for achievements in speleology.[22] Further expeditions, the last in 2015, discovered several side branches of the cave but none past the terminal siphon. As the team returned to Abkhazian coast in August 2015, to Gagra, they met Aleksey Barashkov, the new president of Perovo caving club, where the team's caving career began. They were also exploring Veryovkina and in 2009 while they traveled to the cave from Gagra, on a track high in the mountain the jeep, a GAZ-66 capsized and two explorers were injured, one badly. So Perovo speleoclub discontinued explorations in Veryovkina, until 2012. In 2013 they broke through a narrow passage at the new bottom (where Perovo-speleo stopped in 2010), at −340 m, and reached a junction of two meanders. One had a strong draft, the other had flowing water (Narnia branch). They followed the water and lost two years in that branch, it was all very narrow. In 2015 they decided to try the meander with draft and with little digging they reached another shaft, at an estimated depth of 360 m, where they stopped because of lack of rope and time. As the cave was developed by both clubs Perovo-speleo, led by Demidov, decided to proceed at that point. In the winter 2015/2016 the access was too difficult so the next, very small expedition took place in June 2016. At the bottom of the last, 30 m shaft, Yevgeny Kuzmin discovered a continuation, Babatunda, the biggest hall in the cave, 155 m deep. They reached the depth of 630 m.

Demidov ascendings the Babatunda pit in Veryovkina cave, photographed by Pyotr Lyubimov

In August 2016 a joint expedition of both teams followed and reached the depth of −1000 m, with an open continuation.[23] During the October/November 2016 expedition of the two teams the cave was deepened to 1350 m, but snow surprised the cavers on exit, roads were impassable, all-road truck could not come and they walked 3 days in the snow to reach the valley.[24] Next expedition in February 2017 used a helicopter to get to the entrance and reached the depth of 1832 m, Veryovkina cave became the second deepest in the world,[25] after Krubera-Voronya. The achievement brought Perovo-speleo team, represented by Demidov, UIS Prize for 2017 in the category The most significant discovery/exploration.[26] In early August 2017 cavers of Perovo speleo club descended to −2155 m, where they found a siphon and returned. In mid-August Perovo-speleo team, with Czech caver Zdeněk Dvořák, mapped 7 km of new horizontal passages, reached an underground river with a flowrate of 500 liters per second and two terminal siphons at the depth of 2204 m.[27][28] Veryovkina became the deepest cave in the world.[29][30][31][32] In February 2018 a small expedition of 4, led by Demidov, reached 2212 m, final depth of the cave, at the bottom of the Captain Nemo siphon.[33][34] Several expeditions followed,[35][36] including a photo trip to the bottom of the cave in September 2018 with the English cave photographer Robbie Shone,[37] during which the team was surprised by a rain storm that flooded the lower level of the cave.[1][38][39] Final cave length, 17.5 km, was surveyed in August 2019.[40]

Demidov also helped to promote scientific research in the cave, where it is possible to access an extensive net of passages below −2000 m without diving,[2] from temperature and water pressure measurements to search for new fauna species.[41][3] Veryovkina cave exploration was presented at several international events,[42][43] found a wide reaching echo,[2][44][45][46] and Demidov's experience was called for during the cave-related events of general interest.[47][48]

Other pursuits

[edit]

In October 2006 Demidov participated in an international expedition to Ghar Parau cave in Iran,[49] in July 2007 he joined the CAVEX team to Sima GESM cave in Sierra de las Nieves mountain range in Spain, in September and October 2007 and in September 2010 he took part in the Sino-Anglo-Russian expedition to deep caves of Tianxing, China.[50] In November 2012 Demidov visited Gran Caverna de Santo Tomás in Viñales, Cuba, in August 2013 caves in Northern Macedonia and in August 2014 he participated in another CAVEX team expedition to Spain, to Sima de las Puertas Illamina (BU56).[3] In January 2017 he attended the International Caving Meeting FinalMenteSpeleo2017 in Italy and in November 2017 he took part in cave rescue training in caves of Chatyr-Dag mountains in Crimea.[51] In June 2018 he joined the exploration of the cave W le Donne in Italy.[52]

In 2004 he worked on a boat at the Fiji islands, where many Russian expatriates also settled, and he returned to Fiji several times later.[3][53] From November 2008 to March 2009 he crossed the main island, Viti Levu on foot,[54] while the crossing of the second island, Vanua Levu, in 2012 failed halfway because of the wasp bite which required hospitalisation. From January to May 2019 he made a trek over the Viti Levu mountains. The caves of Fiji were not of interest to him.[3]

Death

[edit]

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic caving expeditions to deep caves on Arabika massif in the summer 2020 were cancelled, yet when the border with Abkhazia reopened on 1 August, a few expeditions nevertheless took place.[55] Demidov joined a CAVEX team expedition to the Integral cave, situated north of Veryovkina, 2,345 m above sea level, and the depth of 200 m. On 23 August, he and Stanislav Khomyakov came to the meander, which was the last explored point of the cave, at a depth of 305 m. The meander begins with a narrow passage among stones and boulders at the bottom of a collapse hall. Both cavers easily overcame this obstacle and, after passing a short meander, came to a small ledge. Demidov went back to fetch a rope, and Khomyakov remained to clear the ledge of loose stones. After a while Khomyakov, worried about Demidov's long absence, climbed back. He saw a new collapse of clay and stones with Demidov in the center of it, without any signs of life.[56]

A large rescue operation followed and on 1 September Demidov's body was lifted to the surface. The following day, 2 September, it was airlifted to Moscow.[57]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Bisharat, Andrew; Shone, Robbie (18 October 2018). "Epic flood sends cavers scrambling for their lives / A National Geographic photographer recounts his fight to escape the world's deepest cave". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 14 April 2019. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Yakopin, Primozh (December 2019). "The Man from the Deepest Cave on Earth, Part I". Descent (271). Wild Places Publishing: 36–38. Retrieved 8 December 2019.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d e Yakopin, Primozh (February 2020). "The Man from the Deepest Cave on Earth, Part II". Descent (272). Wild Places Publishing: 19–24. Retrieved 15 February 2020.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ "Чемпионат России – 2003 – Официоз / Спелео 4–5 к.с." [Championship of Russia – 2003 – Official Results / Speleo 4–5 (grade)] (in Russian). Туристско-спортивный союз России / Tourism and Sports Union of Russia. 2003. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  5. ^ Zverev, Konstantin (2003). "История спелеологических исследований засифонной части пещеры Заблудших" [Cave of the Lost, history of speleological exploration behind the siphon] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  6. ^ Demidov, Pavel (27 November 2003). ""Перово-спелео": впятером в пещере Заблудших" ["Perovo-speleo": five in the Cave of the Lost] (in Russian). Научно-производственная фирма БАСК / Research and Production Company BASK. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  7. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (2003). "Команда – История команды "Перово-спелео" в фотографиях" [The team – History of the Perovo-speleo team in photos] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  8. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (2007). "Пещера Вятская, как все начиналось (экспедиции 2004–2006 года)" [Vyatskaya cave, how it all began (expeditions 2004–2006)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  9. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (August 2008). ""Пещера Вятская – новые метры первопрохода" 2008 г." ["Vjatskaja cave – new meters of the first access" in 2008] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  10. ^ Demidov, Pavel (2001). "Хабю. (Абхазия. Февраль 2001г.)" [Khabyu. (Abkhazia. February 2001)] (in Russian). Перово Спелеоклуб / Perovo Caving Club. Archived from the original on 9 July 2017. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  11. ^ Demidov, Pavel (2001–2002). "Исследования Пещеры Напра (имени Ю. Зубени)" [Exploring Napra Cave (named after Yu. Zubeni)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  12. ^ Zverev, Konstantin (8 October 2003). "Экспедиция команды "Перово-спелео" в пещеру Напра" [Perovo-speleo team expedition to the Napra cave] (in Russian). Научно-производственная фирма БАСК / Research and Production Company BASK. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  13. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (18 August 2012). "Пещера Пантюхинская вместо Московской (февраль-март 2008 г.)" [Pantjukhinskaja cave instead of Moskovskaya (February–March 2008)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  14. ^ "Крубера (Воронья) – УСА, октябрь 2005 / Вышли" [Krubera (Voronya) – UkrSA, October 2005 / (They) Went Out] (in Russian). Маршруты – сообщество путешествующих людей / Itineraries – a community of traveling people. October 2005. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  15. ^ Yakupova, Taliya (20 January 2016). ""Кавказские пленники, или Новые приключения спелеологов." (п. "Снежная" январь 2016 г.)" [Prisoners of the Caucasus, or New Adventures of Cavers. (Snezhnaya cave, January 2016)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  16. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (2016). "Открытие и история исследования пещеры им. А. Веревкина (1968–1986 г.)" [Discovery and exploration history of the cave named after A. Veryovkin (1968–1986)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  17. ^ Zverev, Konstantin (December 2002). "Исследование пещеры имени А. Веревкина 2001–2002 год. Новое направление" [Exploration of the A. Veryovkina cave 2001–2002. New direction.] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  18. ^ Zverev, Konstantin (2009). "Пещера "Веревкина", возобновление исследований 2009 г." [Veryovkina Cave, resumption of exploration in 2009] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  19. ^ Demidov, Pavel (1 September 2012). "Пещера Московская. Долгожданный прорыв (Абхазия, зап. Кавказ, хр. Гагринский, массив Арабика) (март 2010 г.)" [Moskovskaya cave. Long-awaited breakthrough (Abkhazia, Western Caucasus, Gagra ridge, Arabica massif) (March 2010)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  20. ^ Demidov, Pavel (16 March 2010). "Новый старый километр на Арабике" [New old kilometer in Arabika] (in Russian). Ukrainian Cavers Mailing List. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  21. ^ Demidov, Pavel (March 2011). "Пещера Московская. Новый старый километр" [Moskovskaja cave. New old kilometer] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  22. ^ "Медаль памяти А.Морозова "За успехи в спелеологии"" [A. Morozov Medal "For Achievements in speleology"] (in Russian). Комиссия спелеологии и карстоведения Московского центра Русского географического общества / Speleology and Karst Studies Commission, Moscow Center of the Russian Geographical Society. 2018. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  23. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr; Demidov, Pavel (21 August 2016). "Первый километр в пещере Верёвкина" [The first kilometer in the Veryovkina cave] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  24. ^ Demidov, Pavel (6 November 2016). "Пещера им. Веревкина: Остался километр до моря" [Veryovkina cave: Now a kilometer to the sea.] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  25. ^ "Пещера имени Веревкина в Абхазии стала второй по глубине в мире!" [Veryovkina Cave in Abkhazia has become the second deepest in the world!] (in Russian). 4sport.ua. 10 March 2017. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  26. ^ "UIS Prizes 2017 Final Result / Category 4 a / The most significant discovery / exploration" (PDF). UIS Bulletin. 59 (2). UIS – Union Internationale de Spéléologie: 44. December 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  27. ^ Demidov, Pavel (11 September 2017). "По данным топосъемки глубина пещеры Верёвкина от входа составила 2204 метра" [According to the survey, the depth of Veryovkina cave from the entrance reached 2204 meters] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  28. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (2 October 2017). "Официальный доклад об экспедиции в пещеру им. А. Верёвкина (видеозапись)" [The official report on the expedition to the A. Veryovkina cave (video recording)] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  29. ^ "Deepest Cave". Guinness World Records Limited. March 2018. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  30. ^ "Самая глубокая в мире" [The Deepest (Cave) in the World] (PDF). Абхазский меридиан / Abkhaz meridian (in Russian). 4 (191). Центр гуманитарных миротворческих инициатив / Center for Humanitarian Peace Initiatives: 6. April 2018. Retrieved 18 May 2019.
  31. ^ Wendorf, Marcia (21 August 2019). "The World's Deepest Caves and the Race to the Bottom of the World". Interesting Engineering, Inc. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  32. ^ Demidov, Pavel (December 2017). "The deepest cave in the world" (PDF). UIS Bulletin. 59 (2). UIS – Union Internationale de Spéléologie: 49–51. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2018. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  33. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr; Demidov, Pavel (12 March 2018). "Экспедиция в Верёвкина март 2018. Глубина пещеры достигла -2212 метров" [Expedition to Veryovkina, March 2018. The depth of the cave reached −2212 meters.] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  34. ^ Dmitritskaya, Oliviya (9 April 2017). "Самую глубокую пещеру на планете открыли спелеологи России в Абхазии" [The deepest cave on the planet was discovered by Russian cavers in Abkhazia] (in Russian). The Caucasus Post. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  35. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (5 July 2018). "Завершилась июньская экспедиция 2018 года в пещеру Верёвкина" [The June 2018 expedition to the Vyorevkina cave ended] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  36. ^ Roccati, Christian; Caprile, Francesco (23 July 2019). "Sima Veryovkina: italiani nell'antro più profondo al mondo" [Veryovkina abyss: Italians in the deepest cave in the world] (in Italian). Mountain Blog Italia. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  37. ^ Walford, Shannon (16 May 2019). "Pro Team: Robbie Shone". 3 Legged Thing LTD. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  38. ^ Shone, Robbie (August 2020). "The Climb of His Life". National Geographic. 238 (2): 34–36. ISSN 0027-9358. Archived from the original on 7 July 2020. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  39. ^ Shone, Robbie (26 March 2020). Through the Lens with Robbie Shone (Speech). National Geographic Talk. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society. Retrieved 18 February 2020.[dead link]
  40. ^ Demidov, Pavel; Parfyonov, Oleg (3 April 2020). "Верёвкина" [Veryovkina]. speleoatlas.ru – Caving atlas of Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) (in Russian). Русское географическое общество / Russian Geographic Society. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  41. ^ Turbanov, Ilya S.; Demidov, Pavel E.; Kolesnikov, Vasiliy B.; Turbanova, Anastasia A. (2018). "Предварительные резултаты изучения беспозвомочных животных пещеры имени А. Верёвкина (Западный Кавказ, Абхазия)" [Preliminary results of invertebrate animals study in the Veryovkina Cave (The Western Caucasus, Abkhazia)]. Speleology and Spelestology. Collection of materials of IX International scientific conference. Speleology and Spelestology (in Russian). Naberezhnye Chelny: Nizhny Novgorod Pedagogical University Press. pp. 360–368. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  42. ^ Demidov, Pavel; Shone, Robbie (8–12 September 2019). Inside Mountains – Exploring the deepest cave in the world. International Mountain Conference 2019. Innsbruck: Universität Innsbruck. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  43. ^ Demidov, Pavel (17 November 2018). Veryovkina cave (Speech). Wyprawa „Lampo 2018” laureatem Nagrody im. Waldka Muchy 2018 / "Lampo 2018" expedition, the laureate of the Waldka Mucha 2018 Award (in English and Polish). Podlesice. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  44. ^ Tyler, Simon (2019). Adventures on Earth. London: Pavilion Children’s Books. p. 96. ISBN 9781843654278. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  45. ^ Pfarr, Theo; Novik, Natalia (2018). "Speläologische Streiflichter international" [International speleological highlights]. Die Höhle (in German). 69 (1–4). Verband Österreichischer Höhlenforscher: 143–145. ISSN 0018-3091.
  46. ^ Kosturkov, Tsvetan; Nenova, Milena (26 June 2020). "Interview #6 – Pavel Demidov, Russia". Pod RB. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  47. ^ Demidov, Pavel (2019). "Thai Cave Rescue: Elon Musk was Wrong". Mountain Planet. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  48. ^ Kofanov, Sergey (17 July 2018). "Спелеолог Павел Демидов об истории спасения детей в Таиланде" [Speleologist Pavel Demidov on the saving children in Thailand] (in Russian). RISK.RU. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  49. ^ Oganov, Artyom (13 November 2006). "Международная экспедиция в пещеры Ирана – Парау 2006" [International Caving Expedition to Iran – Parau 2006] (in Russian). Mountain.RU. Retrieved 15 February 2020.
  50. ^ Parshin, Dmitry (2007). "Международная экспедиция в пещеры Китая. Тяньсин 2007" [International expedition to the caves of China. Tianxin 2007] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  51. ^ Lyubimov, Pyotr (26 January 2017). "Слёт итальянских спелеологов FinalMenteSpeleo2017" [The International Caving Meeting FinalMenteSpeleo2017] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  52. ^ Magni, Federico (24 March 2018). "Grigna, viaggio al centro delle Alpi" [Grigna, voyage to the center of the Alps] (in Italian). Lecco: Il Giorno. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  53. ^ "Павел Демидов" [Pavel Demidov] (in Russian). Маршруты – сообщество путешествующих людей / Itineraries – a community of traveling people. 6 April 2007. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
  54. ^ Demidov, Pavel (31 August 2012). "Приключения Павла Демидова на острове Фиджи 2008 г." [Adventures of Pavel Demidov on the island of Fiji in 2008] (in Russian). incave.org. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  55. ^ "Абхазия открыла границу с Россией" [Abkhazia opens border with Russia] (in Russian). Известия / Izvestija. 1 August 2020. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  56. ^ Yershov, Aleksandr (30 August 2020). "В неисследованной пещере в Абхазии погиб российский спелеолог" [Russian speleologist died in an unexplored cave in Abkhazia] (in Russian). Российская газета / Rossijskaja gazeta. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  57. ^ "Тело погибшего в Абхазии российского спелеолога отправили в Москву" [The body of the Russian speleologist who died in Abkhazia was sent to Moscow] (in Russian). ТАСС, информационное агентство / TASS, news agency. 2 September 2020. Retrieved 19 May 2021.