Nutty Putty Cave Map May 2026
On November 24, 2009, John Jones squeezed into the narrow fissure. He was 400 feet from the entrance. Because he thought the passage widened out, he kept moving forward until he reached a tight "S-curve" in the rock. Unable to turn around, he attempted to go head-first through the curve.
He became wedged upside down at a 70-degree angle. His feet were above his head.
The rescue operation is now a legendary case study in extreme rescue failure. Over 100 rescuers tried for 27 hours to extract him. They drilled anchors, set up rope systems, and even tried a "slide-board" technique.
At one point, the rescue team did free his arms and upper body. But when they pulled, his legs jammed tighter. The map showed that the passage narrowed to a "V" shape. The clay acted like a Chinese finger trap: pulling only made it worse. nutty putty cave map
Because he was upside down, blood pooled in his lungs and heart (orthostatic intolerance). His heart stopped due to cardiac arrest. The official cause of death was listed as asphyxiation/hypoxia due to chest compression.
Once he was declared dead, the rescuers faced a horrific ethical choice: recovering his body would require dismemberment, or blasting the rock. The Jones family decided the body should remain.
The official map clearly shows The Crack as a blind passage—it goes nowhere. However, Jones and his brother mistakenly believed it connected to a larger area called The Big Slide due to an old, informal hand-drawn map. This error led him to enter a passage that was less than 10 inches high, with a ceiling that sloped downward, trapping him in an inverted position. On November 24, 2009, John Jones squeezed into
The tragedy of 2009 revolves around a specific spot on the map: The Big Slide (also called "The Chute"). On the map, The Big Slide is a yellowish-tan line branching off the main route, leading to a room called "Bob's Way."
However, the map also notes a smaller, unnamed passage near the top of The Big Slide. This passage leads to "Ed's Push"—a vertical chimney that goes down to an area called "The Birth Canal."
Here is where the map became a weapon of ironic tragedy. In 2009, John Edward Jones (a 26-year-old medical student and experienced hiker, though not a technical caver) was exploring with his brother Josh. They were using a laminated copy of the map. Unable to turn around, he attempted to go
The map legend indicated that "The Big Slide" was a large, open (though steep) decline that eventually led to a large room. Jones believed he was in "The Big Slide." In reality, due to a navigational error in the dark, he had entered the unnamed vertical chimney leading to "Ed's Push."
Because the map does not clearly label this chimney as a distinct, separate, and vertical passage (it looks like a slight bulge on the line), Jones mistook a 10-inch-wide vertical tube for a 45-degree sloping slide. He entered head-first.
The cave is a hydrothermal maze cave, not a typical solution cave. Its passages are narrow, angular, and often dead-end. Major areas include: