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It was like pressing pause : Group of 15 volunteers emerges from 40-day isolation experiment in a cave — RT World News

French volunteers who lived in a cave with no phones, clocks, or sunlight for 40 days say it was great

» French volunteers who lived in a cave with no phones, clocks, or sunlight for 40 days say it was great French volunteers who lived in a cave with no phones, clocks, or sunlight for 40 days say it was great Julian KossoffApr 25, 2021, 21:54 IST Volunteers leave the Lombrives cave after spending 40 days in the cave in Ussat-les-Bains, southern of France, on April 24, 2021.Fred Scheiber/AFP via Getty Images French volunteers have emerged from a cave after spending 40 days with no clocks or phones. They took part in the Deep Time project, which explored the limits of human isolation. Two-thirds of the group say they wanted to stay in the cave for longer.

French volunteers leave cave after 40-day endurance trial - Newspaper

Volunteers leave the Lombrives cave after spending 40 days in the cave in Ussat-les-Bains, southern of France, on Saturday. AFP TARASCON ARIGE: A group of 15 French volunteers on Saturday left a cave where they had stayed for 40 days, in an experiment probing the limits of human adaptability to isolation. Dazzled by the light and with pale faces but otherwise healthy, the group led by French-Swiss explorer Christian Clot emerged at around 10:30am from the Lombrives cave in Ariege, southwest France. The underground isolation experiment saw the subjects, aged between 27 and 50, give up watches, phones and natural light, exchanging modern comforts for a cave system with a constant 12 Celsius (54 Fahrenheit) temperature and 95 percent humidity.

Deep Time study: French volunteers leave cave after 40 days in isolation

BBC News Published image copyrightGetty Images image captionFor 40 days and 40 nights, the cave-dwelling volunteers swapped modern comforts for basic necessities A group of French volunteers have emerged from a cave after a 40-day study exploring the limits of human adaptability to isolation. The 15 participants lived in the Lombrives cave in south-west France with no phones, clocks or sunlight. They slept in tents, made their own electricity, and had no contact with the outside world. The project aimed to test how people respond to losing their sense of time and space. The so-called Deep Time experiment came to an end on Saturday, allowing the eight men and seven women, aged 27 to 50, who took part to leave the cave.

French Isolation Study for 15 People Ends After 40 Days in Cave

French Isolation Study for 15 People Ends After 40 Days in Cave
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