There’s no natural light inside the mine, says Ricky Rhodes, a photographer who was recently invited to capture images of the mine. “The darkness of the mine has really stuck with me,” he says. “I’ve never seen such a pure black in my life. If you turned off your headlamp, you could see nothing at all.” It’s also hot, dry, and full of salty dust. Fresh air must be pumped in, and workers are required to carry backup oxygen reserves.
To extract salt from the deposit, miners use a method called room and pillar mining. Using explosives and large machinery, they blast out large chambers from the solid rock salt. Removing too much salt could risk a mine collapse. So engineers make sure to leave behind gigantic pillars of salt to support the weight of the rock above before blasting out another chamber. This method leaves behind a collection of empty caverns, many of which are used to store broken mining equipment too large to remove from the mine. (To get machinery down into the mine in the first place, workers must bring it below ground piece by piece, where they then assemble it.)