On the 27th of April 2009, after three-month hard work, the members of SGP namely: Robert, Tomek and Beata got inside the chamber situated above the guardroom in Rzeczka complex.
On the same day, at the end of our work at about 6 p.m., we succeeded in cutting through to an unknown room. It was Robert who did it working at the stall. At the point where hewing was done, some light appeared which was coming from our camera lighting supplied through a pipe at the bottom of the chamber.
The team was able to start widening the hewed hole and removing mine output. Three months of hard and exhausting work proved to be successful. Reaching the chamber was not an easy job. Before doing it, we had to hew a 6-metre-long tunnel in tough concrete and rocks with a percussion hammer. Filling one wheelbarrow took about 4-5 hours. After one month we had to use a new hammer because the previous one was completely worn out. The chamber is not big and has an irregular shape. The distance between the walls at the widest point is 3 metres. The height at the highest point is 1,80 m. It was hewed in gneiss rock and its lower part is paved with stones mixed with concrete. The walls are covered with a thick layer of something which in macroscopic scale looks like lime. We are going to examine its composition in the future. On the floor, there is a big amount of loose material which fell down from the roof where a fault is.
In the middle of the chamber, there is also a specific smell of decayed wood. Moreover, There protrude 4 steel pipes covered with couplings. The camera was installed in one of the pipes. In spite of the fact that the space was examined, photographed and measured thoroughly, the purpose of the pipes has not been explained so far, like many other issues connected with the subject of our research. There are a lot of goals and tasks before us which we would like to deal with because explaining mysteries is the sense of lives of genuine explorers.















