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Kents Cavern is first recorded as Kents Hole Close on a 1659 deed when the land was leased to John Black.
The earliest evidence of exploration of the caves in historic times are the inscriptions " William Petre 1571 " and " Robert Hedges 1688 " engraved on stalagmites, and the first recorded excavation was that of Thomas Northmore in 1824.
Northmore's work attracted the attention of William Buckland, the first Reader in Geology at the University of Oxford, who sent a party including John MacEnery to explore the caves in an attempt to find evidence that Mithras was once worshipped in the area.
MacEnery, the Roman Catholic chaplain at Torre Abbey, conducted systematic excavations between 1824 and 1829.
When MacEnery reported to the British Association the discovery of flint tools below the stalagmites on the cave floor, his work was derided as contrary to Bishop James Ussher's Biblical chronology dating the Creation to 4004 BC.

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