UIS Commission on Karst Hydrogeology and Speleogenesis
Email Print

Karstbase Bibliography Database

Featured article: karst/cave journals
White, William B.
Chemistry and karst
Acta carsologica
2015
44
3
381
399

The processes of initiation and development of characteris­tic surface karst landforms and underground caves are nearly all chemical processes. This paper reviews the advances in understanding of karst chemistry over the past 60 years. The equilibrium chemistry of carbonate and sulfate dissolution and deposition is well established with accurate values for the necessary constants. The equations for bulk kinetics are known well enough for accurate modeling of speleogenetic processes but much is being learned about atomic scale mechanisms. The chemistry of karst waters, expressed as parameters such as total dissolved carbonates, saturation index, and equilibrium carbon dioxide pressure are useful tools for probing the internal char­acteristics of karst aquifers. Continuous records of chemical parameters (chemographs) taken from springs and other karst waters mapped onto discharge hydrographs reveal details of the internal flow system. The chemistry of speleothem deposi­tion is well understood at the level of bulk processes but much has been learned of the surface chemistry on an atomic scale by use of the atomic force microscope. Least well understood is the chemistry of hypogenetic karst. The main chemical reac­tions are known but equilibrium modeling could be improved and reaction kinetics are largely unknown.

Carbonate equilibrium; carbonate kinetics; karst denudation; hypogene chemistry; cave mineral deposition; calcite/aragonite problem
0583-6050
http://dx.doi.org/10.3986/ac.v44i3.1896
White, William B., 2015, Chemistry and karst , Acta carsologica , 44 , 381 - 399 http://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/carsologica/superhome/current/showToc, PDF