Abstract

Abstract. Most of the existing models of speleogenesis are limited to situations where flow in all conduits is pressurized. The feedback between the distribution of hydraulic head and growth of new solution conduits determines the geometry of the resulting conduit network. We present a novel modeling approach that allows a transition from pressurized (pipe) flow to a free-surface (open-channel) flow in evolving discrete conduit networks. It calculates flow, solute transport and dissolution enlargement within each time step and steps through time until a stable flow pattern is established. The flow in each time step is calculated by calling the US Environmental Protection Agency Storm Water Management Model (US Environmental Protection Agency, 2014), which efficiently solves the 1-D Saint-Venant equations in a network of conduits. Two basic scenarios are modeled, a low-dip scenario and a high-dip scenario. In the low-dip scenario a slightly inclined plane is populated with a rectangular grid of solution conduits. The recharge is distributed to randomly selected junctions. The results for the pressurized flow regime resemble those of the existing models. When the network becomes vadose, a stable flow pathway develops along a system of conduits that occupy the lowest positions at their inlet junctions. This depends on the initial diameter and inlet position of a conduit, its total incision in a pressurized regime and its alignment relative to the dip of the plane, which plays important role during the vadose entrenchment. In the high-dip scenario a sub-vertical network with recharge on the top and outflow on the side is modeled. It is used to demonstrate the vertical development of karst due to drawdown of the water table, development of invasion vadose caves during vadose flow diversion and to demonstrate the potential importance of deeply penetrating conductive structures.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Speleogenetic models: a short history, aims and resultsKarst aquifers are among the most prolific water reservoirs

  • The role of solution conduits in karst aquifers has been a topic of numerous studies

  • We focus on the description of new mechanisms of flow pathway selection and discuss the results in view of the existing conceptual models

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Summary

Introduction

Karst aquifers are among the most prolific water reservoirs. Due to their heterogeneity and anisotropy, their efficient exploitation and protection face many challenges. The role of solution conduits in karst aquifers has been a topic of numerous studies. Many conceptual models of speleogenesis have been proposed based on field observations (Audra et al, 2007; Ford and Ewers, 1978; Audra and Palmer, 2013; Palmer, 1991) and inference from basic principles of flow. To gain insight into the processes governing speleogenesis, different physical models have been built and followed by numerical models that are based on the physical and chemical principles of flow, dissolution and transport

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