Abstract

ABSTRACTSinkholes are common in the Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) Region (NE Italy), where the presence of karstifiable rocks favours their occurrence accelerated by intense rainfalls. Their existence has been reported since the end of the 1800s along the Tagliamento Valley, in correspondence with the mantled evaporites (gypsum). Furthermore, tens of evaporite sinkholes have been documented on the reliefs adjacent to the village of Sauris and along the narrow W-E-oriented valleys, where regional faults have played a major role in their spatial distribution. This paper reports for the first time an inventory of the sinkholes affecting the evaporites of the FVG Region. These phenomena were mapped and categorised using a genetic classification. The main output is an A0-format map, which incorporates a 1:50,000 scale Sinkhole Inventory Map (SIM). The SIM encompasses 552 sinkholes. The cover suffosion sinkholes are the most abundant, followed by bedrock collapses. There is a clear prevalence of the circular shape (65%) over other shapes. Diameters are 1–140 m, with depths ranging 0.1–40 m with a mean value of 4.5 m. The SIM can motivate regional planning authorities to perform further investigations aimed to understand the geomorphological evolutions of these phenomena.

Highlights

  • Sinkholes or dolines are closed depressions and are peculiar to karst landscapes

  • Sinkholes are common in the Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) Region (NE Italy), where the presence of karstifiable rocks favours their occurrence accelerated by intense rainfalls

  • Bedrock collapse sinkhole: Their evolution is linked to the presence of cavities in the evaporite subsurface characterised by the development of cupola-shaped failure plains (Gutiérrez et al, 2014) evolving in quite stable arched roofs characterised by the upward migration of the collapses

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Summary

Introduction

Sinkholes or dolines are closed depressions and are peculiar to karst landscapes. The term sinkhole is widely used in North America and by engineers, but doline is the term most commonly used in the geomorphological world. Sinkholes affect several European countries such as Spain (Galve et al, 2009a; Gutiérrez, Calaforra, et al, 2008), England (Cooper, Farrant, & Price, 2011), Albania (Parise, Qiriazi, & Sala, 2004) and Italy (Caramanna, Ciotoli, & Nisio, 2008; Margiotta, Negri, Parise, & Quarta, 2016). Friuli Venezia Giulia (FVG) is one of the most impacted regions in Italy (Burelli, Cleva, Cucchi, & Oberti Di Valnera, 2004; Calligaris, Zini, Cucchi, & Stefanelli, 2010; Cucchi & Piano, 2002; De Waele et al, 2017; Nisio, Caramanna, & Ciotoli, 2007; Zini et al, 2015a)

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