In the early 1960s, a young scientist entered a cave in the French Alps intending to study glacial formations. What followed was not just a geological survey, but an experience that would draw international scientific attention for reasons unrelated to rocks or ice.
Over two months later, he emerged from the darkness wearing protective goggles. Disoriented, he was unaware of the actual date. Something fundamental had changed—not only for him, but potentially for how science understood the human relationship with time itself.
At the time, few researchers were seriously exploring how the absence of natural light and social structures could alter physiological cycles. The idea that the body might possess its own autonomous timekeeping system was still under early investigation, mostly through animal studies in laboratory settings.
Evidence for the Body’s Internal Clock
In July 1962, French geologist Michel Siffre, then 23, entered the Scarasson cave, located 130 metres below the surface near the Italian border. He brought no clock, no calendar, and no exposure to sunlight. Using only a telephone, he reported to a surface team when he ate, woke, or went to sleep.
Temperatures inside the cave hovered just above freezing. Humidity was close to 100 percent. Over the following weeks, Siffre’s perception of time began to drift. In an interview with Scientific American, he recalled, “I lost all notion of time. I could tell if it was morning or evening, but that was it. I thought I’d been down there for 35 days. It had been 63”.

His sleep and wake cycles extended beyond the standard 24-hour rhythm. During a follow-up experiment in 1972, conducted in Texas in partnership with NASA, his internal days stretched to as long as 48 hours. These results offered rare data on human circadian behaviour in the absence of time cues, as detailed in this chronobiology feature examining Siffre’s legacy.
Subsequent research by institutions including the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics and Harvard Medical School confirmed that a small region in the brain—the suprachiasmatic nucleus—acts as the master clock for coordinating circadian rhythms. These neurons regulate daily physiological cycles, even without external light or time markers.
Relevance to Spaceflight and Confined Environments
The initial experiment was informal and self-funded. Its impact, however, extended rapidly into fields concerned with sensory deprivation, isolation, and performance under extreme conditions.
Siffre’s 1972 experiment was designed in collaboration with NASA to simulate the challenges faced by astronauts during long-duration space missions. Apollo crews had already reported time disorientation, prompting concerns about the psychological strain of extended isolation. The experiment helped shape future approaches to monitoring biological rhythms in space.
In a 2022 report by the European Space Agency, Siffre’s work was cited as foundational to analog astronaut studies—Earth-based simulations used to investigate the cognitive and behavioural impacts of time isolation on human crews.
Military interest followed, particularly in submarine operations where crews spend weeks or months in sealed, artificial environments. In an interview with Cabinet, Siffre explained, “It was the Cold War… France had also just begun its nuclear submarine program. French headquarters knew nothing about how best to organize the sleep cycle of submariners.”
NASA later supported additional analysis of his biometric data using mathematical modelling to better understand human adaptation to isolation and variable light conditions.
Cognitive Strain Under Time Isolation
Although Siffre remained physically stable throughout the experiments, he reported significant cognitive challenges. These included memory lapses, emotional flattening, and reduced verbal clarity—symptoms now recognised in studies of sensory deprivation and confinement.
His observations are echoed in a 2020 review published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience, which explores the link between circadian rhythm disruption and a range of brain disorders, including mood instability, cognitive decline, and sleep-related conditions. The article notes that such effects intensify with prolonged isolation or environmental desynchronisation.

Other subjects who later undertook similar isolation experiments under Siffre’s supervision exhibited similar physiological irregularities. In one documented case, a participant remained asleep for over 30 hours without interruption, raising alarms on the surface. The experiment demonstrated the brain’s flexibility—but also its vulnerability—when separated from daily light-dark cycles.
Although the methodology would not meet today’s clinical research standards, the consistency of the findings over multiple trials positioned Siffre’s work as a unique dataset in real-world circadian disruption studies.
Expanding Research Into Biological Timing
Interest in circadian rhythms has increased substantially in the years since Siffre’s experiments. Today, medical researchers are investigating how the timing of treatments, aligned with internal biological clocks, may improve outcomes in oncology, endocrinology, and mental health.
Workplaces are applying chronobiological principles to study fatigue, alertness, and decision-making in shift workers, emergency personnel, and transport operators. Sleep specialists cite irregular exposure to light, travel, and screen time as contributors to chronic circadian misalignment in modern populations.
Space agencies, meanwhile, continue to test human resilience in environments devoid of conventional time cues. Simulations of Mars missions, Arctic stations, and underwater laboratories rely on controlled light exposure and sleep scheduling strategies to support team performance and psychological stability.
Now in his eighties, Siffre lives in Nice, France. Among the few physical mementos of his career is a tube of electrode paste used by Apollo astronauts, gifted to him by NASA. It reflects a lasting connection between his early cave experiments and the expanding exploration of human time perception in extreme environments.
