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IMPLICATIONS OF HYPOGENIC TRANSVERSE SPELEOGENESIS<br />

5. Some implications of the hypogenic transverse<br />

speleogenesis concept<br />

Despite obvious advances made during the last few<br />

decades, karst and cave science remains of limited<br />

significance and appreciation in such applied fields as<br />

formation of mineral deposits, hydrocarbon prospecting,<br />

groundwater management in artesian basins, mining,<br />

geological engineering, etc. One of the main reasons is that<br />

the predominantly epigenic karst paradigm, and respective<br />

concepts and knowledge of epigenic, unconfined karst,<br />

learned by industry geologists from general geology,<br />

groundwater hydrology and karst textbooks, was<br />

inappropriately and largely unsuccessfully applied to<br />

solving practical problems related to the quite distinct<br />

domain of hypogenic, confined, karst. The conceptual<br />

framework suggested in this book places hypogenic karst<br />

in the systematized context and hierarchical structure of<br />

basinal groundwater flow (in the sense of Tóth, 1999), and<br />

highlights the powerful role of speleogenesis in the<br />

organization of regional flow systems, a consequence of its<br />

unique capacity to dramatically alter the primary porosity<br />

and permeability of soluble formations. This framework<br />

suggests that karstified zones and their function in basinal<br />

groundwater systems are predictable. The new refined<br />

concept of hypogenic speleogenesis has broad implications<br />

in applied fields and promises to make karst and cave<br />

expertise more highly-valued by practicing<br />

hydrogeologists, mining engineers, and economic geology<br />

and mineral resource industries. A detailed discussion of<br />

all possible implications is far beyond the scope of this<br />

book, but below are a few particularly instructive examples<br />

and references given to illustrate the above contentions.<br />

5.1 Variability in aquifer characteristics and<br />

behavior resulting from unconfined<br />

and confined speleogenesis<br />

The specific mechanisms of ascending hypogene<br />

speleogenesis, discussed in Chapter 3, are responsible for<br />

the peculiar features of conduit porosity that develop in<br />

soluble formations under confined settings. This gives rise<br />

to characteristic distinctions between karst systems that<br />

develop in unconfined and confined karst aquifers.<br />

Huntoon (2000) provided an illustrative comparison of<br />

features found in unconfined and confined aquifers in<br />

Arizona, USA. The summary that follows is based on the<br />

discussions in previous sections (see also Klimchouk,<br />

2003a) and the cited work of Huntoon.<br />

Caves formed in unconfined settings tend to form<br />

highly localized linear or dendritic systems that account for<br />

high heterogeneity and extreme anisotropy of unconfined<br />

karst permeability. They receive more or less concentrated<br />

recharge from the immediately overlying or adjacent areas,<br />

with which they have genetic relations. Conduit systems<br />

are hierarchically organized to effectively concentrate and<br />

laterally transmit flow (and hence contaminants) in the<br />

downgradient direction. This organization is frequently<br />

cited to be similar to surface water drainage networks.<br />

Storage is commonly low in karst aquifers that evolved in<br />

unconfined settings, but almost all flow takes place<br />

through conduit systems (Worthington et al., 2000).<br />

System responses to major storm events are characterized<br />

by flow-through hydraulics. Spring discharge from<br />

unconfined conduit systems tends to be flashy and highly<br />

variable.<br />

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