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KARST TOPOGRAPHY

A karst landscape

The karst hills of the Burren on the west coast of Ireland

'Karst topography' is a three-dimensional landscape shaped by the dissolution of a soluble layer or layers of bedrock, usually carbonate rock such as limestone or dolomite. These landscapes display distinctive surface features and underground drainages, and in some examples there may be little or no surface drainage. Some areas of karst topography, such as southern Missouri and northern Arkansas in the USA, are underlain by thousands of caves.
Different terms for karst topography exist in other languages - for example, ''yanrong'' in Chinese and ''tsingy'' in Malagasy - a notable exception being English (Jennings, Ch.1 p.1). The international community has settled on ''karst'', the German name for Kras, a region in Slovenia partially extending into Italy where it is called Carso and where the first scientific research of a karst topography was made. The name has Paleoeuropean origin (karra - stone) and in antiquity it was called Carusardius in Latin. The Slovenian form ''grast'' is attested since 1177, and the Croatian ''kras'' since 1230.

Contents
Chemistry of karst landscapes
Karst formations
Water drainage and problems
Pseudokarst
List of notable karst areas
Africa
Asia
Europe
North America
Canada
United States
Caribbean
Mexico
Oceania
See also
References
External links

Chemistry of karst landscapes


Karst lake (Doberdo' del Lago, Italy), from underground water springing into a depression. This lake has no surface inlet or outlet.

Karst landforms are generally the result of mildly acidic water acting on soluble bedrock such as limestone or dolostone. 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 may pass through soil that may provide further CO2 to form a weak carbonic acid solution: H2O + CO2 → H2CO3. Recent studies of sulfates in karst waters suggests sulfuric and hydrosulfuric acids may also play an important role in karst formation.
This mildly acidic water begins to dissolve the surface and any fractures or 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.
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.

Karst formations


Surface karst.

The karstification of a landscape may result in a variety of large or small scale features both on the surface and beneath. On exposed surfaces, small features may include flutes, runnels, clints and grikes, collectively called karren or lapiez. Medium-sized surface features may include sinkholes or dolines (closed basins), vertical shafts, disappearing streams, and reappearing springs. Large-scale features may include limestone pavements, poljes and blind valleys. Mature karst landscapes, where more bedrock has been removed than remains, may result in karst towers or haystack/eggbox landscapes. Beneath the surface, complex underground drainage systems (such as karst aquifers) and extensive caves and cavern systems may form.

Erosion along limestone shores, notably in the tropics, produces karst topography that includes 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 dissolved into water may precipitate out where the water discharges some of its dissolved carbon dioxide. Rivers which emerge from springs may produce tufa terraces, consisting of layers of calcite deposited over extended periods of time. In caves, a variety of features collectively called speleothems are formed by deposition of calcium carbonate and other dissolved minerals.
A karst river may disappear underground a number of times and spring up again in different places, usually under a different name (like Ljubljanica, the river of seven names).

Water drainage and problems


Farming in karst areas must take into account the lack of surface water. 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.
Source of the river Loue, a karst spring.

A karst fenster is where an underground stream emerges onto the surface between layers of rock, cascades some feet, and then disappears back down, often into a sinkhole. There is an example of this in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania.
Water supplies from wells in karst topography may be unsafe, as the water may have run unimpeded 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, resulting in reduced opportunity for contaminants to be filtered out.
Groundwater in karst areas is just as easily polluted as surface streams. Sinkholes have often been used as farmstead or community trash dumps. Overloaded or malfunctioning septic tanks in karst landscapes may 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 Discus macclintocki, a species of ice age snail surviving in air chilled by flowing over buried karst ice formations.

Pseudokarst


''Pseudokarst'' refers to landscape features that are similar in form or appearance to karst features, but are created by different mechanisms. Examples include lava caves and granite tors (for example Labertouche Cave in Victoria, Australia), and paleocollapse features.

List of notable karst areas


Africa


Anjajavy Forest, western Madagascar

Ankarana Reserve, Madagascar

Madagascar dry deciduous forests, western Madagascar

Tsingy de Bemaraha Strict Nature Reserve, Madagascar
Asia

Phong Nha Cave in Phong Nha-Ke Bang, Vietnam.


The Stone Forest (Yunnan Province, China)

★ Area around Guilin and Yangshuo in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China

Zhangjiajie National Forest park, forming part of the Wulingyuan scenic area (a UNESCO World Heritage Site), Zhangjiajie Prefecture, Hunan, China.

Ofra region, Israel.

Akiyoshi plateau, Japan.

El Nido, Palawan, The Philippines

Sagada, Mountain Province, The Philippines

Bohol, The Philippines

Negros and Gigante Islands, Negros Oriental, The Philippines

Vang Vieng, Laos

Gunung Mulu National Park Malaysia

Krabi region, Thailand

Phangnga Bay Area, Southern Thailand

Halong Bay, Vietnam

Phong Nha-Ke Bang, Vietnam
Europe


★ The Herzegovina region of Bosnia-Herzegovina

★ The regions of Dalmatia (including Zagora), Lika, Gorski kotar, Kvarner and the islands in Croatia

★ The Moravian Karst

★ The Central Rhodope karst in Bulgaria (Trigrad Gorge and caves), the Devnya Valley (karst springs)

★ The Apuseni Mountains, Romania

Slovak Paradise, Slovak Karst and Muránska planina, Slovakia

★ The region of Inner Carniola in Slovenia

Kras, a plateau in southwestern Slovenia and northeastern Italy

Murge, in Apulia and Basilicata, southern Italy

★ The Picos de Europa and Basque mountains, northern Spain

★ The Ciudad Encantada in the Cuenca province (Castilla-La Mancha)

★ El Torcal de Antequera nature preserve, southern Spain

★ The White Peak of the Peak District, UK, around Matlock, Castleton, and Thor's Cave

Yorkshire Dales (including Malham Cove), England

The Burren (Co.Clare, Ireland)

Assynt, SE Skye and near Kentallen in Scotland

★ The limestone region of the Southern Brecon Beacons National Park, Wales

Hönnetal at Balve, Germany

★ The Swabian Alb region in the federal state of Baden-Wuerttemberg in southern Germany

★ The "Ares de l'Anie, in the southernmost part of Barétous valley, South-West of France
North America

Canada


★ The Nahanni region in the Northwest Territories

Monkman Provincial Park in the Northern Rockies

★ Portions of the Niagara Escarpment, Ontario

Wood Buffalo National Park in Alberta and the Northwest Territories
United States


★ The Mitchell Plain and Uplands of Southern Indiana

★ The Great Valley of Appalachia (Huntsville, Alabama to Northeast Pennsylvania)


★ The Shenandoah Valley of Virginia

★ The Driftless Area of southwest Wisconsin, southeast Minnesota, northeast Iowa and northwest Illinois, left unglaciated by all three phases of the Wisconsinian glaciation

★ The Florida peninsula

Mammoth Cave area and Bluegrass region of Kentucky

★ The Ozark Plateau of Missouri and Arkansas

★ The Kamas Ranch and Alabaster Cavern area of Oklahoma

★ The Cumberland Plateau in Middle Tennessee

★ The Grassy Cove Karst Area, Tennessee, ''a registered National Natural Landmark''

★ The Hill Country of Texas

★ Central Pennsylvania

Presque Isle County near and around Rogers City in northern Michigan

★ The campus of the University of California, Santa Cruz

★ The Germany Valley Karst Area, West Virginia, ''a registered National Natural Landmark''

★ The Swago Karst Area, West Virginia, ''a registered National Natural Landmark''
Caribbean


★ The Karst forest in Puerto Rico

Limestone eastern foothills of Maya Mountains including parts of the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary

Los Haitises National Park, Dominican Republic

★ Cockpit Country, a region in Jamaica

Limestone mountains of northwestern Puerto Rico

Viñales Valley, Cuba
Mexico


★ The Cenotes of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
Oceania


Leeuwin-Naturaliste National Park, South-west Western Australia (near Margaret River, Australia

★ Northern Swan Coastal Plain, Perth, Western Australia, Australia

Naracoorte Caves National Park, South Australia, Australia

Jenolan Caves, New South Wales, Australia

Wombeyan Caves, New South Wales, Australia

Mole Creek Karst Conservation Area, Tasmania, Australia

Waitomo, Oparara regions of New Zealand

★ The Nakanai Mountains, East New Britain, Papua New Guinea

See also



Karst field

Glaciokarst

Speleothem

Speleology

Foiba

Limestone pavement

References


Jennings, J.N. ''Karst Geomorphology'' 2nd ed. Blackwell 1985
Sweeting, M.M. ''Karst Landforms'' Macmillan 1973


External links



Speleogenesis and Karst Aquifers - a large glossary of Karst related terms.

Acta Carsologica - research papers and reviews in all the fields related to karst.

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