Abstract

Evaporite karst is widespread, but relatively unknown when compared with carbonate karst; this special issue addresses that lack of familiarity. Evaporite rocks have much higher solubilities and faster dissolution rates than carbonate rocks and they also commonly have lower mechanical strengths and more ductile reheologies. Many of these factors are dependent on the local hydrogeology, and when combined they can result in areas where karst features evolve on a human time scale, rather than a geological timescale. Karst collapse and subsidence are common in such areas, making them problematical for the local population. The evaporite-karst environment is very sensitive to changes in the local hydrology and hydrogeology, so that human factors such as groundwater extraction, drainage, and irrigation can act as triggering events for karst collapses. Some evaporite-karst features such as caves and saline springs have been beneficially exploited, but most of them, including sinkholes, subsidence, and groundwater degradation, pose a threat to the local environment and a hazard to development. The papers in this special issue of Environmental Geology arose from a successful session on Evaporite Karst convened by us at the Sixth International Conference on Geomorphology. This was held in Zaragoza, Spain, in September 2005 and was organised by Zaragoza University and the International Association of Geomorphologists (IAG; http://www.geomorph.org/). Authors of the twenty-eight presented abstracts were invited to submit full papers to this special issue. Nineteen papers were proposed and sixteen papers have been accepted and are published here.

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