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4. HYDROLOGICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS IN KARST AREA
THE CONSTRUCTION OF UNDERGROUND DAMS ON Yuan Daoxian (China) ABSTRACT: The construction of underground dams on subterranean streams in karst regions of China has gained momentum in recent years, because it entails lessengineering work and yields quicker results in the supply of irrigation water and electric power. In South China, karst water is very unevenly distributed and its flow and storage mainly take the form of subterranean stream, so that subterranean reservoirs generally have a very limited capacity. But small water conservancy projects exactly serve the needs of irrigation and electricity supply in the karsts, where the landform is characterized by Fengcong Depression (cockpit) with the farmland and villages scattered in closed depression. There are different types of underground dams: full dam, semi-dam, underground reservoir, surface reservoir (cockpit storage) and others. Their construction projects should be based on regional hydrogeological data and the planning of the subterranean stream system, with due care given to leakage prevention, flood control, and water supply at upstream and downstream points. BACKGROUND OF KARST GEOMORPHOLOGY AND HYDROGEOLOGY One of the most concentrated karst region in the world lies in Yunnan, Guizhou, Sichuan, Hubei, Hunan, Guangxi provinces and their neighbouring areas in Southwest China. It covers a continuous area of 500,000 km2. The thickness of Carbonate rock there reaches 3,000-10,000m, which distributes predominantly in the intervals from Sinian to Ordovician, and from Devonian to Triassic. Annual precipitation reaches 1,000-2,000 mm, but about 70% of it is concentrated in the rainy season from May to August. Annual mean temperature is 12-22° . The fundamental characteristics of landscape are controlled by the great intermittent uplift in the Cenozoic era. Apart from the wide exposure of carbonate rock, peneplains with altitudes from 500-2,500m are dissected by gorges of the networks of the Changjiang and Xijiang rivers. The bottoms of the gorges are cut down to an altitude of 50-900m. All the conditions mentioned above are favorable for the rapid circulation of underground water and intense development of karst. They also bring about the great unevenness of spatial distribution of karst water, which stores and flows mainly in the form of subterranean stream (conduit flow). According to preliminary statistics, there are 2836 subterranean streams each with a minimum flow of more than 0.05 m3/s in South China (Fig.1). The total minimum dischargeof these subterranean streams is 1482 m3/s, and their total length is 13,919 km. However, the characteristics of conduit flow and unevenness of seasonal distribution of precipitation give rise to the great amplitude of fluctuation of subterranean streams, which have a seasonal variation of 10-100 times in discharge and tens to over 100 meters in water table. In some karst regions, the depth of water table reaches tens to hundreds of meters in dry season, on the other hand, the closed depression (cockpit) may be flooded in rainy season. So, artificial control is necessary before these abundant karst water resources can be utilized. Hundreds of underground dams have been built in recent years on the subterranean streams in south China, which have solved the problem of irrigation properly according to local natural conditions. For example, at the Xiashi district (Dushan county, Guizhou Province) alone, there are 16 underground dams that capture subterranean streams for irrigating 22,000 mu (one acre=6.07 mu) of farmland. The catchment area of a subterranean stream is small and ranges from several to tenof square kilometers in general, whereas the largest one reaches more than 1,000 square kilometers. The trunk lengths of subterranean streams are usually several to over ten kilometers, with the largest one probably being over 50 kilometers. The minimum discharge of such subterranean streams is 0.05-0.1 m3/s in general, whereas thbiggest one reaches 8.9 m3/s. So the capacity of the reservoirs formed by dams on such subterranean streams is small and ranges from several hundred thousand to several million cubic meters in general, with the largest one being over one hundred million m3. It follows that the area of farmland irrigated by such a kind of reservoirs is also small in general, ranging from hundreds to thousands of mu, the largest one being over one hundred thousand mu. Fengcong-Depression (cockpit), the typical tropical karst landscape, is the main feature of South China karst. Villages and farmland are scattered sparsely on the bottoms of the karst depressions or poljes which varies in size. The farmland in each depression has an area of only hundreds of mu, or even less than ten mu. In some large poljes, there are farmland several thousand to ten thousand mu. Moreover, the depressions or poljes are seperated each other by cluster of peaks with relative altitudes tens to hundreds of meters (Fig.2). Evidently, under the natural conditions described above, building dams on subterranean streams to form small reservoirs, and solving the problem of irrigation for each cockpit depression individually, is an economical and rational measure. TYPES OF UNDERGROUND DAMS AND SOME EXAMPLES The dams on subterranean streams may be divided into two major types, namely, the full dam (damming up the whole cross section of a subterranean stream) and the semidam (partially damming the cross section). However, according to their positions on subterranean streams, they may be further distinguished into three types as foredam (dam site near resurgence), window dam (dam site near a karst window), and back dam (dam site near the swallow hole and converting a karst depression into a reservoir). Moreover, according to their functions in the exploitation project, the underground dams may be classified as for storing water on surface, for storing water underground, as well as for raising water table only (diverting water for irrigation or HE power) and etc. Some examples are followed. THE YIDONG RESERVOIR. In Huanjiang county, Guangxi. Back full dam, a surface reservoir is formed in a depression, with a capacity of one million m3, and water head 10m, used for control the subterranean stream to irrigate farmland at the downstream of the resurgence. (Fig.3). THE YUZHAI UNDERGROUND RESERVOIR. In Dushan county, Guizhou province. Semi-foredam, 5.97m in height, 9m long and 4m wide on base, 1.8m on crest. Distance of backwater 1200m. Capacity of reservoir is 96 thousand cubic meters and irrigates 1,500 mu farmland (Fig.4). THE LONGWANGDONG UNDERGROUND RESERVOIR. In Jiangbei county, Sichuan province, the subterranean stream is developed in the Triassic limestone of the axial part of an anticline, and was excavated through by a coal mining tunnel in 1966. The capacity of the underground reservoir as estimated by the total volume of water flowed out within 72 days after it was opened is 16.8 million cubic meters. The reservoir was restored in 1972 by damming the tunnel again, with its highest water pressure amounting to 6.2 kg/cm2, and annual yield of water 6 million cubic meters (Fig.5). THE JIJIAO UNDERGROUND DAM. In Xincheng county, Guangxi, the minimum discharge of the subterranean stream is 1.5 m3/s, and the full dam is at the downstream side of a karst window. The water table has risen up 19m (dry season)--30m (flood season) since the dam was built in 1958. At five hundred meters upstream from the window, a 49m long diversion tunnel was excavated for irrigating 2068 mu farmland (Fig.6). THE YUHONG SUBTERRANEAN STREAM HE POWER STATION. In Huaihua county, Hunan province, the subterranean stream is developed along the bedding plane between the limestone and impervious beds. The full foredam (10.5m high, 7m wide, and 3m thick) is an equalthick arch dam, which raises the water table of the subterranean stream 34m in dry season and 115m in flood season respectively (Fig.7).
THE BEILOU SUBTERRANEAN STREAM HE POWER STATION. In Xincheng county, Guangxi, the subterranean stream is developed along the bedding plane, with a minimum flow of 0.15 m3/s. To concentrate and get the 24m high water head, a semi-foredam is built, and a channel followed by a tunnel is dug in cave to divert water into a HE power station outside (Fig.8).
PROBLEMS THAT MUST BE CONSIDERED IN BUILDING DAMS 1. A comprehensive plan is necessary to have an overall consideration about problems of water supply and flood control for both the upstream points and downstream points of a subterranean stream system. Before building an underground dam, it is necessary to make clear the course of the subterranean drainage system, and consider as a whole the problems of water supply and flood control for all the depressions or poljes it passes through. For instance, the Wanger underground dam, in Dushan county, Guizhou province, is a full foredam 8m long, 9m high, and 6m wide, with a capacity of one hundred thousand cubic meters, but its backwater is 3000m long, and has influences on a series of depression upstreams (Fig.9), so a special surface spillway is dug. 2. Leakage prevention. Most of the underground dams are small in capacity, injection curtain are scarcely used except some larger projects. The measures for leakage prevention are usually simple ones utilizing some favourable natural conditions. Detailed cave exploration is necessary before damming, so as to select the throat point as the dam site on the basis of the information about the expansion and connection characteristics of the whole cave system. For example, the Neiwan underground reservoir, in Chenxi county, Hunan province (Fig.10) has a very complicated cave system, but it is under the control of the dam point so it has got a water head of 70 meters and a capacity of seven hundred thousand cubic meters. For a full dam, leakages around the cave ceiling must also be taken into account. 3. Foundation of dams. The narrow part with sound rocks in the underground passage is preferred as a dam site, besides, careful treatment is also necessary for those early deposits in a subterranean stream, if they are distributed on the possible way of leakage, even though they are cemented by travertine and look to be very hard. The underground course adjacent to the upstream of a reverse siphon is often not suitable for damming, because alluvial deposit is usually thick there. For instance, in such a part of the Solue subterranean stream, Bama county, Guangxi, the cross section is only 13m in width, and rocks on the cave ceiling or walls are perfect, but the thickness of alluvial deposit under the stream bed reaches 18.47m, as testifed by drilling.
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES IN KARST AREAS IN JAPAN Kazuko Urushibara-Yoshino (Japan) INTRODUCTION In Japan, there are 2 types of limestone areas; namely i) the limestone areas older than Tertiary, and ii) uplifted coral reefs during Quaternary era. The latter areas are located mainly on the southern Kikai islands in Nansei Islands. The former areas are located in Honshu and Okinawa Island. These areas are shown in Fig.1. As an example of successful natural conservation, quarries in the Palaeozoic limestone areas at Chichibu in Central Japan are discussed in this paper. An example of problematic management of land use in the areas of uplifted coral reef limestone areas is found in Nansei Islands in southwest Japan. Further, examples of Ishigaki and Minamidaito Islands are also discussed. THE RECOVERY OF THE VEGETATION ON QUARRIES In the Chichibu region, there is Buko Mountain (1,336m a.s.l, 35° 57¢ N 139° 06¢ E), which is composed of paleozoic limestone layers. This mountain has been a religious symbol for the local people. They made lime by heating limestone blocks from the mountain in the historical age. The first cement factory was opened in this area in 1925 and quarried by machinery using modern methods. The second factory has started quarries since 1926. After the war the economic development of Japan caused the rapid increase in demand for cement and the 3rd cement factory began quarring in 1969. The special railway for the transport of limestone blocks and cements was introduced on the foot of the Buko Mountain. These factories have produced continuously great amount of limestone blocks from the mountains by the vertical-cutting-method. The mountain shape has changed due to this and, as a result, the height of the mountain has become 30m lower in the years around 1975. During this time there was popular protest against this because the high cement production with the vertical-cutting-method resulted in a lot of dust spreading over the city. Furthermore, people felt uneasy about the rapid change of mountain's shape as the mountain had a religious significance for them. Then, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), the three companies mentioned above, which have quarries, and the scientist group have investigated together to find a way of recovering the vegetation by introduction of trees on the walls of quarries and decrease the limestone dust in the Chichibu region since 1972. This action was called "Green Campaign".
Fig.1 Map of limestone areas in Japan. As shown in Fig.2, five ways have been examined on the vertical walls of limestone quarries in Japan by MITI from 1972 to 1982. Finally, MITI has made regulations in 1982 as follows: 1) The quarrying companies should plant trees in the quarried places, which are usually located on the steep slopes in Japan. 2) Angle of slopes of the quarries should be smaller than 60° . 3) The species of plants should resemble as much as possible the original vegetation in the quarried area. The soils with similar types to the original soils should also be introduced. 4) The steep quarried walls should be cut in steps with 10m height difference for each. Trees must be planted in the holes with the soils. On the steeper walls, vines like ivy should be planted. 5) Each company has to report to MITI every 5 years with pictures of the walls covered by the vegetation. If the companies fail to keep this regulations, they will not get permission from the government to operate in future. Fig.2 Tested five techniques for recovering vegetation on the walls of quarries. At present, this regulation works very well. From the "Green Campaign", we learned that the supply of some soils on the bare limestone walls helps the development of vegetation very much, particularly at the first stage of recovery. LAND RECLAMATION IN NANSEI ISLANDS The southern islands of Okinawa Prefecture reverted to the Japanese Government from the occupation by U.S.A. in 1972. After that, the land reclamation in the huge areas started with the support of the Japanese Government and the local office of Okinawa Prefecture. In Nansei Islands, whose southern part is in Okinawa Prefecture, the most serious problems for agriculture were drought. This occurs almost once in three years. The strongest crop during the dry summer is sugar cane and the farmers' income is the highest because of its price. Due to such reasons, on almost all the islands, sugar cane was mainly cultivated. The lowest yields of the sugar cane during the drought occurred in the areas with Quaternary uplifted coral reef, because the soils here are shallow and there is heavy clay in these areas. Then, the government decided to introduce irrigation systems and to put lot of soils formed from Tertiary mud stone in these areas. For the sake of using big machines the unit size of fields was increased. The reclaimed areas on Ishigaki Island since 1975 is shown in Fig.3. The yield after the land reclamation since 1975 increased only 6% as compared with the average of period (1960-1977) (Fig.4), even though the sprinkler system was introduced to the fields. This percentage is not satisfactory, if we consider the cost incurred for the land reclamation. In addition, the present fringing coral reefs have been damaged by soils, which are transported from the fields by rain wash. The coastal fishery is having serious problems; in particular, catching shrimps and eels has been affected seriously because they prefer the clean sea water in coral reefs. Because Minamidaito Island is a paleo-atol, thick red soil exists and this condition has made it possible to continue monoculture of sugar cane. It was not necessary to introduce the other soils for the land reclamation. However, since 1972, because of the control by the government the farmers in this island could not employ the workers from abroad. Instead of hand harvest by those workers, the farmers had to introduce the harvesters and accordingly, the land units were arranged for easy work for harvesting sugar cane continuously until now. Against drought, the drop-irrigation system from the caves has been introduced. As a result, in the several caves, the ground water has become saline. This has been caused by inadequate self-management by the farmers. The introduction of harvesters to the sugar cane fields made the soil layers harder. As a result, productivity in the serious drought years became lower than before the land reclamation and introduction of harvesters. Fig.4 Relationship between sugar cane yield and water deficit at Ishigaki Island.
QUANTITY AND QUALITY DEGRADATION OF UPPER JURASSIC AQUIFER IN OLKUSZ-ZAWIERCIE KARST REGION (SOUTH POLAND) Wieslawa Krawczyk, Marian Pulina, Andrzej Tyc (Poland) INTRODUCTION Cracow-Czestochowa Upland is the biggest karst region in Poland (about 3,500 Km2). Together with the karst region of Silesian Upland it enjoys the main aquifer of Silesian-Cracow monocline. This region is of importance to hydrological balance of the whole country also. It is the main zone of recharge of surface water apart from the Sudety and the Carpathy Mts. Here, there are important springs on the Vistula and the Odra tributaries (the Warta, the Pilica, the Przemsza). So this karst region controls quantity and quality of South Poland river's waters and underground water intakes. Considerable part of Cracow-Czestochowa Upland, with the Olkusz-Zawiercia karst region as its main part, is under influence of Poland's greatest urban-industrial district of Upper Silesian. The country's greatest metallurgical works "Katowice" and zinc-lead mines "Olkusz-Pomorzany" are in the nearest vicinity of the Olkusz-Zawiercia region. This region is also intensively cultivated. In this conditions underground water resources are reduced and intensive quality degradation is observed. The authors should like to describe the main elements of anthropogenic degradation of the Upper Jurassic aquifer and show basic factors causing this degradation in karst region. Presented results are based on several years of hydrological and hydrochemical researches being carried out at the Department of Karst Geomorphology of Silesian University. GEOLOGICAL AND HYDROLOGICAL SETTING Olkusz-Zawiercie karst region belongs to the complex of underground water aquifers in the Silesian-Cracow monocline. It is connected with Upper Jurassic banded, rocky or chalky limestones occuring on the surface or under a thin cover of Quaternary deposits (Fig.1). Their thickness varies between 50-400 m, but it reaches 90 m on the southern end and 120-150 m on the north-eastern border of the study area. The Upper Jurassic limestones build aquifer which is fissured and karstified through the whole profile. The system covers three main mediums of water circulation: (1) porous, which in natural conditions of hydrodynamic regime, may be treated as not active, being a medium of water storage, (2) fissured, which is the most effective hydraulic system of the whole massif, varied depending on a lithofacial level of Jura, (3) channel (karst), which is the most effective in the vadose zone (Liszkowska, Pacholewski 1989). Small conduits (several mm to several cm in diameter) and fissures widened by corrosion, which may be found through the whole profile of limestones, are basic karst forms that are involved in water circulation. Caves and caverns are restricted only to the layer close to the surface and they are not hydraulically active. As most of the fissures and the karst forms are filled with sand-clay deposits the water-bearing system of the Upper Jura shows, in certain deeper parts, characteristic features of the porous system. The above characteristics proves that water circulation in Upper Jurassic aquifers is rather diffusive than channel. Because of tectonics and large erosional dissection the drainage system in the massif between Olkusz and Zawiercie is dispersed. It is proved by great density of springs. Some of them, in the western part of the area, are connected with Upper Jurassic cuesta. Outflows in the limit of a deep denudational-tectonic dissection of the Biala Przemsza constitute another group of springs. Discharge of majority of them is below 2.5 l/s and they are very often grouped forming the zones of outflows where total discharge is about 20 l/s. The highest discharge of several springs reaches 150 l/s. Apart from draining system some water from the Upper Jurassic massif is drained towards east under the cover of Cretaceous chalk deposits. The whole aquifer is enriched by precipitation through limestone outcrops. REDUCTION OF JURASSIC KARST WATER RESOURCES Olkusz-Zawiercie karst region is strongly influenced by the region of zinc and lead ores exploitation. Major part of the discussed region is within the limit of a hydraulic depression cone of zinc and lead mines (Fig.1). The depression covers the subjacent Upper Jurassic, Middle Trassic limestones and dolomites, forming a separate fissured-karst aquifer. Stratigraphic Trassic and Jurassic carbonate layers are separated by impermeable Rhaetic-Liassic deposits. However the isolation is not prefect and the levels may be in a hydraulic contact. Numerous erosional windows in the Rhaetic-Liassic cover have been evidenced outside the limit of Jurassic limestones, when such discontinuities have not been undoubtfully proved within the Jurassic limit. Therefore hydraulic connection between the Upper Jurassic and Middle Triassic aquifers have not been finally proved yet. However there are more and more data suggesting that at least local quantity degradation of Jurassic karst waters exists, which is the result of artificial drainage within the limit of the hydraulic depression cone. This can be proved by numerous dry springs, category changes of certain springs of high discharge from permanent to temporary and loss of water in farm wells. It occurs mainly to the south-east and east from Olkusz. Fig.2 presents changes occuring in the Upper Jurassic aquifer for the last 20 years. The period covers natural conditions to the widening of the hydraulic depression cone in the Middle Triassic massif to the north (till 1975) and probable influence of artificial drainage. Dynamics of perennial changes in the aquifer are shown as a function of trend of the the data concerning fluctuations of underground water levels in the well at Chechlo (see 7, Fig.1) and precipitation at the station at the same village. Despite the observed hydrological drought in the whole Poland in the years 1982-1984 the trend of precipitation in the period is slightly increasing. Similar and even deeper droughts occured also earlier (e.g. 1969, 1971, 1973, 1976), when the trend of water level fluctuation in the well is diminishing. As the circulation is diffusive, till 1982 the water level oscillated around the mean perennial level, despite distinctive fluctuation of the total precipitation. In the end of 1983 the well at Chechlo dried completely and even after deepening it remained dry from September 1984 till March 1985. The divergence of trends of both phenomena proves that significant lowering of the underground water level in the Upper Jurassic aquifer does not result only from hydrometeorological conditions in the last few years. It may be assumed that the well at Chechlo is probably influenced by the artificial drainage connected with the zinc and lead mines. The influence of the drainage is the most intensive and troublesome in the periods of hydrological droughts. SPECIFIC CONDUCTIVITY AS AN INDICATOR OF QUALITY General physicochemical properties of karst waters in the Olkusz-Zawiercie region are presented in Fig.3. Waters from spring in this area are of calcium-hydrocarbonate type. The only exception are the waters from two springs located outside the range of the Upper Jurassic limestones (10,11, Fig.3) where the waters are of sulphate-calcium type. Waters in the northern part of the region contain large amount of sulphates when highly mineralized waters contain chlorides and nitrates. Water from farm wells constitute a separate group. Two types of wells can be distinguished: (1) where water properties are similar to moderately mineralized springs; (2) where water is more intensively mineralized with the value of specific conductivity reaching 125 ms/m. Large amount of nitrates, chlorides, sodium and potasium in the ionic composition of these waters is a characteristic features (29, Fig.3). Waters of the Upper Jurassic aquifer are characterized by large diversification in specific conductivity. It can be proved by significant diversification of the contents of elements being the effect of natural processes of limestones dissolution related to foreign elements, the results of anthropogenic impact. Strict dependence of conductivity value upon the amount of calcium ions and hydrocarbonates is connected with the ionic type of waters. Simultaneously, increase of specific conductivity is accompanied by the increasing number of ions of anthropogenic origin in the ionic composition of the water (sulphates, chlorides, nitrates) (Fig.4). This dependence is fulfilled at the high correlation coefficient. Hence, anions of anthropogenic origin play the crucial role in the ionic composition of the waters from the highest mineralized springs. Therefore specific conductivity in the springs draining the same aquifer can be a good indicator of degradation in its different parts. CONCLUSIONS Basic reason of the significant lowering of the underground water level in the Upper Jurassic aquifer is the artificial drainage connected with the mine's hydraulic depression cone. The reasons of significant transformation of natural chemical composition of the waters in Olkusz-Zawiercie karst region are four basic factors: (1) intensive rain waters pollution; (2) location of villages in the highest parts of the karst massif and lack of sewage systems; (3) fertilization (main nitric) in agricultural area; (4) fissured-karst water circulation system in vadose zone of the massif, which makes pollutants migration easier.
Because of the main direction of air circulation from the urban-industrial Upper Silesian region rain waters reaching the Olkusz-Zawiercie karst region are intensively polluted. They contain considerable quantity of nitrates, with mean concentration in the rain water reaches the nitrates content in moderately polluted spring waters (15.5 mg/dm3) (see R. Fig.6). Several times in a year precipitations with nitrates content above 50 mg/dm3 appear (Fig.5, 6). Influence of the rain water pollution has regional character. Diversification of degradation degree of the Upper Jurassic aquifer is caused by two other anthropogenic factors. The lack of sewage systems results in very bad quality of water in farm wells (40-50 m deep in this area). Wells developing a hydraulic depression cone are the place of pollutants intrusion into the aquifer (liquid manure and sewage). Bad water quality of springs situated in greater villages has the similar origin. That waters have higher mineralization, high chlorides and nitrates content, and low oxygen saturation degree (e.g.C, Fig.6). Furthermore, most degradated waters emerge from springs in the regions of farms influence. From mineral compositions introduced with fertilizers into the soil, nitrogen in nitrates forms are easily washed to underground water. Hence distinct nitrates content occurs in underground waters of northern parts of the study area, which are influenced by highly fertilized farm grounds. That waters contain phosphates, too.
TECHNOGENIC IMPACT ON THE KARST IN PERM REGION K.A.Gorbunova,N.G.Maximovich GEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND The Perm Region territory of 1606 sq.km is situated within three large geotectonic units: the eastern margin of the eastern European platform,pre-Urals foredeep and the folded belt of the Urals zone. The Paleozoic karstified rocks:limestones,dolomites,gypsums,anhydrites,salts are exposed or occur not deep from the surface on the area of about 30 thousands sq.km. Numberous boreholes in the carbonate rocks have revealed paleo-karst. The karstified rocks occur in the form of anticline and syncline folds accompanied with fracture dislocations. Typical are sinkholes, solutional basins, lost rivers, springs, caves and blind creeks. TYPES OF TECHNOGENIC EFFECTS ON THE ECOLOGICAL MEDIUM OF KARST AREAS Perm region bears a considerable technogenic load. The distribution of various types of technogenic effects on the environment is conditioned by the presence of commercial mineral deposits,timber and water resources , the geographic position of the region on the border of the western and eastern areas of USSR,the history of its development. The greatest changes of the geological medium of the karst areas are caused as a result of various types of the human economic activities, such as: 1) mining industry (Kizel Coal Basin,Verkhnekamskoye Potash Salts Deposit,Volgo-Urals Oil and Gas Bearing Area); 2) hydrotechnical construction (Kamskaya hydroelectric station and Kamskoye reservoir); 3) urban and industrial construction (on the basis of commercial mineral deposits,timber and water resources in Perm Region there appeared large industrial centers--cities of Perm, Berezniki, Kizel, Chusovoy and others); 4) communication and transport constructions (the region is crossed by railway and highway lines, electric transmission lines,oil and gas pipelines); 5) water distribution systems (use of fresh drinking,medicinal and commercial mineral water); 6) timber industry and agricultural activities (tree felling,chemical effect from agriculture). All these kinds of the human economic activies change some components of the environment (overburdon and karstified rocks,relief,underground and surface waters, atmosphere, biosphere) which is reflected directly or indirectly on the basic conditions for karst develoment and causes its activition or declining. TECHNOGENIC CHANGES OF KARSTIFIED ROCKS AND OVERLAYING DEPOSITS In many construction types,mining,guarrying (especially gypsum and limestone) the soil cover blanket deposits are removed partially or entirely,the karstified rocks are exposed. In some cases,the removed soils are used in construction forming media aggressive to karstified rocks. In other cases, the solid waste disposal consist of soluble minerals. The constructions being erected and their operation create static (industrial and civil objects,reservoirs) and dynamic loads (blasthole drilling,intensive transport traffic). The consequence of these types of economic activity is change of the stressed condition of karstified rocks, their fracturing, formation of technogenic landscape, appearence of concentrated absorption centers of atmospheric precipitation and karst waters rechange. The activation of karst caused by the disturbance of the cover and redistribution of the surface run-off was observed in the area of the main gas pipelines Siberia-Center-West. They cross the western limb of the Ufa swell to the south of the city of Kungur where are karstified gypsums and anhydrites, to a less degree the limestones and dolomites of the Kungurian stage. There can be traced a connection of the karst and the river network with tectonic dislocations. Most karstified area are the sites where the gypsums are exposed or covered with soil vegetation layer or eluvium of small thickness.The number of sinkholes for 1 ha here reaches 95, the area of sinkholes totals 50 per cent of the site area. The initial size of the collapse sinks is 2 to 3 m,the average diameter of the sinkholes is 7 to 8 m.From May 1983 to October 1984 in the gas pipeline area of 40 m wide and 5.4 km long there appeared 24 collapse sinkholes, and in 1985 their number exceeded 45. A great part of the collapse sinks had diameter of no more than 2.5 m,depth of 2 m and only in some cases 5 m. At present, such collapse presented no danger, but further activation of collapse may have negative sequences. To provide safety of construction and gas pipelines, antikarst measures were recommended: filling the karst sinks with non-draining material, arranging of the surface waters run-off, reduction of transport load,stop of blasting operations in the pipeline area.The condition of the constructions is being monitored. Intensity of the collapse process increase after construction of industrial and civil objects and roads,the collapse sizes being increased. For example, from 1960 to 1971 in Kungur region in road-side ditches and reserves there appeared 22 collapse. In quarring of limestones and gypsum the overlaying deposits are removed. Blasting operations in quarries lead to fracture forming and opening in the rocks which promotes infiltration of atmospheric precipitation.The suffosion and dissolution activation causes numerous suffosion-karstic collapses, for example, in the vicinity of the gypsum quarry Yergach to the north-west of Kungur. TECHNOGENIC EFFECTS ON UNDERGROUND WATERS OF KARSTIFIED MASSIFS The karst activation is caused by variation regime of the level and chemical composition of the karstic waters in the water intake areas,in mine and quarry outfall and drainage system.In these cases, the hydrodynamic zones are shifted,the karstic water flow direction changes and the velocity increases. In Kizel Coal Basin the coal-bearing strata of the Visean stage of the Lower Carboniferous series occurs under the karstified carbonate rocks. Some mines passed through cavities and caves filled with water. In the karst influence zone,the mine water inflow reach 2000 to 2500 m«£/h. As a result of the karst waters drainage thick strata of carbonate rocks are involved in the active water exchange and karstification. In interaction with sulfur-containing coal-bearing rocks,the bicarbonate karst waters are transformed into bisulphate waters enriched with ferrum,aluminium and other microcomponents. The mine waters run down into rivers and are partially absorbed by ponors. Moving along karst channels in carbonate rocks the bisulphate (PH 3 to 4) polluted mine waters are partially neutralized and cleaned. In the southern part of the basin the mine waters are released into the river Gluhkaya which disappears in the cave and flows for 7 km by underground route. The river feeds a spring in the valley of the river Chusovaya whose freshet discharge reaches 10 thousand m«£/h. After the mine waters passing through the underground karst channels the ferrum, aluminium and sulphate concentration reduces ten and hundreds of time. At the same time there occurs contamination of stalactites and stalagmites in caves with ferrum hydroxides. Some cavities are filled by sediments. The recharge,circulation and outflow conditions and the chemical composition of karst waters change considerably in the influence zones of hydroelectric stations and reservoirs. Near Perm, on the river Kama, the Kamskaya Hydro was constructed in 1954. On the dam foundation, under argillites, sandstones, gypsum limestones and dolomites of the Ufimian stage, there occur gypsums and anhydrites of the Kungurian stage which are regional waterproofs. After filling the reservoir filtration was intensified at the dam foundation. In some parts sulphate waters appears which indicates the dissolution of gypsum. In this situation, consolidation of the existing cement curtain was done with a chemical gelforming silicate solution. The injection consolidation and post-injection processes provided gypsum protection against dissolution and increased the stability of the dam. Filling the Kamskoye reservoir raised the water level by 20 to 22m. Its banks within the limits of the Krasnokamsk-Polazna swell are laid with gypsums and anhydrite of the Kungurian stage. Part of the caves was inundated. In the waves impact zone there formed leaching processes and new small caves. Introduction of the river waters into the karstified rocks, seasonal fluctuations of the water level in the shore area reaching 7 to 8 m, caused activation of suffosion, removal of material from the filled karst cavities, gypsum dissolution and collapse forming. In the reservoir influence zone on the territory of the settlement Polazna, from 1956 to 1961 there occured 11 collapses while for the previous 50 years there were only two. The karst activation both in the upper and deep horizons is observed in connection with drilling operations for oil, gas and salt as well as development of oil and potash salts deposits in the same areas. The boreholes are imperfect which cause vertical flow exchange and mixing of mineralized and fresh waters and increase the waters aggressivity towards the soluble rock. Some abandoned wells gush polluting the rivers. At present well constructions are improved to provide the aquifer isolation. About 50 per cent of oil resources is confined to fractural karst reservoirs. Developing a greater part of a deposits by fresh water injection into wells to maintain pressure can activate the dissolution processes of carbonate and sulphate salts in deep horizons. The processes are promoted by activity of sulphate-reducing bacteria. To intensify the oil inflow, the hydrochloric acid is injected into the seam (up to 100 m3 and more) at the concentration of 10 to 20%. As a result of the carbonate rocks dissolution near the well, the volume of the fractural karst reservoirs and the oil inflows increase. As noted by I.N.Shestov et al, an active impact on karstified rocks in the oil development wells spreads over to the depth of hundreds of meters. COMPLEX CHARACTER OF TECHNOGENIC IMPACT ON THE ENVIRONMENT IN KARST AREAS In territories of considerable technogenic load, the conditions and factors of karst formation change considerably due to irreversible transformations of the landscape and the rocks, pollution of surface and underground waters, atmosphere and atmospheric precipitation, degradation of vegetation. An example is Verchnekamsky industrial complex including, besides potash salts enterprises of the city, settlements, large water intakes, linear (engineering) constructions, timber processing and oil industries. The salt extraction has been taking place there for more than 500 years. The salt stratum of the Kungurian stage (underlying rock salt, potash salt, overlying rock salt) and the intermediate stratum are overlied with clays, limestones, gypsums, marls,sandstones of the Ufimian stage and Quaternary deposits to which aquifers are confined. In chamber working of potash salts artificial cavities are formed, redistribution of stresses in the rocks takes place, opening of fractures in the overlying rocks, slow sinking of the surface. According to G.V.Beltyukov, in driving and developing all the mine shafts in fractural zones there are noted waters shows. In the overlying rock salt and in the carnallite rock in some places there were uncovered karst cavities of hundreds of cubic meters in volume. In July 1986 in one of the sites there occured a collapse sink. It had the size of 40 by 80 m on the plane with the depth of 25 m to the water level. The collapse was accompanied by a gas explosion and light effect. In worked-out tunnels there condenses moisture in the form of small pools or drip from the roof. In some sites it dissolves the salt, in others there deposistalactites and sinter salt crusts from oversaturated brines. The salt leaching zones formation had been promoted by, in the past, brine extraction from more than 200 wells of salt industry. Some abandoned wells have turned into "artificial" springs. In drilling wells of the former salt fields karst cavities were uncovered in the salt strata. The potash salt industry occupy an area of more than 700 ha. Every year they increase by several millions of tons. The mine dump and industrial liquid wast receivers pollute the environment by salinization and create a lifeless technogenic landscape. In salt mine dump there develops a peculiar "technogenic" karst under the effect of atmospheric precipitation and temporary surface run-off: numerous ponors, karren, small sinkholes, channels and caves. CONCLUSION Various kinds of the human economic activities called technogenic impact change karstic processes course. These changes have various trends. In most cases the technogenic impact lead to activation of karst processes as a result of the environment change (rocks, hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere) which determine the basic conditions and factors of karst formation. The karst activation has a negative impact on engineering geological conditions and may cause hazardous situations. It shows itself not only in upper but in much deeper horizons of the rocks. Slowing of the karst process is a result of some or other engineering geological measures connected with construction on karstified rocks. The environmental response to the technogenic impact depends on the karst type: saline, sulphate, carbonate. As a result of mining activities on the surface there accumulate soluble technogenic soils which show "technogenic karst". Remove of dissolved components from the soils pollute the environment. The human economic activities being planned in karst areas must be based on the predictions of the karst process in view of the environmental changes under the influence of the existing and designing engineering works and providing nature protection measures.
FLUID FLOW IN THE CHALK OF ENGLAND Michael Price (England) SUMMARY: The Chalk aquifer of England can be thought of as a multi-porosity medium. The matrix is a fine-grained limestone which generally has high porosity but small pore throats, so that its permeability is typically only 0.1 to 10 millidarcys (10-4to 10-2 m day-1).A fairly uniform fracture system imparts a secondary permeability, which appears to be about 100 to 1000 mD(0.1 to 1 m day-1). Where the chalk forms a major aquifer, most of the transmissivity results from the enlargement of fractures, by solution,to form a few highly permeable zones. Over much of the outcrop, weathering leads to the development of shallow permeable layers to form an additional component. Each of these permeability systems influences some aspect of subsurface water movement, with implications for resources, quality and construction. The Chalk of England is an unusual aquifer in that it can have several superimposed components of porosity and permeability, althouth not all will necessarily be present at any one locality .Universally present is a matrix or intergranular component;this can contribute porosities of more than 40%,the porosity generally being higher in the southern part of England than in the northern part and also increasing up the stratigraphic succession. The matrix permeability is generally isotropic and shows the same regional and stratigraphical trends as porosity. It is generally low, seldom exceeding 10mD (about 6´ 10-3 m day-1); a hydraulic conductivity value of 10-3 m day-1 is more typical. The second permeability component---termed the primary-fissure component---is caused by a fairly ubiquitous fracture system,usually consisting of three near-orthogonal sets of joints. The degree of openness of these joints varies from place to place, depending on factors such as tectonic history and how much solution has taken place as a result of sub-surface flow. At depths much in excess of 100m, the joints may be effectively closed. The hydraulic conductivity imparted by these joints is generally still too low to explain the Chalk's performance as an aquifer;typically it is in the range 10-2-1 m day-1. The presence of the primary-fissure and matrix components of porosity and permeability means that the Chalk is a double-porosity system. The primary-fissure component of permeability can be enhanced in two circumstances .In the upper few metres of the chalk at outcrop the fracture openings can become enlarged and the block size reduced, leading to hydraulic conductivities greater than 10 m day-1 when the material is saturated. Frequently, however, this material lies in the unsaturated zone. In the top few tens of metres of the aquifer the primary fissures may be enlarged by solution. This enlargement typically seems to occur along individual near-horizontal fractures or in discrete near-horizontal zones,rather than uniformly throughout the aquifer. The non-uniform permeability so produced is termed the secondary-fissure component. These secondary feasures appear to be related to river-valley base levels, although some may have developed in the geological past. The secondary fissures ,being essentially highly permeable layers,impart heterogeneity to the Chalk where they are present;thus they cause a double-permeability behaviour to be superimposed on the double-porosity behaviour. The permeability contrast between the secondary and primary-fissure components is so great, however,that this double-permeability behaviour can be expected to appear as another double-porosity system; the Chalk can thus be a dual double-porosity aquifer. Some progress has been made in the study of the fissure permeabilities using packers; this approach needs to be combined with some of the latest analytical techniques developed in the oil industry, although in the unconfined contdition there are likely to be problems in obtaining unique interpretations. In the unsaturated zone, matrix flow appears to be dominant throughout the year at some sites, with pore-water suctions nearly always too high for flow to occur in fissures. At other sites there is evidence that fissure flow occurs after heavy rainfall.Good agreement is seen between unsaturated hydraulic conductivity curves measured in situ and predictions based on pore-size measurements and calculated fissure openings. The small pores in chalks mean that the matrix has low permeability despite its high porosity. Most of these small pores do not drain under gravity, so that the specific yield of chalk is low; however,much of the pore water is accessible to plants. In the confined condition, an example fom Norfolk suggests that most of the water released from elastic storage is derived from closure of fissures. Some water will be released by expansion of pore water from the matrix;some of the elastic storage may take a finite time to become apparent and may be erroneously interpreted in pumping test analyses as leakage from adjacent strata. The variability of the permeability components throughout the Chalk is so great that exceptions will be found to almost any generalization. However,generalizations can be valuable from the practical point of view. The Chalk is England's major aquifer and its unusual properties have an important influence on the supply of water and its susceptibility to pollution. A knowledge of the properties and flow mechanisms of the unsaturated zone is essential to an understanding of the risk of pollution to the groundwater of the saturated zone. In the saturated zone the secondary fissures are the pathways for most groundwater movement, and the smaller but more numerous primary fissures and the matrix pores contribute storage. Because of the extensive and permeable secondary-fissure systems in the upper part of the saturated zone,water can travel large distances with great rapidity,meaning that pollutants can be quickly and widely dispersed; the high matrix porosity means that pollutants can diffuse into the matrix so that they may be greatly diluted but may also remain there for long periods. It is hoped that the general comments in this paper will have provided some insight into the behaviour of the chalk aquifer.
CATASTROPHIC SUBSIDENCE: AN ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARD, P.E.LaMoreaux (USA) The sudden formation of sinkholes or "catastrophic subsidence" in recent years has focused attention on a little-understood geologic hazard. Few people realize that thousands have formed in the United States since 1950. Costly damage, some accompanied by injuries and loss of life, has resulted from sudden collapses beneath highways, railroads, bridges, buildings, dams, reservoirs, pipelines, vehicles, and drilling operations. Perhaps one of the most spectacular was the "Golly Hole" collapse on December 2, 1972, in Shelby County, Alabama; another was the surface collapse of part of a city block in Winter Park, Florida, in 1981. Sinkholes can be separated into categories defined as "induced " and "natural." Induced sinkholes are those caused or accelerated by human activities, whereas natural ones occur in nature. Recognition of induced sinkholes or catastrophic subsidence, and their investigation has been confined mainly to this century. Almost all investigations dealing with triggering mechanisms or processes have been made since 1950. The purpose of this article is to describe techniques used in a case history to relocate a gas pipeline in a highly vulnerable karst setting. Active subsidence (catastropic collapse) in Dry Valley, Shelby county, Alabama, USA, presented a danger to highways, railroads, buried telephone cables, personal propetry, farm animals, and oil and gas pipelines, including the Southern Natural Gas 10-inch Bessemer to Calera pipeline. Many collapses have occurred along the pipeline right-of-way. Some collapses directly underneath the pipeline exposed it. Geologic, geophysical, and hydrologic surveys along the pipeline identified the areas where sinkholes could occur. Extensive collapse sinkholes resulted from a combination of factors, including groundwater withdrawal, modification of surface drainage, construction activities, and heavy and prolonged rain. Catastrophic collapse in the area will continue indefinitely until these conditions change. Therefore, an alternative pipeline route had to be chosen to anchor the pipeline to bedrock with anchor points not greater than 20 feet apart because of the strength of the pipe. Determining the geographic distribution, frequency, and probability of catastrophic sinkhole occurrence was accomplished by the following works: 1. Preparation of a detailed map of the geology and structure along the pipeline in the critical areas of subsidence. 2. Mapping of exposures of bedrock limestone in quarries, road cuts, and sinkholes to determine dip and strike of bedding and joint and fault trends to relate to preferential solution zones and groundwater flow patterns. 3. Acquisition and analysis of satellite imagery and high- and low-altitude aerial photography (black and white, black and white infrared, color infrared, color). Resulting regional and local geological structural trends, lineaments, and sinkhole and drainage alignments were studied to project preferential groundwater flow patterns and solution zones in bedrock limestone. 4. Use of seismic geophysical studies and test drilling to define the top of bedrock and overburden thickness along the alternate pipeline route. 5. Determination of geology along the new pipeline route before construction, which was verified during its construction to ensure that the pipeline was securely connected to bedrock. 6. Monitoring of sinkhole-subsidence occurrence on a monthly basis over a period of 38 months. Each month, photography from an overflight was analyzed and subsidence features located were checked in the field and documented. Based on the various studies, two alternate pipeline routes were delineated that would reduce the danger from catastrophic subsidence beneath the pipeline. Alternate route 1, the final route chosen, was the best and most direct route across Dry Valley. It followed shallower bedrock, had less overburden thickness, fewer sinkholes, and undisturbed drainage, and crossed an area underlain by less limestone and a larger area underlain by Athens Shale. Construction for the new pipeline route involved opening the ditch line twice. The ditch was first dug to remove all bedrock float and pinnacles. The ditch was backfilled and dressed at the end of each day to prevent rainfall and surface runoff from entering. During excavation, it was noted that bedrock was shallower and pinnacles were more frequent beneath Dry Valley than previously identified. Construction was redesigned to obtain maximum bedrock support to pipeline. The ditch was then reopened to lay pipe. Fractured bedrock zones were grouted, where necessary. Supports of steel piling driven to bedrock with a crossbar were erected in areas of deep unconsolidated overburden and large solution features. A steel casing was placed beneath a railroad and Shelby County Highway 16 to protect the pipeline from excessive weight. These supports were tied directly to bedrock. The new pipeline was cleaned, tested, and tied into the old pipeline. Valves were placed on both the old and the new pipelines so that the old line could be reactivated if necessary. The original pipeline across Dry Valley was purged with nitrogen. Tree roots and logs were removed from the overburden and a clay lining was placed in high subsidence risk areas adjacent to the pipeline to prevent downward migration of water into the ditch. After the pipe was laid, the ditch was backfilled and a clay crown was spread over it. The right-of-way was then graded and restored to approximate original land surface. It was then properly terraced to control surface drainage, seeded with grass, and fall fences previously crossing it were replaced. Natural drainage was left unobstructed. Subsequently, the right-of-way has been monitored through a period of rains during which catastrophic subsidence might be expected. No subsidence has been recorded to date along the right-of-way and the area is now completely reclaimed and vegetation recovered. Photo 10. Yakaciflic Sinkhole in Alvan Polje, Turkey(Painting by Wang Keda |
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