Karst topography
Karst topography is a landscape of distinctive dissolution patterns often marked by underground
drainages. These are areas where the
bedrock has a soluble layer or layers, usually, but not always, of
carbonate rock such as
limestone or
dolomite. In such places there may be little or no surface drainage. Some areas of karst topography, such as the region of southern
Missouri and northern
Arkansas in the
USA, contain literally thousands of
caves.
The word
Karst is the
German name for
Kras, a region in
Slovenia, partially extending to
Italy, that rests on a limestone plateau. It was here that first scientific research of a karst topography was made.
 |
Source of the river Loue showing karst formations |
Karst landforms are generally the result of mildly
acidic
rainfall acting on soluble limestone or
dolostone bedrock. The process of subsurface
rock dissolution results in a topography with distinctive features, including
sinkholes or
dolines (closed basins), vertical shafts, disappearing streams, and
springs. With a sufficiently low
base level and sufficient time, complex underground drainage systems (such as karst
aquifers) and extensive
caves and cavern systems may form.
The
carbonic acid that causes these features is formed as
rain passes through the
atmosphere picking up
CO2, which dissolves in the water. Once the rain reaches the ground, it passes through the
soil, gathering up more CO
2 to form a weak carbonic acid solution: H
2O + CO
2 → H
2CO
3.
This mildly
acidic water begins to
dissolve any fractures and bedding planes in the limestone bedrock. Over time these fractures enlarge as the bedrock continues to dissolve. Openings in the rock increase in size, and an underground drainage system begins to develop, allowing more water to pass through and accelerating the formation of underground karst features.
|
Coastal erosion in limestone (here an ancient dune of coral sand). |
Somewhat less common than this limestone karst is
gypsum karst, where the solubility of the mineral
gypsum provides many similar structures to the dissolution and redeposition of calcium carbonate.
Erosion along limestone shores, common in the tropics, produces typical karst topography, including a sharp
makatea surface above the normal reach of the sea and undercuts that are mostly the result of biological activity or
bioerosion at or a little above mean sea level. Some of the most dramatic of these formations can be seen in Thailand's Phangnga Bay and Halong Bay in Vietnam.
Calcium carbonate removed by water may deposit elsewhere. In caves,
stalactites and
stalagmites are formed by deposition of calcium carbonate and other dissolved minerals as the water drips from above. An example is the
Gruta Rei do Mato in the Lagoa Santa Karst formation around
Sete Lagoas,
Brazil with a stalactite of 20 meters height.
Other formations consist of shields (where the flow is from a fissure rather than from a point), and
flowstone, which occurs when the flow of calcite-rich water is somewhat impeded and calcite is deposited in the flow.
Helictites are curlicue-shaped formations associated with the roofs and walls of caves. Larger flow-type formations are
rimstone pools and gours, which are bathtub-shaped and may contain large calcite or aragonite crystals as a result of slow
evaporation. Rivers which emerge from limestone caves may also produce
tufa terraces, consisting of layers of calcite deposited over extended periods of time as the water leaves the CO
2-rich cave environment.
|
Karst lake (Doberdo' del Lago, Italy), from underground water springing into a depression. Karst lakes have no affluent or effluent |
Farming in karst areas must take into account the excessive drainage. The soils may be fertile enough, and rainfall may be adequate, but rainwater quickly moves through the crevices into the ground, sometimes leaving the surface soil parched between rains.
Water supplies from
wells in karst topography are inherently hazardous, as the well water may simply run from a sinkhole in a cattle pasture through a cave and to the well, bypassing the normal filtering that occurs in a porous
aquifer. Karst formations are cavernous and therefore have high rates of permeability. This results in very little time for contaminants to be filtered out naturally through the pores of strata.
Groundwater in karst areas is just as easily
polluted as surface streams. All too often, sinkholes have been used as farmstead or even community
trash dumps. In karst areas where
septic tanks are the main
sewage disposal system, overloaded or malfunctioning systems dump raw sewage directly into underground channels.
The karst topography itself also poses some difficuties for human inhabitants. Sinkholes can develop gradually as surface openings enlarge, but quite often progressive
erosion is unseen and the roof of an underground cavern suddenly collapses. Such events have swallowed homes,
cattle,
cars, and farm machinery.
The
Driftless Area National Wildlife Refuge in
Iowa protects
ice age snails surviving in air chilled by flowing over buried karst ice formations.
Pseudokarst occurs where the primary erosive agent is not rainwater, but there is underground drainage. This can occur in
basalt, where drainage is through
lava caves, or among
granite tors (for example
Labertouche Cave in
Victoria,
Australia).
Paleocollapse can resemble karst, but is formed by a different mechanism.
Asia
*
The Stone Forest (Yunnan Province, China)
* Area around
Guilin and
Yangshuo in
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China
*
Ofra region,
Israel.
*
Vang Vieng,
Laos*
Gunung Mulu National Park Malaysia*
Krabi region,
Thailand*
Phangnga Bay Area, Southern
Thailand*
Halong Bay,
VietnamOceania
*
Jenolan Caves, New South Wales,
Australia*
Waitomo, Oparara regions of
New Zealand* The
Nakanai Mountains,
East New Britain,
Papua New GuineaEurope
*
Herzegovina region of
Bosnia-Herzegovina* The regions of
Dalmatia,
Lika,
Gorski kotar,
Kvarner and the islands in
Croatia*
Moravian Karst* The
White Peak of the
Peak District, UK, around
Matlock,
Castleton, and
Thor's Cave*
Yorkshire Dales (including the spectacular
Malham Cove),
England *
The Burren (Co.Clare,
Ireland)
* The
Apuseni Mountains,
Romania*
Assynt, SE
Skye and near
Kentallen in
Scotland* Slovak Paradise and Slovak Krast [
1], Slovak republic
* The region of
Inner Carniola in
Slovenia*
Kras, a plateau in southwestern
Slovenia and northeastern
Italy* The limestone region of the Southern
Brecon Beacons National Park,
WalesAfrica
*
Anjajavy Forest, western
Madagascar*
Madagascar dry deciduous forestsNorth America
* The
Nahanni region in the
Northwest Territories,
Canada* The
ViƱales Valley in
Cuba* The
Cenotes of the
Yucatan Peninsula,
Mexico *
Huntsville, Alabama, and the North Alabama Region,
U.S.A.*
Coulee Region in the
American Midwest,
U.S.A.* The
Florida peninsula,
U.S.A.*
Mammoth Cave area and
Bluegrass region of
Kentucky,
U.S.A.* Southeastern
Minnesota,
U.S.A.* The
Ozark Plateau of
Missouri and
Arkansas,
U.S.A.* The
Karst forest in
Puerto Rico,
U.S.A.* The Cumberland Plateau in Middle
Tennessee,
U.S.A.* The
Hill Country of
Texas,
U.S.A.* Central
Pennsylvania*
Presque Isle County near and around
Rogers City in northern
Michigan*
Karst field*
Proteus anguinus*
Speleothem*
Speleology*
Foiba*
Limestone pavement*
Subsurface Evaluations Inc - a large glossary of Karst related terms.