The cave houses the largest known underground chamber in the world, Sarawak Chamber.
The cave once housed Stone Age human beings 700,000 years ago and features a crystallined inner chamber.
The caves also housed sheep, goats and oxen.
She was a cook (the cave once housed a restaurant) and lapidary jeweler who lived in the blasted-out home until 1974.
The caves house a Buddhist monastery dating back to the 2nd century BC.
The cave housed 15-30 individuals because it was limited by the need for mobility and by how much the actual land could house people.
The cave houses an inhabited area of approximately 100 square meters and is located about 250 meters from today's shoreline.
The murals cover an area equivalent to more than one and a half football fields, and the caves also house some 2,000 painted sculptures.
Christians believe that the cave houses the remains of monks who were massacred by the Persians in 614.
Galápagos penguins are frequently seen, and a small cave behind Pinnacle Rock houses a breeding colony.