Title of article
Factors controlling carbonate dissolution rates quantified in a field test in the Austrian alps
Author/Authors
Plan، نويسنده , , Lukas، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
12
From page
201
To page
212
Abstract
Carbonate dissolution rates were investigated by measuring the mass difference of carbonate tablets exposed to natural dissolution for 1 year. 70 tablets were distributed over 13 test sites on the north slope of the Hochschwab Massif in the Austrian Alps. The influences of altitude, subsoil vs. sub-aerial exposure, vegetation, karst morphology, soil humidity, sample lithology, and sample surface morphology were investigated. The observed dissolution rates varied between 13 and 40 μm/a for subcutaneous samples and about 11 μm/a for sub-aerial exposure. Outstandingly high rates of 48 μm/a were observed in a doline and nearly zero rates were measured at a site influenced by seeping spring water.
balance, using high-resolution hydrological data, was calculated for the Kläffer Spring, which has an average outflow of 4.8 m3/s. It indicated a loss of 21×106 kg of carbonate rock per year which gives an average dissolution rate of 95 μm/a for the catchment area of 83 km2. The dissolution rates of ∼10 μm/a from the sub-aerially exposed samples are comparable to values from limestone pedestals, which were protected from dissolution by glacial erratics for the past 15 ka.
Keywords
Hochschwab , Limestone dissolution , mass balance , Karst , Denudation rate
Journal title
Geomorphology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Geomorphology
Record number
2358555
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