- Source: Robert Gulden
- Diponegoro
- Syarif Kasim II dari Siak
- Soemitro Djojohadikoesoemo
- Rupiah Hindia Belanda
- Hamim Tohari Djazuli
- Putra mahkota
- Geger Sepehi
- Saldo untung
- Hindia Belanda
- Hamengkubuwana IX
- Robert Gulden
- Bjørn Gulden
- Deaths in November 2022
- Robert Louis-Dreyfus
- National Speleological Society
- The Testament of Cornelius Gulden
- Het Gulden Cabinet
- Indonesian rupiah
- West Virginia Speleological Survey
- Adidas Campus
Robert Gulden, nicknamed Bob, (March 30, 1948 – November 30, 2022, age 74) was a prominent cave surveyor and cartographer. From 1976 until his death, Gulden kept the world's best-known database of long and deep caves.
Early life
Gulden was born on March 30, 1948, in Starnberg, West Germany, to Irma and Edgar Walt Gulden. He began caving in 1964 while living in Okinawa, Japan.
Career
Gulden joined the National Speleological Society in 1971. He began keeping the database for which he was best known in 1976, while he was helping to survey the Friars Hole Cave System in West Virginia. He also helped explore and map Great Onyx Cave at Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky, Gap Cave in Cumberland Gap National Historical Park in Virginia, and Siler's Cave in West Virginia.
He belonged to a caving club called the Gangsta Mappers, a group of "guerrilla cartographers who remap previously explored caves, but with more care and in greater detail", the New York Times reported in 2004.
In March 2022, Gulden was presented with the Karst Award, given annually to an outstanding member of the cave and karst field by the Karst Waters Institute.
Death
Gulden died in his sleep on November 30, 2022. Bob's wife Janice Louise preceded him in death.
Books
Caves of the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia, co-written with Mark J. Johnsson. Published 1984 by the West Virginia Speleological Survey.
See also
List of longest caves in the United States
External links
caverbob.com[usurped]: Gulden's personal website, home to his various cave databases[usurped]