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Título
The role of gypsum and/or dolomite dissolution in tufa precipitation: lessons from the hydrochemistry of a carbonate–sulphate karst system
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Hydrochemistry
Tufa
Calcite
Gypsum
Incongruent dissolution of dolomite
Clasificación UNESCO
2506 Geología
Fecha de publicación
2016
Editor
WILEY
Citación
Domínguez‐Villar, D., Vázquez‐Navarro, J. A., & Krklec, K. (2016). The role of gypsum and/or dolomite dissolution in tufa precipitation: lessons from the hydrochemistry of a carbonate–sulphate karst system. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 42(2), 245–258. https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.3978
Resumen
[EN]The precipitation of freshwater carbonates (tufa) along karstic rivers is enhanced by degassing of carbon dioxide (CO2) downstream of karstic springs. However, in most karstic springs CO2 degassing is not enough to force the precipitation of tufa
sediments. Little is known about the role of dissolution of gypsum or dolomite in the hydrochemistry of these systems and how this
affects the formation of tufa deposits. Here we present a monitoring study conducted over a year in Trabaque River (Spain). The river has typical karst hydrological dynamics with water sinking upstream and re-emerging downstream of the canyon. Mixing of
calcium–magnesium bicarbonate and calcium sulphate waters downstream of the sink enhances the dissolution of carbonates
and potentially plays a positive role in the formation of tufa sediments. However, due to the common-ion effect, dissolution of
dolomite and/or gypsum causes precipitation of underground calcite cements as part of the incongruent dissolution of
dolomite/dedolomitization process, which limits the precipitation of tufa sediments. Current precipitation of tufa is scant compared
to previous Holocene tufa deposits, which likely precipitated from solutions with higher saturation indexes of calcite (SIcc values)
than nowadays. Limited incongruent dissolution of dolomite/dedolomitization favours higher SIcc values. This circumstance occurs
when waters with relatively high supersaturation of dolomite and low SO4 2 composition sink in the upper sector of the canyon. In such a scenario, the process of mixing waters enhances the exclusive dissolution of limestones, preventing the precipitation of calcite within the aquifer and favouring the increase of SIcc values downstream of the springs. Such conditions were recorded during periods of high water level of the aquifers and during floods. This research shows that the common-ion effect caused by the
dissolution of gypsum and/or dolomite rocks can limit [or favour] the precipitation of tufa sediments depending on the occurrence
[or not] of incongruent dissolution of dolomite/dedolomitization.
Descripción
This research was carried out while DDV was granted with a Juan de la Cierva fellowship from the Spanish Government.
URI
ISSN
0197-9337
DOI
10.1002/esp.3978
Versión del editor
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