Cave environments on Earth have long provided shelter to a variety of organisms, from microbes to humans. Though their scales of interest differ vastly, these two examples have sought the same comfort from caves: a stable and sheltered environment, protected from the woes of the surface world. Since the discovery of lava caves on Mars (see Sauro et al., 2020 for a review), they have become of renewed interest as targets for human shelter in future missions, as well as areas of astrobiological interest, with the potential of harboring traces of extant or extinct extraterrestrial life.