Island Cave and Karst Research
John Mylroie (Emeritus,
Department of Geosciences, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State,
Mississippi, USA)
Gerace Research Centre, San Salvador Island, Bahamas
23 June 2010
Caves
in the Bahamas can be quite large. Their formation controls are different
from what’s seen on continents.
Hypogenic
caves form in a manner decoupled from surface hydrology - they can form in the
freshwater lens of carbonate islands.
Caves
show phreatic formation - no turbulent flow, but instead they form from laminar
flow.
CIKM
- carbonate island karst model
Caves
form as a result of freshwater/seawater mixing and sea level change.
Get
eogenetic karst on carbonate islands.
Carbonate
islands vary:
1)
simple carbonate islands - Bahamas
2)
carbonate cover islands (lens is partitioned) - Bermuda
3)
composite islands - Barbados
4)
complex islands (complex lens configuration) - Saipan or New Zealand
The
Bahamas have simple carbonate islands - there’s no non-carbonate rock
influences on island hydrology.
The
geology of an island is going to tell you how the freshwater lens is going to
behave
Freshwater
lenses float on seawater. Freshwater mounds up and flows to ocean
(head). For every 1 unit of freshwater mound thickness above sea level,
there’s 40 times as much thickness to the freshwater lens below sea level.
If
the aquifer is porous and permeable, get a small lens. If the aquifer is
inefficient (close to an aquitard or aquiclude), will get a large top mound
before the freshwater flows to the ocean.
The
top and base of the freshwater lens are mixing zones. The base is the
halocline. Below the halocline is saline ground water - the marine
phreatic zone.
Caves
form by mixing dissolution at the halocline. But this especially happens
at the lens margin - there, lens margin flow velocities are high (think your
thumb over the end of a garden hose), so reactants and products flush through
quickly. This is a zone of enhanced dissolution - get flank margin
caves.
Freshwater/seawater
mixing - these two are miscible liquids, but they will stay separated unless
they’re agitated.
d34S from cave gypsum in some flank margin caves
indicates biomediation of sulfur has occurred, likely from anoxic conditions.
Expect
caves along the halocline at the margin of the freshwater lens - active
halocline caves - flank margin caves.
Also
expect caves along the upper margin of the freshwater lens - water table caves.
Freshwater/seawater
mixing results in dissolution at a microscopic and macroscopic scale.
On
Sal Salvador Island, an historic water well has been discovered on North Point
Peninsula - that doesn’t make sense considering the small size of land there
and the proximity to the ocean. However, the Holocene-aged North Point
Member limestones there have little organized porosity/permeability, so they
hold lots of freshwater, despite being close to the sea.
Mixing
zone dissolution cuts across cave wall rock, speleothem, paleosols.
Speleothem can be shaved off.
Caves
on carbonate islands are controlled by sea level position - sea level has
varied ~130 meters over the last 2 million years.
During
most of the Quaternary, sea level has usually been lower than now.
Some spikes in sea level occurred during marine isotope stages 5e, 9, 11, 15 -
sea level was above modern sea level at these times. Very little
of Quaternary time was spent above modern sea level.
Flank
margin caves form at the distal margin of freshwater lens, at the flanks of an
island.
As
cave chambers develop in the lens, the mixing zone steps landward to the rear
of the flank margin cave chambers - the cave grows large & complex.
Flank
margin caves originally have no entrance. Entrances form later
by hillside erosion breaching the flank margin caves. They have a low,
wide aspect, the result of the freshwater lens/mixing zone geometry.
Flank
margin caves are oval in plan view. The entrance reaches its maximum
width when hillside erosion breaches the cave at the halfway point. Ex:
Tinian, Marianas.
U/Th
dates from flank margin speleothem in the Bahamas show that none of these
vadose features are >100,000 years old.
Bahamas
blue holes may lead to caves containing stalagmites (may see modern mixing zone
corrosion in these flooded caves) from glacioeustatic sea level lowstands.
Bahamas
blue hole speleothem - U/Th dates range from 39,000 to >350,000 years old.
Get
tidal flow in some caves (Lighthouse Cave on San Salvador Island, Bahamas).
Pit
caves form by roots passing water down through the vadose zone toward the water
table - get a pit cave - water quickly gets to the water table. Pit caves
form independent of sea level position (only forming in the vadose zone).
Banana
holes - these are isolated phreatic voids that have collapsed. They are
~10 m across and 2 to 3 m high. Banana hole surface densities have been
measured up to 3000/km2.
Before
extension of the San Salvador Island airport in the Bahamas, ground-penetrating
radar was used to identify voids. Voids were filled in before airport
extension paving. They didn’t do that on Andros Island. The Andros
airstrip has had 100 collapses.
Caves
at paleo-lens positions occur high up on islands experiencing tectonic
uplift. Such caves ignore structure. Ex: caves in tilted/jointed
limestones in New Zealand.
Paleosols
act as aquitards/aquicludes - can get freshwater lens distortion, resulting in
unusual flank margin cave morphologies. Ex: Hatchet Bay Cave on
Eleuthera Island.
San
Salvador Island has a negative water budget. Freshwater lenses get
separated by upconed saline groundwater - several saline upcones occur on San
Salvador.
The
margins of freshwater lakes on Bermuda enlarge, despite the similar size
and geology between Bermuda and San Salvador. But Bermuda & San Salvador
have different climates & different water budgets.
Guam
has vadose cave passages in white limestone, perched atop black volcanics.
Saipan
Cave - phreatic lift occurs here due to that island’s complex geology.
Eogenetic
karst is a shortcut in karst processes.
Primary conditions →
eogenetic
karst
→
↓
↓
Burial
→ uplift/fracturing → telogenetic karst → caverns
Isla
de Mona is a steep-walled island, exactly what San Salvador Island was like
during Quaternary lowstands.
The
world’s largest flank margin caves have a pre-Pleistocene genesis &
tectonic uplift.
Flank
margin caves form by diffuse flow, not by turbulent flow as in classic conduit
caves.
Caves
have been found along Bahamas platform walls at -105 m and -125 m depths.
So,
flank margin caves last (2 m.y. at Isla de Mona) & only if sea level stays
still for a while.
Small
islands have flank margin caves - diffuse flow model is an artifact of sea
level highs, resulting in small islands.
Large
islands have conduit caves because they have huge catchment area - they look
typically continental.
Carbonate
deposition results in 12 x 1013 g/year of carbon released as
CO2. [contra intuition]
Carbonate
dissolution results in 11 x 1012 g/year of carbon sequestered as HCO3-.
[contra intuition]
Precipitation of CaCO3
releases CO2. [contra intuition]