A group of enthusiastic researchers found what might be one's worst nightmares -- the world's biggest spiderweb, home to over 110,000 spiders, spans an area of 1,140 square feet, and made in the absence of sunlight, with high hydrogen-sulfur gas levels in a cave on the Albanian-Greek border.

In their research published in the Subterranean Biology journal, the researchers called it \"the first documented case of colonial web formation in these species.\" Their data confirmed the two dominant spider species inhabiting the cave, co-existing in a manner that stunned the scientists.

Lead author István Urák, in an interview with Live Science, said, \"The natural world still holds countless surprises for us. If I were to attempt to put into words all the emotions that surged through me [when I

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