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United States Office of Research and EPA/600/R-02/003

Environmental Protection Development February 2002


Agency Washington, D.C. 20460 www.epa.gov/ncea

Research and Development

A Lexicon of Cave and Karst


Terminology with Special
Reference to Environmental
Karst Hydrology

(Supercedes EPA/600/R-99/006, 1/’99)

KARST WATERS
INSTITUTE

Digital Version
Courtesy of the author
& The Karst Waters Institute
EPA/600/R-02/003
February 2002

A LEXICON OF CAVE AND KARST TERMINOLOGY

WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE

TO ENVIRONMENTAL KARST HYDROLOGY

(Supercedes EPA/600/R-99/006, 1/’99)

National Center for Environmental Assessment–Washington Office


Office of Research and Development
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Washington, DC 20460
DISCLAIMER

This document has been reviewed in accordance with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency policy
and approved for publication. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not constitute
endorsement or recommendation for use.

ii
CONTENTS

PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv

PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v

AUTHOR AND REVIEWERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vi

INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

GLOSSARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.........................................................................4
B . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
F . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
L . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
O . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
P . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 134
Q . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 151
R . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152
S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
U . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
V . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203
W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206
Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 211
Z . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212

REFERENCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213

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PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION

Release of the first edition of this lexicon was well received and resulted in two printings. The
first edition is again in short supply, but rather than going through a third printing, an updated edition
was deemed appropriate. Since the release of the first edition, additional definitions related to
biospeleology, courtesy of Dr. William R. Elliott of the Natural History Division of the Missouri
Department of Conservation, have been added. Additional definitions obtained from the Australian
Speleological Federation also have been added.
Researchers and the general public alike will find these additions useful as they work their way
through the published literature. For this second edition, the literature search is current to 2002. To be
sure, this updated lexicon is far from complete and will more than likely be updated in a few years.

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PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION

The National Center for Environmental Assessment–Washington Office (NCEA–W) has


prepared this document for the benefit of the regional offices and public in general due to the need to
understand the terminology common to the field of karst. It is a glossary of most terms that have
some relationship to the field of environmental karst as well as specific karst terms. It includes many
foreign terms because much of the karst research is conducted in foreign countries and published
using local terminology. In many instances, common environmental terms are defined in such a way
as to specifically reference karstic phenomena.
The purpose of this document is to serve as a technical guide to regional offices and the public
in general who must read the karst literature or who must hold discussions with karst researchers. It is
intended that this document remove much of the confusion surrounding many of the karst terms.
The literature search supporting this lexicon is current to 1998.

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AUTHOR AND REVIEWERS

The National Center for Environmental Assessment–Washington Office within the Office of
Research and Development was responsible for the preparation of this document and provided overall
direction and coordination during the production effort.

AUTHOR/COMPILER

Malcolm S. Field, Ph.D.


U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
National Center for Environmental Assessment–Washington Office
Washington, DC

REVIEWERS

Stephen R. Kraemer, Ph.D.


U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
National Exposure Research Laboratory
Ecosystems Research Division
Athens, GA

Arthur N. Palmer, Ph.D.


Department of Earth Sciences
State University of New York
Oneonta, NY

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INTRODUCTION

Several attempts to classify karst terminology in an organized manner have been attempted in
the past. The last few glossaries of karst terminology were organized in the late 1960s and published
in the early 1970s. Since that time, many new terms related to karst in general have come into use
throughout the world while other older karst terms are seldom used nowadays. In the mid 1990s the
British Cave Research Association (BCRA) published and updated a dictionary that covers the general
area of karst and caves, but did not focus on environmental issues.
Many of the more recent karst terms are related to the upsurge in environmentalism and the
recognition among karst cognoscenti that karst terranes are much more sensitive to man-induced
effects on the environment than are other types of landscapes. In an attempt to be as broad as possible
in this glossary, terms related to general hydrology and hydrogeology, common karst rock and mineral
types, and many of the descriptive terms used in speleology even where they relate to specific
localities, have been included. No attempt was made to exclude foreign karst terms although many
are no doubt, missing. This has led to a much larger manuscript than was originally intended when
this project was initiated, but it has provided for a more comprehensive document.
Because many non-karst professionals, whether working on basic research or on
environmental problems, need to have a general working knowledge of karst terminology, this
glossary was developed to provide an up-to-date reference for more modern definitions of karst terms
both currently in usage and now defunct. As with any undertaking of this sort, numerous omissions
will be shown to be evident. In other instances, disagreements regarding definitions will arise. In the
event that readers of this glossary find various omissions or incorrect definitions, it would be greatly
appreciated if the necessary corrections be forwarded to the author so that the glossary may be updated
in the future.
As a final note, it should be pointed out that a list of references for the definitions are included
at the back of this glossary and citations are provided when appropriate. In many instances,
duplication of definitions from previous glossaries were employed to avoid changing the original
definitions. However, efforts were not always attempted to cite the exact source for each definition as
this would have greatly lengthened this already excessively long manuscript; secondary citations have

1
been provided. Exact citations would also have resulted in confusion where several definitions were
utilized in the writing of a single clear definition for any particular term. In no instance was it
intended that the work of others be appropriated, only that this glossary be as comprehensive and clear
as possible while avoiding excessive clutter. Also, where definitions were deemed to be incorrect or
poorly worded, alternatives have been written.

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GLOSSARY OF TERMS

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A accidental An animal accidentally living in
a cave[25].
abîme. (French.) 1. An abyss. 2. A wide,
deep shaft, in limestone, the walls of which acclivity. Ascending a slope[16].
are vertical or overhanging[10].
accretion. Land addition by sediment
ablation. The wearing away of ice or snow deposition of a stream[16].
through the process of evaporation[16].
accumulation. Building of new land by
abney level. Type of clinometer with a addition of sedimentary deposits[16].
bubble tube used in cave survey to
determine vertical angles[25]. acetylene. An inflammable hydrocarbon
gas, C2H2, produced by water reacting
abris sous roche. (French.) See rock with calcium carbide. When burned,
shelter. yields carbon dioxide as well as light[25].

abseil. 1. (n.) A controlled descent of a acid. Any chemical compound containing


rope using friction obtained by either hydrogen capable of being replaced by
wrapping the rope around the body in a positive elements or radicals to form salts.
particular way or passing the rope through In terms of dissociation theory, it is a
a carabiner or passing the rope through a compound which, on dissociation in
descender[25]. 2. (v.) To do an abseil[25]. solution, yields excess hydrogen ions.
Synonym: rappel. Acids lower the pH. Examples of acids
or acidic substances are hydrochloric acid,
absorption. The process by which tannic acid, and sodium acid
substances in gaseous, liquid or solid pyrophosphate[6].
form dissolve or mix with other
substances[22]. acidity. The property of water having a pH
below 4.5 that is caused by the presence
abyss. Extremely great depth[16]. of mineral acids. Usually expressed in
equivalent amounts of calcium
accelerated corrosion. A localized carbonate[16]. See also alkalinity; pH.
concentration of solution intensity,
produced by factors favoring greater acid mine drainage. Acid waters
aggressivity of the water in certain parts originating from surface or underground
of the karstland creating differential mine workings[16].
solution rates and thereby a marked
unevenness in the overall erosion of the acoustic log. Geophysical borehole log
karstland[19]. See also corrosion; alluvial measuring the speed of sound in rocks to
corrosion. determine porosity[16].

accessory mineral. Mineral constituents of acoustic resistance. The product of wave


a rock occurring in very small amounts[16]. velocity and rock density indicating the

4
reflective power of a boundary between two adsorption isotherm. A graphical
strata[16]. representation of the relationship between
the bulk activity of adsorbate and the
activated charcoal, activated carbon. A amount adsorbed at constant
granular material usually produced by the temperature[22].
roasting of cellulose base substances,
such as wood or coconut shells, in the advection. 1. The process whereby solutes
absence of air. It has an extremely porous are transported by the bulk mass of
structure and is used in water flowing fluid[6]. 2. Phenomenon of cool
conditioning as an adsorbent for organic air mass intruding and interrupting
matter and certain dissolved gases[6]. It is evaporation and causing condensation due
especially useful for adsorbing tracer to heat loss[16]. See also convective
dyes. transport.

active cave. 1. Cave containing a running aeolianite. See eolian calcarenite.


stream. 2. Cave in which speleothems are
growing. (Less common and less aeration. The process of bringing air into
desirable usage.) Compare live cave[10]. intimate contact with water, usually by
bubbling air through the water to remove
active glacier. Glacier in the stage of dissolved gases like carbon dioxide and
actively enlarging and moving as a result hydrogen sulfide or to oxidize dissolved
of accumulation of precipitation that materials like iron compounds[6].
exceeds the rate of ablation.
aeration, zone of. See zone of aeration.
active water. Water with corrosive
properties[16]. aerial photograph. Photograph of the
landscape taken from an airplane.
adaptation. An inherited structural, Synonym air photo. See also stereo aerial
functional, or behavioral characteristic photographs.
that improves an organism's chances for
survival in a particular habitat[23]. See aerobic. A property of aquatic life forms
also mutation. that can exist only in the presence of
oxygen. See also anaerobic.
adiabatic. The property of thermodynamic
process with no heat exchange[16]. age of caves. The ages of individual caves
may vary enormously. In most regions
adjusted stream. Stream flowing parallel the youngest cave passages have reached
to the strike of underlying beds[16]. their present dimensions during the last
10,000 years, or since the last Pleistocene
adsorption. Adherence of gas molecules, glacial retreat. In higher latitudes most
ions, or molecules in solution to the caves can be related to erosion during the
surface of solids[22]. later Pleistocene climatic variations of the
last million years, and older caves have

5
largely been removed by continuing surface carbon dioxide to form carbonic acid or,
lowering. In tropical regions less interrupted rarely, other acids. 2. Quality of waters
erosion conditions have encouraged survival that attack metals and concrete chemically
of older caves; the Mulu caves of Sarawak by dissolution[10].
include large passages at least two million
years old. Relict caves hundreds of millions aggressiveness. A measure of the relative
of years old may survive in some buried capacity of water to dissolve rock
limestones, but are commonly filled with material. In the context of karstification
younger sediments (see neptunian deposits), and speleogenesis this usually concerns
minerals or, very rarely, igneous rocks. the dissolution of limestone or dolomite
These fill materials may themselves be by the action of dissolved carbon dioxide
dateable, either on the basis of contained (carbonic acid), though other acids may
fossil material (including pollen), by also be involved[9].
comparison with similar rock types that
occur at the surface or by isotopic age aguada. (Spanish for watering place.) In
determination methods identical to those Yucatán, shallow depression generally
applied to suitable surface rock materials. covering several hectares used for water
See also dating of cave sediments[9]. supply[10].

aggradation. Land addition through A-horizon. The topmost eluviated horizon


sediment deposition[16]. of a soil profile[16].

aggrading river. River that is actively aîle. See aisle.


elevating its bed by deposition of
sediments[16]. air pocket, air bell. 1. An enclosed air
space between the water surface and the
aggregate. Grain mixture loosely held roof of a cave[10]. 2. Part of a flooded
together[16]. passage where the ceiling rises above the
water level to create an air pocket isolated
aggregation. The formation of aggregates. from the rest of the cave[9].
In drilling fluids, aggregation results in
the stacking of the clay platelets face to air separating tank. A tank in which
face; as a result, viscosity and gel strength desorbed gases are separated from a
decrease[6]. liquid and evacuated by pumping[16].

aggressive. Referring to water which is still air-space ratio. The ratio of (a) the volume
capable of dissolving more limestone, of water that can be drained from a
other karst rock, or speleothems[25]. saturated soil or rock under the action of
force of gravity to (b) the total volume of
aggressive water. 1. Water having the voids[22].
ability to dissolve rocks. In the context of
limestone and dolomite, this term refers aisle. An elongated high narrow traversable
especially to water containing dissolved passage in a cave[10]. See also crawl,

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crawlway; corridor; passage. Synonyms: (Greek.) allothigenes ryax, or potamos;
(French.) aisle, aîle; (German.) Kluft; (Italian.) corso d’acqua allogeno;
(Greek.) farangothes ipoyios thiavasis; (Spanish.) río alóctono; (Turkish.) karst
(Russian.) hod; (Spanish.) laminador disi kökenli akarsu; (Yugoslavian.)
vertical; (Turkish.) dar geçit; alogena rijeka, alogena reka.
(Yugoslavian.) nis#a.
allogenic. Formed or generated elsewhere,
albedo. The ratio of reflected radiation to usually at a distant place[1]. See also
total radiation on a natural surface[16]. autogenic; recharge, allogenic; recharge,
autogenic.
algal limestone. Type of limestone formed
by calcium secreting algae[16]. allogenic drainage. Underground karst
drainage that is derived entirely from
alkali flat. A salt covered or heavily saline surface run-off that originates on adjacent
depression in an arid environment[16]. non-karstic, generally impermeable,
rocks. Also allochthonous drainage. See
alkaline. Any of various soluble mineral also autogenic drainage[9].
salts found in natural water and arid soils
having a pH greater than 7. In water allogenic valley. A karst valley incised by a
analysis, it represents the carbonates, watercourse originating on impervious
bicarbonates, hydroxides, and rock with a volume sufficient for it to
occasionally the borates, silicates, and traverse a limestone area on the surface.
phosphates in the water[6]. The valley is incised from the limestone
contact and with the passage of time the
alkalinity. The property of water to river is increasingly likely to pass
neutralize acids. Usually expressed in underground as the waters enlarge joints.
terms of calcium carbonate equivalents[16]. Occasionally such a valley may represent
See also acidity; pH. the large-scale collapse of the cavern
system along a subterranean stream or the
allochthonous. Said of material originating enlarging of a series of karst windows[19].
from a different locality than the one in
which it has been deposited[16]. See also alluvial. Pertaining to or composed of
autochthonous. alluvium or deposited by a stream or
running water[6]. Also applies to material
allochthonous drainage. Less common lining the floor of a cave and deposits at
synonym for allogenic drainage[9]. the mouth of a spring.

allogene stream. A surface-water course alluvial apron. A fan-like plain from the
flowing over a karst terrane, but fed by a deposition of glacial outwash[16].
spring (or springs) issuing from a non-
karst terrane[20]. Synonyms: (French.) alluvial channel. River or stream channel
rivière allogène (cours d’eau); (German.) bed composed of unconsolidated alluvial
allochthoner Fluss (all. Waßerlauf); material[16].

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alluvial corrosion. Greater intensity of alveolization. (From the Latin word
solution, caused by the passage of water ‘alveolatus,’ meaning hollowed out.)
through unconsolidated deposits rich in Pitting of a rock surface produced by
carbon dioxide, thus increasing wind loaded with sand, by water charged
aggressivity[19]. See also corrosion, with carbonic acid, or by plant roots[10].
accelerated corrosion. See also alveolar. Synonyms: (French.)
alvéolisation; (German.) Aeolisation ?
alluvial fan. A fan-like deposit of detrital Wabenverwitterung; (Greek.) kypselothis
material from steep mountain slopes[16]. epiphania; (Italian.) alveolizzazione;
(Spanish.) alveolizacion; (Turkish.)
alluvial plain. A plain formed by the çukurlaÕma; (Yugoslavian.) alveolizacija.
deposition of water borne sediments[16].
ammeter. A meter used to measure the
alluvial veneer. A very thin cover of water flow of water in a stream channel.
borne sediments[16]. Synonym: current meter[16].

alluvium. A general term for clay, silt, amorphous silica. Silica with no definite
sand, gravel, or similar unconsolidated crystalline structure[16].
material deposited during comparatively
recent geologic time by a stream or other analysis, chemical. Laboratory procedure
body of running water as a sorted or semi- in water quality determination to identify
sorted sediment in the bed of the stream chemical constituents[16].
or on its floodplain or delta or as a cone
or fan at the base of a mountain slope[6]. analysis, complete chemical analysis.
Chemical analysis of a water sample for
alpine karst. 1. Karst formed at high physical, chemical, and bacteriological
latitude, or in polar regions regardless of constituents[16].
altitude. 2. Almost synonymous with
glaciokarst but restricted to areas of high analysis, core. Petrophysical analysis of a
altitude and relief[9]. Synonyms: rock core acquired through the process of
glaciokarst; nival karst. boring a hole in rock with the intention of
producing a core of rock as opposed to
alternative. Adjective used to designate an chips[16].
intake or resurgence operating only
during rainy seasons; in some areas analysis, morphometric. A geodetic and
reversible; equivalent to intermittent. geometric description of basin, stream
Also used as a noun[10]. network, or sinkhole plain, the purpose of
which is to determine the frequency and
alveolar. 1. Consisting of a honeycomb hierarchy of occurrences[16].
shape[16]. 2. A specific erosional pattern
resulting in a cellular structure[16]. See analysis, sieve. Mechanical grain size
also alveolization. analysis by sieving an unconsolidated
material through a series of sieves[16].

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anastomosis. 1. The development of a anchor ice, ground ice. Ice that is
network of branching, intersecting, and temporarily attached to the bottom of a
rejoining channels in a two dimensional river[16].
system. Anastomosing tubes, or cave
anastomoses, which are generally formed anemolite. A helictite in which the
due to dissolution by slow, poorly eccentricity is ascribed to the action of air
directed, phreatic flow along a bedding- currents[10]. The word is derived from
plane parting or fracture in limestone, wind-control theory of helictite
represent an important element in the formation[9].
early stages of cave development.
Individual anastomoses most commonly anemometer. A device used to measure
have a diameter of approximately 100 wind speeds[16].
mm and networks may contain hundreds
of tubes. Most anastomoses are angle of contact, wetting angle. The angle
abandoned when one channel offers between the liquid phase and solid
preferential flow conditions so that it boundary measured through the liquid
increases in size at the expense of others. phase[16].
Such abandoned or relict anastomoses are
commonly only exposed by subsequent angle of repose. The natural slope of
wall or roof collapse[32]. 2. A network of unsupported granular material[16].
tubular passages or holes in a cave or in a
cave or solution-sculptured rock. A anglesite. A cave mineral — PbSO4[11].
complex of many irregular and repeatedly
connected passages[9, 21]. Synonym: angular. The property of unconsolidated
labyrinth; (French.) anastomose; grains with sharp edges[16].
(German.) Labyrinth; (Greek.)
anastomosis; (Italian.) anastomosi; angular unconformity. A geological
(Russian.) labirint; (Spanish.) unconformity with marked difference in
anastomosís; (Turkish.) geçit Õebekesi; dip of the superimposed series[16].
(Yugoslavian.) splet kanala.
anhydride. Anhydrous calcium sulfate,
anastomotic cave pattern. A type of maze CaSO4[16].
cave consisting of tubular passages or
holes in a cave or in a solution-sculptured anion. A negatively charged ion that
rock. A complex of many irregular and migrates to an anode, as in electrolysis[6].
repeatedly connected passages.
Synonym: labyrinth. anion exchange. Ion exchange process in
which anions in solution are exchanged
anchor. A fixed object used to secure a for other anions from an ion exchanger[6].
man whilst operating a safety rope or for
attaching equipment such as ladders or anisotropic. The property of aquifer
ropes[25]. systems displaying different hydrological

9
properties in different directions[16]. See antecedent stream. A stream having
also anisotropy; anisotropic mass. established its course before occurrence
of orogenic events that would later alter
anisotropic mass. A mass having different the general drainage pattern[16].
properties in different directions at any
given point[22]. antenna (plural antennae). A feeler; an
appendage, sensory in function, that
anisotropic steering. Anisotropic occurs in pairs on the heads of
structures (anisotropies) in the rock like crustaceans, insects, and certain other
schistosity, inclusions and fractures which animals[23].
can deviate or ‘steer’ the direction of
fractures subsequently developed. anthodite. 1. Radiating crystals of
aragonite, mostly sharp needles 1–20 mm
anisotropy. The condition of having long. They occur sporadically in some
different properties in different caves but they may also be spectacularly
directions[22]. abundant, with clean white crystals
growing all over the rock and calcite
annual frost zone. The top layer of ground surfaces. Carlsbad Caverns (USA) and
subject to annual freezing and thawing[16]. Grotte de Moulis (France) have fine
anthodite displays[9]. 2. A cave formation
annual mean. The mean value taken over composed of feathery or radiating masses
all events that have occurred during a year of long needlelike crystals of gypsum or
such as precipitation, river stages, water- aragonite, which radiate outward from a
table levels[16]. common base[10]. See also cave flower.

annulus. The annular space between drill anthropocentric definitions. Definitions of


pipe and casing or between casing and the caves or parts of caves that include
borehole wall[16]. accessibility by human explorers as one of
their limiting conditions. Most well
anomaly. The deviation from normally known among these is the definition
expected findings, especially in published by the International
exploration geophysics indicating a Speleological Union, that ‘A cave is a
change in subsurface environmental natural underground opening in rock that
conditions[16]. is large enough for human entry’ (see
proto-caves)[9].
antecedent precipitation index. A
precipitation index that is based on the anticlinal valley. A valley that is
amount of previous precipitations[16]. established along the axis of an eroded
anticline[16].
antecedent-soil moisture. The degree of
water saturation in the soil prior to a anticline. Upfolded stratum[16].
precipitation event[16].

10
aphthitalite. A cave mineral — synonymous with some inception
(K,Na)3Na(SO4)2[11]. horizons[18].

apparent ground-water velocity. See aquifer, artesian. A confined aquifer


specific discharge. where the potentiometric surface rises
above the top of the aquifer bed[16].
appendage. An arm or other limb that
branches from an animal's body[23]. aquifer, coastal. An aquifer in a coastal
region open to salt-water intrusions[16].
approach segment. That part of a
hydrograph curve before onset of aquifer, flowing artesian. An artesian
precipitation[16]. See also hydrograph. aquifer in which the water, under
hydrostatic pressure rises above the land
apron. A smooth bulging mass of surface.
flowstone covering sloping projections
from walls of caves or limestone cliffs[10]. aquifer, karst. An aquifer in which the
flow of water is or can be appreciable
aquatic. Living in water. Aquatic cave through one or more of the following:
animals include amphipods, isopods, joints, faults, bedding-plane partings, and
crayfish, planarians, fish, and blind cavities — any or all of which have been
salamanders[23]. See also terrestrial; enlarged by dissolution[18].
marine.
aquifer, leaky. An aquifer overlain or
aqueduct. A conduit to convey water, underlain by semipermeable strata from
usually above ground[16]. or into which water will flow[16].

aquiclude. A formation which, although aquifer stimulation. A type of


porous and capable of storing water, does development that is done in
not transmit it at rates sufficient to furnish semiconsolidated and completely
an appreciable supply for a well or spring. consolidated formations to alter the
See also confining unit[22]. formation physically to improve its
hydraulic properties[6].
aquifer. 1. A formation, group of
formations, or part of a formation that aquifer storage. Gas storage in an
contains sufficient saturated permeable aquifer[16].
material to yield significant quantities of
water to wells and springs[6]. 2. A aquifer system. A body of permeable and
ground-water reservoir. 3. Pervious rock poorly permeable material that functions
that is completely saturated and will yield regionally as a water-yielding unit; it
water to a well or spring. Historically the comprises two or more permeable beds
term has been applied to beds favoring separated at least locally by confining
early cave development, probably beds that impede ground-water movement
but do not greatly affect the regional

11
hydraulic continuity of the system; includes mineral composed of calcium carbonate,
both saturated and unsaturated parts of CaCO3, like calcite but differing in crystal
permeable material[22]. form[10]. 3. An unstable orthorhombic
carbonate mineral, CaCO3[16].
aquifer test. A test to determine hydrologic
properties of the aquifer involving the ardealite. A cave mineral —
withdrawal of measured quantities of Ca2(SO4)(HPO4)"4H2O[11].
water from or addition of water to a well
and the measurement of resulting changes area of influence of a well. The area
in head in the aquifer both during and surrounding a pumping or recharging well
after the period of discharge or within which the potentiometric surface
additions[6]. has been changed[22].

aquifere epikarstique. See epikarst zone. arête and pinnacle karst. A landscape of
naked reticulated raw-topped ridges
aquifuge. A formation which has no having almost vertical slopes and a relief
interconnected openings or interstices and of as much as 120 meters. The ridges rise
therefore neither stores nor transmits above forest- covered corridors and
water[22]. See also confining unit. depressions. Found in New Guinea at
elevations of 2,000 meters and more[10].
aquitard. A confining bed that retards but Both pinnacle karst and arête karst are
does not prevent the flow of water to or varieties of limestone landscape formed
from an adjacent aquifer; a leaky under equatorial rain forest cover. They
confining bed. It does not readily yield are characterized by vertical sided blades
water to wells or springs, but may serve of bare rock fretted by dissolution[9].
as a storage unit for ground water[22]. See
also confining unit. argillaceous. The property of rocks
containing clay in non-negligible
aragonite. 1. A relatively rare form of proportions[16].
calcium carbonate (CaCO3), chemically
identical to the more common calcite but argillaceous limestone. Limestone
of orthorhombic crystal form. Its pure containing considerable amounts of
form is metastable in the cave clay[16].
environment, where calcite forms
preferentially. It is relatively abundant in arid. The property of dry climates and
some caves due to the presence of regions with a net deficiency of
impurities, notably strontium, that distort moisture[16].
the carbonate lattice and favor aragonite
growth. The commonest form seen in arrival time. 1. The time of arrival in
caves as small radiating crystals subsurface flow tracing for the first tracer
(anthodites) that develop in humid caves, pulse to arrive at a discharge location. 2.
where surfaces are covered by a moisture The time of arrival in geophysics for the
film but not by flowing water. 2. A

12
first seismic wave to arrive at a artificial recharge. Recharge at a rate
geophone[16]. greater than natural, resulting from
deliberate or incidental human
artefact. A product of human manufacture activities[6].
or art, e.g. tools of bone, stone, etc.,
paintings, engravings. In caves, tools are ascender. A mechanical device used by
often buried in sediment. (Scientific cavers who are either ascending or are
attention should be drawn to the finding descending through a vertical opening in
of artefacts in caves[25].) a cave (e.g. vadose shaft) that uses a cam
to grip a rope while downward pressure is
artesian. Synonymous with confined. being applied to the device[13]. See also
mechanical ascender; prusiking; prusik
artesian aquifer. Synonymous with knot.
confined aquifer. See aquifer, artesian.
association. A relatively stable community
artesian flow. Flow through a confined of different species living in a
aquifer where the elevation of the characteristic habitat[25].
overlying aquiclude is locally depressed
so that the entire aquifer is saturated and atmometer. An instrument used to measure
the flow is under hydrostatic pressure. evaporation intensities[16].
Some maze cave development in
cavernous limestones may be due to atmosphere. A gaseous envelope of the
artesian flow, which is commonly related earth that contains and transports air and
to synclinal fold structures[9]. water in vapor and condensed form[16].

artesian spring. See spring, artesian. attapulgite clay. A colloidal, viscosity-


building clay consisting of hydrous
artesian well. A well deriving its water magnesium aluminum silicates and used
from a confined aquifer in which the principally in salt-water drilling fluids[6].
water level stands above the ground
surface[6]. Synonym: flowing artesian attrition. The wearing away of rocks by
well. friction[16].

arthropods. Animals with jointed legs and auger. A rotary drilling device where the
bard external skeletons (exoskeletons). dry cuttings are removed continuously by
The group includes insects, crustaceans, helical grooves on the drill pipe[16].
spiders, millipedes, and several other
types of animals commonly found in aurichalcite. A cave mineral —
caves[23]. (Zn,Cu)5(CO3)2(OH)6.

artificial discharge. The discharge of autochthonous. Property pertaining to


ground water by pumping wells[16]. sedimentary material originating and

13
deposited at about the same location[16]. passage or chamber roof that tapers
See also allochthonous. upward rather like a very elongate
cone[10]. Compare dome pit.
autochthonous drainage. Less common
synonym for autogenic drainage[9]. average interstitial velocity. See velocity,
average interstitial.
autogenic, authigenic. Formed or
generated in place[1]. See also allogenic;
recharge, autogenic; recharge, allogenic. azimuth. The true bearing of a survey line,
determined by measurement from an
autogenic drainage. Underground karst accurate survey or by observations of sun
drainage that is derived entirely by or stars[25].
absorption of meteoric water into the
karst rock surface[9]. Synonym: azonal soil. Soils without distinct layering
autochthonous drainage. See also in horizons[16].
allogenic drainage.
azurite. A cave mineral —
available water. The water available to Cu(CO3)2(OH)2[11].
plants in the soil zone as defined by the
interval between field capacity and
wilting point[16].

aven. 1. A hole in the roof of a cave


passage that may be either a rather large
blind roof pocket or a tributary inlet shaft
into the cave system. A feature described
as an aven when seen from below may
equally be described as shaft when seen
from above, and the naming of such a
feature commonly depends purely upon
the direction of exploration. Many avens
close upwards to impenetrable fissures
but may still be important hydrological
routes; few caves are without them. In
parts of France, aven is equivalent to the
British term, pothole[9]. 2. (French.) A
vertical or highly inclined shaft in
limestone, extending upward from a cave
passage, generally to the surface; smaller
than an abîme. Commonly related to
enlarged vertical joints. Compare cenote;
natural well; pothole. 3. (British.) A
vertical extension from a shaft in a

14
B bactericide. A substance used to destroy
bacteria (e.g. iron bacteria)[6].
backflooding. 1. Temporarily rising water
level in a cave caused by downstream bailer. 1. A cylindrical container used to
passage being too small to pass an withdraw a sample of water from a well.
abnormally high discharge. The 2. A cylindrical container with a bottom
excavation and reexcavation of some valve for the clearing of drill cuttings
caves is ascribed to the enlargement of a from the bottom of a borehole[16].
passage at or near the water table by
gravity flow alternating with periods of bailing line. Cable operating a bailer[16].
calcite precipitation[10]. 2. Flooding due Synonym: sand line.
to backup of excess flow behind a
constriction in a major conduit. Water balcony. Any projection on the wall of a
that is ponded in tributary passages and cave large enough to support one or more
proto-caves upstream of the constriction persons[10].
may contribute to the enlargement of
maze caves[9]. bank. Ascending slope bordering a river[16].

background noise. The level of intensity of bank erosion. Erosion of a river bank[16].
signals due to normal activities other than
the specific signal emission[16]. bank storage. 1. Subsurface conduit water
that has been driven back up into older,
backwater. The accumulated water above higher karst levels and into the
the normal level of a water course due to surrounding rock matrix during a high
impoundment at a point downstream[16]. flow period. 2. River water that has
infiltrated river banks during a high flow
backwater curve. Water surface profile in period and being retained in temporary
a stream or channel above a constriction storage[16].
or impoundment[16].
barbels. Fleshy threadlike sensory
bacon. Thin, elongated, translucent structures hanging like whiskers near the
flowstone having parallel colored bands mouths of certain fish, such as catfish[23].
on or projecting from roofs and walls of
some caves[10]. See also blanket; curtain; bare karst. A type of karst landscape
drapery. lacking soil cover and where dissolution
of carbonate rocks to form karst
bacteria. Simple, colorless one-cell plants, landforms occurs primarily on the
most of which are unable to manufacture exposed bedrock surface[9]. See naked
their own food using sunlight Bacteria karst.
are possibly important in caves as
synthesizers of food materials from barite. 1. A cave mineral — BaSO4. 2. A
minerals. They are also important as natural finely ground barium sulfate used
decomposers[23].

15
for increasing the density of drilling base level. Lowest level of erosion by a
fluids[6]. stream[16].

barograph. A pressure recorder[16]. base level of erosion. The lowest


theoretical level of surface to be achieved
barometer. An indicator of barometric by erosion[16].
pressure[16].
base level, karst. See karst base level.
barometric efficiency. The ratio of water
level change to atmospheric pressure base line. 1. An arbitrary line from which
change in a well[16]. deflections of self potential are read[16]. 2.
Shale line[16].
barrier. A geological formation or part of a
formation having become impervious to baseline monitoring. The establishment
ground-water flow due to a facies and operation of a designed surveillance
change[16]. system for continuous or periodic
measurements and recording of existing
barrier, freshwater. Barrier of freshwater and changing conditions that will be
injected into an aquifer to stop the inflow compared with future observations[22].
of seawater into a coastal aquifer[16].
base of karstification. Level below which
barrier, hydrologic. Lithologic formation karstification has not occurred. See also
preventing horizontal movement of karst base level.
ground water[16].
base width. The width of the hydrograph as
barrier, permeability. A geologic or determined by a line parallel to the time
petrographic feature in a bed obstructing axis cutting through the points where the
free flow[16]. rising limb starts and where the recession
curve ends[16].
barrier spring. See spring, barrier.
basin. Hydrogeographic unit receiving
base exchange. The displacement of a precipitation and discharging runoff in
cation bound to a site on the surface of a one point[16].
solid, as in silica-alumina clay-mineral
packets, by a cation solution[6]. basin characteristics. The physiographic,
geologic, and ecologic characteristics of a
base flow. 1. That part of the stream basin[16].
discharge that is not attributable to direct
runoff from precipitation or melting basin, closed. Drainage basin with no
snow; it is usually sustained by surface flow outlet[16].
ground-water discharge[22]. 2. Sustained
fair weather runoff[16].

16
basin, drainage. The area contributing to bathybenthic. Of the bottom of the truly
runoff which sustains streamflow[16]. See deep areas of the sea, where the "rain" of
also drainage basin. organic material produces a deposit of
food[23].
basin, experimental. A basin chosen for
the thorough study of hydrological bathypelagic. Of the deep sea. Refers to
phenomena[16]. the depths between roughly 3000 feet
below the surface and the bottom of the
basin, ground-water. The area throughout sea. No food accumulates in these
which ground water drains towards the waters[23].
same point. It can be larger than the
associated drainage basin if permeable bathyphreatic. Referring to water moving
layers extend outside of the topographical with some speed through downward
divide[16]. In karst terranes, the ground- looping passages in the phreatic zone[25].
water basin often does not resemble the See bathyphreatic zone, ground water,
drainage basin. phreas.

basin, infiltration. Basin in which water is bathyphreatic zone. See bathyphreatic,


spread for recharge[16]. ground water, phreas.

basin, intermontane. A basin lying bathometer. An instrument for measuring


between two mountain ranges[16]. water depths in wells[16].

basin method. A recharge method in which beach. A shore consisting of sand or gravel
water is spread in shallow basins[16]. deposits[16].

basin mouth. The point at which runoff beachrock. 1. Rock composed of sand
leaves a basin[16]. grains and/or sand-sized shell fragments
cemented by calcium carbonate,
basin perimeter. The circumference of a commonly formed very rapidly on some
basin following the divide[16]. beaches in tropical and sub-tropical areas.
Beachrock generally occurs as thin beds
basin relief, maximum. The elevation between bedding planes that dip seawards
difference between basin mouth and the at angles similar to those of the beach
highest point within a basin perimeter[16]. slope[9]. 2. A friable to indurated rock
consisting of sand grains of various
basin, settling. A basin used for the settling minerals cemented by calcium carbonate;
out of solids from suspension[16]. occurs in thin beds dipping seaward at
less than 15N. Also known as beach
bat. A member of the order Chiroptera, the sandstone[10].
only mammals capable of true flight as
they have membranes between the toes of bearing. The angle measured clockwise
their forefeet[25]. that a line makes with the north line.

17
True, magnetic and grid bearings are bedding grike. Term used to describe the
measured respectively from true, occurrence of the dissolution and
magnetic and grid north[25]. widening (similar to that which occurs in
joints) of nearly vertical bedding in karst
bed. 1. A layer in sedimentary rocks; a terranes[8]. Synonym: (German.)
stratum[10]. 2. A sedimentary deposit of Schichtfugenkarren.
relatively small thickness and great areal
extent, separated by bedding planes from bedding joint. A joint in rocks that runs
over- and underlying deposits[16]. parallel to or on a bedding plane[16].

bed load. See bedload. bedding plane. 1. A primary depositional


lamination in sedimentary rocks that may
bed, lower confining. An impermeable bed be preserved, though possibly with
underlying an aquifer[16]. different properties, in metamorphic
rocks. These laminations may be clearly
bed, marker. Bed with characteristic visible where lithologies change or where
features that can be followed over large depositional cycles were
areas for identification purposes[16]. completed/initiated, or they may be
effectively invisible to the naked eye,
bed, mortar. Secondary calcium carbonate marking subtle changes in depositional
cementations in the lower part of a soil conditions. Most bedding planes were
profile[16]. Synonym: hardpan. originally horizontal or very slightly
inclined, but more steeply inclined
bed, river. The channel of a river covered bedding planes developed in rocks
by water[16]. deposited in deltaic or sand dune
environments or in marine reefs. When
bed roughness. The roughness of a channel rocks are folded the bedding planes
or river bed[16]. provide an indication of the degree of
deformation. Bedding planes play a
bed, stream. The bottom of a stream crucial role in the inception and ongoing
covered by water[16]. development of most caves and many
surface karst features[3]. 2. A plane that
bed, upper confining. Impermeable bed separates two strata of differing
overlying an aquifer[16]. characteristics[10]. See also parting.

bedding. Applies to rocks resulting from bedding-plane cave. 1. Bedding planes are
consolidation of sediments and exhibiting widespread and very significant features
surfaces of separation (bedding planes) within most carbonate rocks, and cave
between layers of the same or different passages are commonly guided by them.
materials (e.g., shale, sandstone, Their structure, their distribution and the
limestone, etc.). chemical contrasts that some bedding
planes provide may be the major
bedding cave. See bedding-plane cave. influence during the earliest phases of

18
development of a cave system. The term point at a known elevation in relation to
bedding-plane cave is strictly applied to a an adopted datum[16]. Bench marks, or
passage that has not enlarged by growth marked points, connected by precise
into a major tube or canyon, but has leveling, constitute the control of land-
remained almost entirely on the bedding surface settlement in subsidence
plane. A famous example is Hensler’s studies[21].
Passage, in Gaping Gill, Yorkshire, which
is over 400 m long, nearly over 5 m wide bend. Curve in a water course[16].
and nowhere higher than 1 m[9]. 2. A
passage formed along a bedding plane, bentonite. A colloidal clay, largely made up
especially when there is a difference in of the mineral sodium montmorillonite, a
susceptibility to corrosion in the two hydrated aluminum silicate[6].
beds[10]. 3. A cave whose location is
controlled by the bedding of the enclosing B-horizon. Illuvial horizon in which
formation or formations[20]. Synonyms: soluble material from the overlying A-
(French.) grotte de stratification; horizon has been deposited[16].
(German.) schichtgebundene Höhle;
(Greek.) strosigenes speleon; (Italian.) belay. A safety rope tied around a caver that
grotta di interstrato; (Russian.) pescera v is played out or taken in by a second
ploakosti naplastovanija; (Spanish.) cueva person as the caver moves. The purpose
adaptada a planos de estratificación; of the belay is to prevent the caver from
(Turkish.) tabakalanma ma™aras2; falling more than a few feet[13].
(Yugoslavian.) slojna peƒina.
beudantite. A cave mineral —
bedding-plane parting. See bedding plane PbFe3(AsO4)(SO4)(OH)6[11].
and parting.
bicarbonate. A salt containing the radical
bedeckter karst. See covered karst. HCO3–1, such as Ca(HCO3)2[10].

bedload. The part of the total stream load bifurcation. The forklike separation of a
that is moved on or immediately above water course into two arms[16].
the stream bed, such as the larger or
heavier particles (boulders, pebbles, bifurcation ratio. The ratio of the number
gravel) transported by traction or saltation of stream segments of a given order to the
along the bottom; the part of the load that number of segments of next higher
is not continuously in suspension or order[16].
solution[6].
biological clock. An inherited time-
bedrock. Solid rock underlying measuring process within a living thing,
unconsolidated material[16]. which governs its responses to certain
external events[23].
bench mark. A relatively permanent mark,
natural or artificial, furnishing a survey

19
biomass. The total weight of living matter, blade. In a cave, a thin sharp projection
whether in an entire community, at a jutting out from roof, wall, or floor, of
particular trophic level, or of a particular which it is an integral part; generally the
kind of organism in the community. Thus remains of a partition or bridge[10].
we may refer to the biomass of a pond
community, of herbivores in the pond, or blanket. A thick layer of dripstone, not
of copepods in the pond[23]. translucent[10]. See also bacon; curtain;
drapery.
biomicrite. A microscopic-textured
limestone composed of skeletal grains in blind chimney. See chimney.
a matrix of micrite; micrite is a finely
crystalline carbonate sediment with the blind shaft. A vertical extension upwards
upper crystalline diameter being 4 from part of a cave, but not reaching the
microns[20]. Synonyms: (French.) surface; small in area in relation to its
biomicrite; (German.) Biomicrite; (Greek.) height[25].
micrite; (Italian.) biomicrite; (Spanish.)
biomicrita; (Turkish.) biyomikrit; blind valley. 1. A karst valley abruptly
(Yugoslavian.) biomikrit. See also terminated by the passage underground of
micrite; peloid. the watercourse which has hitherto
resisted the karst processes and remained
biospeleology. 1. The study of subterranean at the surface. An intermediate type, the
living organisms, particularly in karst half-blind valley, exists in which the
caves and other openings in rock valley form continues downstream from
formations[9, 21]. 2. The scientific study of the sinkhole used under conditions of
cave animal life, or the biology of caves, normal river flow. The watercourse only
karst, and groundwater. A biologist who flows here intermittently and the valley
specializes in this study is called a may (except for its use as a flood conduit)
biospeleologist[23]. Synonyms: (French.) be fossil in that it represents the section
biospéléologie, biospéologie; (German.) abandoned by the river as it sought
Biospeläologie; (Greek.) biospeleology; progressively higher swallow holes[19]. 2.
(Italian.) biospeleogia; (Russian.) A karst valley with no evident
biospeleologija; (Spanish.) downstream continuation, and one in
biospeleología; (Turkish.) biyospeleoloji, which the water drains and disappears
ma™ara canl2lar2 bilimi; (Yugoslavian.) underground into one or more ponors[20].
biospeleologija. 3. A valley that terminates abruptly at a
point where its stream sinks, or once
biphosphammite. A cave mineral — sank, underground. As sinks develop
NH4H2PO4[11]. higher up the blind valley, the original
valley termination may be dry under most
birnessite. A cave mineral — flow conditions[9]. Related to marginal
(Na,Ca)Mn7O14"3H2O[11]. polje. Synonyms: (French.) vallée
aveugle; (German.) Blindtal, (Kesseltal);
(Greek.) kliste karstike kilas; (Italian.)

20
valle cieca, valle chiusa; (Russian.) (Russian.) dujuÑcij kolokec; (Spanish.)
slepaja dolina; (Spanish.) valle ciego; sondeo soplador; (Turkish.) üfleç kuyu.
(Turkish.) kör vadi; (Yugoslavian.) slijepa See also steam hole.
dolina, sepa dolina. See also half-blind
valley; marginal polje. blowout. An uncontrolled escape of drilling
fluid, gas, oil, or water from a well caused
bloedite. A cave mineral — by the formation pressure being greater
Na2Mg(SO4)2"4H2)[11]. than the hydrostatic head of the fluid in
the hole[6].
blowhole. 1. Opening in the roof of a cave
or cavern through which air is expelled blue hole. 1. Deep resurgence pool, notably
vigorously. In coastal areas the in Jamaica and Florida, that may have a
phenomenon is usually due to blue color due to the presence of algae.
compression of air within the cave by Also a deep submarine cave of the
incoming tides or waves[20]. 2. Cliff top Bahamas. The latter type are large
entrance to a sea cave, also known as a flooded shafts cut into the limestones of
geo, gloop, or gloup[9]. 3. (Australian.) A the shallow reefs and lagoon floors.
small hole in the surface of the Nullarbor Many are 100 m in diameter and some are
Plain through which air blows in and out 100 m deep. Opening from the shafts are
with observable force, sometimes flooded cave passages at various depths,
audibly[10]. Related to breathing hole. some of which have been explored
Synonyms: (French.) trou souffleur; subhorizontally for more than 1 km.
(German.) Windhöhle; (Greek.) ope Their origins are complex. Extensive
ekphysosa; (Italian.) bocca soffiante; stalagmite deposits show that large old
(Spanish.) soplador; (Turkish.) üflenme caves were drained when sea-levels were
a™z2; (Yugoslavian.) vjetrenica, veternica, low during the Pleistocene (when water
puhaljka, pihalnik, dihalnik. See also was held in the ice sheets). They are now
steam hole. being modified by marine dissolution,
notably at the interface between fresh and
blowing cave. A cave out of which or into salt waters (sea littoral zone) and by
which a current of air flows powerful tidal flows between connected
intermittently[10]. holes[9]. 2. (Jamaican.) A major emer-
gence where water (artesian spring) rises
blowing well. A well or borehole into from below without great turbulence. 3.
which air is sucked and from which air is (Bahamas.) A drowned solution
blown (often with considerable velocity) sinkhole[10]. 4. Caribbean expression for a
due to changes in barometric pressure or major quiet up-welling karst spring inland
in water level. The phenomenon or along the coast. The blue color is due
indicates that the well or borehole is in to the scattering of sunlight by water
communication with an underground air- molecules, although in some cases it may
filled cavity. Synonyms: (French.) puits be attributed to the presence of calcareous
souffleur; (German.) Windkamin; (Greek.) algae[20]. Synonyms: (French.) source
ekphysosa ope; (Italian.) pozzo soffiante; bleue (Jura), bleu-fon (South of France);

21
(German.) Blaue Grotto; (Greek.) galapo bolt. A high tensile steel bolt used as an
speleo. See also boiling spring. anchor; either a conical bolt screwed into
a metal holder in a hole drilled in rock,
bobbin. A decender that opens to enclose causing expansion for grip, or a bolt with
the rope around two fixed pulleys. May partially filed thread hammered into a
have a handle ("STOP") which must be slightly smaller hole[25].
squeezed to allow descent[25].
bone-breccia. 1. Cave breccia including
Bodenbedeckter karst. See subsoil karst. much bone[10]. 2. A breccia containing
many bone fragments. (Scientific
bog. Swamp[16]. attention should be drawn to the finding
of such in caves[25].)
bogaz. 1. (Slavic.) An elongated depression
in limestone or karst terrain; thus it bone cave. A cave recognized particularly
embraces a defile, a blind valley or a for its contained deposits of animal bones.
ravine leading to a ponor. It can be The bones may be the remains of animals
considered as a giant grike. This meaning that fell into the cave, as in the Joint
is based on the Serbian use[20]. 2. A Mitnor Cave, Devon, or in many other
variable-discharge artesian spring in pitfall or fissure sites. Alternatively the
which hydrostatic pressure is great bones may be of animals that originally
enough to cause a turbulent or even lived in the cave — and these may
fountain-like discharge. 3. A long narrow include man, as at Niah Cave, Sarawak,
chasm enlarged by solution of the or at Russell Cave, USA. A third, and
limestone[10]. 4. Large linear fissure or most important, type of bone cave is the
box valley through a karst block. ancient animal den, into which scavengers
Effectively a giant grike, perhaps 50 m such as hyaenas dragged the remains of
deep and 1 km long, formed by many other animals, as for example at
dissolution on a fault or joint in very Kirkdale Cave in North Yorkshire[3].
massive limestone[9]. Synonyms:
(French.) défilé, bogaz; (German.) Doline, borehole. 1. Boring into unconsolidated
Karstgaße, Blindtal, Zangön; (Greek.) and consolidated materials for the
faragothis doline; (Spanish.) zanjón; purpose of subsurface hydrogeological
(Turkish.) bog#az; (Yugoslavia.) bogaz. investigations. 2. Synonym for a well
See also canyon; gorge; grike; corridor; developed phreatic tube passage[9].
struga; zanjón.
botryoid, botryoidal speleothem. 1.
boiling spring. See spring, boiling. Generally sub-spherical or globular
calcium carbonate deposits ranging in
bollard. A projection of rock over which size between tiny beads and masses up to
rope, tape or wire can be placed to create 1 m across. Botryoidal describes a form
an anchor[25]. resembling a bunch of grapes[9]. 2. A
grape-like deposit of calcium carbonate
generally found on walls of caves[10].

22
Synonyms: clusterite; grape formation. channel bars, resembling in plan the
See coralloid speleothem. strands of a complex braid[6].

bottom hole. The lowest part of a drilled brake bar. A round bar approximately 2½
hole where the drilling bit cuts into the × ¾ inches that is placed on rappel racks
rock[16]. or carabiners so that rope can be threaded
through the rack or carabiners for
bottomland. A lowland along an alluvial rappelling[13].
river plain[16].
branchwork cave pattern. 1. A cave
boulder clay. See glacial till. system that has been formed by the
intersection of tubular or canyon-like
boundary spring. See spring, boundary. conduits as tributaries in the down-flow
direction. 2. A dendritic cave system of
bourne. (British.) 1. A stream that appears subterranean watercourses having many
in a normally dry valley, particularly on incoming branches and no visible
the Chalk outcrop in southern England, outgoing ones[10].
during wet conditions[9]. 2. Intermittent
stream in a normally dry valley in chalk breakdown. See cave breakdown.
country[10].
breakthrough. A quantum jump in
boxwork. 1. A three-dimensional network erosional activity that is associated with
of thin sheets of mineral projecting from a the transition from dominantly laminar to
cave wall. The boxwork is vein fillings dominantly turbulent flow conditions[9].
etched from the cave wall by dissolution See turbulent threshold.
of the host limestone and consists mostly
of calcite and quartz. It is not common, breakthrough curve. 1. A plot of relative
but spectacular displays occur in Ind concentration versus time, where relative
Cave, South Dakota, USA[9]. 2. Network concentration is defined as C/Co with C
of thin blades of calcite or gypsum etched as the concentration at a point in the
out in relief on the limestone walls and ground-water flow domain, and Co as the
ceiling of a cave[10]. source concentration[22]. 2. A plot of
tracer concentration, C, versus time, t, for
brackish water. Water containing from a ground-water tracing study in karst
1000 to 10,000 ppm of total dissolved conduit for the purpose of quantitatively
solids[16]. determining how much tracer mass was
recovered, mean time of travel, mean
braided stream. A stream that divides into tracer flow velocity, and related hydraulic
or follows an interlacing or tangled flow and geometric parameters.
network of several small branching and Synonyms: recovery curve; tracer-
reuniting shallow channels separated breakthrough curve; tracer-recovery
from each other by branch islands or curve.

23
breakthrough time. The time required to re-cemented, forming a fault breccia[9]. 2.
develop a conduit large enough (usually Rock composed of angular fragments[16].
5–10 mm in diameter) to support
turbulent flow[9]. bridge. 1. May be a natural bridge of
bedrock normally formed outside a cave
breathing cave. Air movement through a entrance by partial collapse leaving an
cave is described as breathing when it isolated roof segment, as in the famous
reverses more frequently than the examples of Rakov Škocjan, Slovenia.
seasonal reversal of a through-draught in Rock bridges may also occur inside caves
a cave with higher and lower entrances. due either surrounding phreatic
Slow breathing occurs in response to dissolution or collapse between
barometric pressure changes, when the superimposed passages. Another
volume of cave air is forced to change. It common type inside a cave is a span of
is notoriously strong in large caves of the false floor where sediment is washed
Australian Nullarbor Plain. More rapid from below, as at The Bridge in GB
wind reversals or oscillations, as in Cavern in the Mendip Hills[9]. 2. In a
Breathing Cave, Virginia, are a resonance cave, a residual rock span across a
phenomenon, similar to the effect passage[10]. 3. In water wells, an
produced by air passing over the neck of a obstruction in the drill hole or annulus. A
bottle. In the cave environment the bridge is usually formed by caving of the
resonant frequency is relatively low and wall of the well bore, by the intrusion of a
periodic air flow reversals occur, rather large boulder, or by filter pack materials
than the sound waves observed at the during well completion. Bridging can
higher frequencies met in the bottle neck also occur in the formation during well
example[9]. development[16]. See also natural bridge.

breathing hole. Opening in the roof of a bridging effect. The forming of arches in a
cave, cavern or other underground void packing of materials[16].
through which air is sucked in and
expelled in a rhythmic manner similar to brine. Water containing more than 100,000
inhalation and exhalation of breath[20]. ppm of total dissolved solids[16].
Related to blow hole and steam hole.
Synonyms: (French.) trou souffleur; brittle deformation. The sudden failure of
(German.) Luftloch, (Greek.) anapnéousa a rock with complete loss of cohesion
opí spiléou; (Spanish.) respirador; across a plane.
(Turkish.) esintili delik.
brochantite. A cave mineral —
breccia. 1. Angular fragments of rock, Cu4(SO4)(OH)6[11].
commonly, but not inevitably, cemented
by finer-grained materials including brushite. A cave mineral —
silica, iron minerals, and calcite to form a CaHPO4"2H2O[11].
new rock. Many fault planes are marked
by zones of broken rock, either loose or

24
bubble gage. A stage recorder based on the
principle of equating a gas pressure to
water level[16].

bucket. A measuring reservoir in liquid


gaging instruments[16].

buffered solution. A solution that resists


changes in the pH value upon addition of
acids or bases[16].

buildup. The vertical distance the water


table or potentiometric surface is raised,
or the increase of the pressure head due to
the addition of water[22].

buried karst. Karst topography entirely


buried by relatively younger post-rock or
sediments and not part of the
contemporary landscape[17]. Synonyms:
fossil karst; (French.) karst couvert, karst
fossile, paleokarst; (German.) bedeckter
Karst, Urkarst; (Greek.) kaymeno
paleokarst; (Italian.) carso sepolto;
(Spanish.) karst soterrado; (Turkish.)
gömülü karst; (Yugoslavian.) pokriveni krs #.
See also covered karst; paleokarst; subsoil
karst.

buried valley. An ancient valley buried by


recent, often glacial deposits[16].

burst. 1. Periods of heavy rainfall[16]. 2. An


explosive breaking of brittle rock material
(e.g., rock burst in a deep mine tunnel).

25
C calcareous. 1. Containing calcium
carbonate[10]. 2. Descriptive of a rock that
caballing. The mixing of two water masses contains calcium carbonate[9].
to produce a blend that sinks because of it
is denser than its original components. calcareous tufa. See sinter.
This occurs when two water masses have
the same density but different calcification. Replacement of the original
temperatures and salinities. hard parts of an animal or plant by
calcium carbonate[10].
cable ladder. A ladder used in vertical
caving that is made of two parallel cables calcilutite. 1. Clastic limestone or dolomite
with metal rungs held in place on the in which the grains have an average
cables with metal tubes crimped to the diameter of less than 1/16 millimeter;
cables[13]. calcareous mudstone[10]. 2. A carbonate
rock that consists predominantly (>50%)
cable way. A cable stretched across a river of silt and/or clay size calcite (or
from which a cable car is suspended to dolomite) particles[9].
allow for stream discharge
measurements[16]. calcirudite. A fragmental limestone in
which the particles are generally larger
caisson. A protective chamber for the than 2 millimeters[10].
excavation of water submerged
unconsolidated sediments[16]. calcite. 1. The commoner, more stable,
mineral form of calcium carbonate,
calanque. (French.) 1. Cove or small bay. CaCO3. It is the dominant component of
2. A valley excavated in limestone or all limestones and, due to its dissolution
formed by collapse of the roof of a cave and reprecipitation by natural waters at
and subsequently submerged by a rise in normal temperatures, it is also the
sea level[10]. dominant mineral of chemical cave
deposits including stalactites and
calc-. Prefix meaning limy; containing stalagmites. It is white or colorless when
calcium carbonate[10]. pure but may be stained, most commonly
to yellows and browns, by included
calcarenite. 1. Limestone or dolomite impurities such as iron oxides. Its
composed of coral or shell sand or of uninterrupted growth in a pool may allow
grains derived from the disintegration and development of good crystals, shaped as
erosion of older limestones. Size of elongate scalenohedral pyramids of
particles ranges from 1/16 to 2 trigonal habit. Growth in stalactites and
millimeters[10]. 2. A carbonate rock that stalagmites is either in masses of fine
consists predominantly (>50%) of sand- parallel or radiating needles, or in a
sized calcite (or dolomite) particles. mosaic of larger rhombic crystals, easily
Many of the particles are the angular or identified by their well developed
degraded fragments of fossil shells[9]. cleavage surfaces. Calcite is also the

26
dominant vein mineral in limestones[9]. 2. (Mexico and Southwestern United
A mineral composed of calcium States.) Indurated calcium carbonate and
carbonate (CaCO3) like aragonite but other salts found in the soil at the surface
differing in crystal form; the principal in arid and semiarid regions, generally
constituent of limestone and other formed by evaporation of lime-bearing
speleothems[10]. waters drawn to the surface by capillary
action. 3. In some areas, refers to hardpan
calcite bubble. A hollow sphere formed by resulting from concentration of carbonate
the deposition of calcite around a gas in the soil by downward leaching and
bubble; the interior is smooth, and the reprecipitation[10]. 4. A deposit of
exterior consists of small jagged precipitated minerals, mainly calcite or
crystals[10]. gypsum or both, formed in the soil or
near-surface layers in arid and semi-arid
calcite flottante. (French.) See floe calcite. zones at the horizon where ascendant
capillary water evaporates and salts held
calcite raft. A veneer of reprecipitated in solution are deposited. 5. A similar
calcite forming a sheet over all or part of deposit, formed by precipitation of salts
the surface of a static cave pool in leached from near-surface material and
conditions favoring the release of carbon reprecipitated at shallow depths from
dioxide[19]. downward moving waters[20]. Synonyms:
(French.) croûte; (German.) Kalkkruste,
calc-sinter. See sinter. Ca-Horizont; (Greek.) apóthema oriktón
aláton; (Italian.) caliche; (Spanish.)
calcium carbonate. Naturally occurring caliche; (Turkish.) kaliçi. See also
compound with the chemical formula hardpan; havara; kafkalla; kankar;
CaCO3. It occurs commonly as the kunkar; nari; calcrete.
mineral calcite and less commonly as
aragonite, and is the major component of callow. (English.) Top or rubble bed of a
carbonate rocks including limestone and quarry.
marble. It also forms the matrix or
cement that holds together many canal seepage loss. Water lost to the
sandstones and other sedimentary rocks[9]. subsurface by seepage through the
See also dolomite. channel bottom or walls[16].

calcrete. (South African.) See caliche. canale. (Italian.) Long drowned valley on
the Dalmatian coast. Some canali may be
calibration. The experimental evaluation of drowned poljes[10].
the scale readings of an instrument
against an absolute standard[16]. cáno. (Spanish.) Stream. See also stream.

caliche. 1. (Chilean and Peruvian.) A canopy. 1. Overhanging flowstone that


natural deposit of nitrates and other salts projects from a cave wall. It may be a
precipitated at the soil surface. 2. remnant of a once continuous false floor

27
or a mass of flowstone that has built width at any particular level is determined
steadily outwards to create its own by the flow of the formative stream, the
overhang[9]. 2. A compound cave rate of its downcutting and the effects of
formation consisting of flowstone any subsequent collapse. Canyon height
hanging from a sloping wall projection reflects the stream’s downcutting history.
and forming a fringe of shawls or It depends upon the vertical distance
stalactites on the outer edge[10]. available for erosional descent to the local
base level and the time that erosional
canyon. 1. A steep-walled chasm, gorge, or downcutting has been active, as well as
ravine cut by running water. 2. A chasm upon the more obvious but less important
that has been formed by a cave stream. 3. influences of flow rate and erosional
A valley formed by collapse of the roof of capacity. Vadose canyons commonly
a long fairly straight cave; a karst twist and meander sharply, while
valley[10]. Related to corridor. maintaining roughly parallel vertical
Synonyms: (French.) canyon, gorge, sides. In contrast to some meanders in
can#on; (German.) Schlucht, Canyon; surface streams, underground meanders
(Greek.) pharangi; (Italian.) forra, gola, must generally be imprinted on a bedding
orrido, canyon; (Russian.) kanjon; plane before entrenchment of the canyon
(Spanish.) cañón;, garganta; (Turkish.) begins. Narrow canyon passages,
bo™az; (Yugoslavian.) klanac, sutjeska, commonly less than 1 m wide and more
soteska, vintgar. See also bogaz; chasm; than 20 m high, are a particular feature of
gorge; ravine. deep alpine caves. Perhaps the largest
canyon passage in the world is that in
canyon passage. 1. A tubular passage Škocjanske Jama, Slovenia, which is over
(cave) that is formed by underground 100 m high and 50 m wide[9]. See
streams following gently tilted bedding- paragenetic cave. See also keyhole
plane partings or fractures and are eroding passage; passage; tubular passage;
channels downward through the rock. vertical shafts.
Their ceiling heights are greater than their
widths. They are similar to surface capacity. The property to contain a certain
canyons, but they possess roofs and are volume or mass[16].
generally the same distance apart at the
top as they are at the bottom. In capacity, carrying. The capacity of a
Mammoth Cave, most are narrow and watercourse to transport solids[16].
winding and may achieve dimensions of
50 feet wide by 100 feet high. If a canyon capacity curve. A graphic presentation of
passage begins forming on an old tube the rate of discharge in a pipe or conduit
passage, then a keyhole passage may or through porous material[16].
result[15]. 2. Also known as vadose
canyons, these are cave passages, most capacity, entrance. The property of a soil
commonly formed by continued floor to let water infiltrate[16].
entrenchment or incision, by a free
flowing vadose stream. The passage

28
capacity, field; field-carrying; capillary. capillary action. The movement of water in
Soil moisture retained by capillarity and the interstices of a porous medium due to
not removable by gravity drainage[16]. capillary forces[22]. Synonymous with
Synonym: specific retention. capillarity, capillary flow, and capillary
migration.
capacity, ground-water. 1. The ability of
soil or rock materials to hold water. The capillary attraction. The adhesive force
yield of a pump, well, or reservoir. between a liquid and a solid in capillarity.

capacity, hydraulic. The ability of a capillary condensation. The formation of


current of water or wind to transport rings of pendular water around point
detritus, as shown by the amount contacts of grains, and, when the rings
measured at a point per unit of time. around adjacent contacts become large
enough to touch.
capacity, infiltration. The maximum rate
at which a soil can absorb precipitation capillary conductivity. 1. The property of
for given conditions[16]. an unsaturated porous medium to transmit
liquid[22]. 2. Coefficient which expresses
capacity, self-cleaning. The capacity of a the extent to which an unsaturated
river to clean its water from pollutants permeable medium allows flow of water
over a given length of water course[16]. through its interstices, under a unit
gradient of capillary potential[22].
capacity, specific. The ratio of well
discharge to corresponding discharge[16]. capillary fringe. The lower subdivision of
the unsaturated zone immediately above
capacity, storage. 1. The ability of an the water table in which the interstices are
aquifer to store water[16]. 2. The capacity filled with water under pressure less than
of rivers to store water in their own that of the atmosphere, being continuous
channels[16]. with the water below the water table but
held above it by capillary forces[22].
capacity, total. The maximum rate of yield
of a well[16]. capillary fringe zone. The zone above the
free water elevation in which water is
capacity, transmission. The property of a held by capillary action.
porous medium to conduct fluid[16].
capillary head. The potential, expressed in
capacity, well. The rate at which a well will head of water, that causes the water to
yield water[16]. flow by capillary action[22].

capillarity. The action by which a fluid, capillary interstice. An interstice small


such as water, is drawn up (or depressed) enough to hold water by surface tension at
in small interstices or tubes as a result of an appreciable height above a free water
surface tension. surface, yet large enough to prevent

29
molecular attraction from extending hydroscopic moisture and below the field
across the entire opening. capacity[22].

capillary migration. See capillary action. carabiner. An oval of steel or aluminum


with a movable spring-loaded gate on one
capillary movement. The rise of water in side. A locking carabiner is one where
the subsoil above the water table by the gate is threaded and has a ring that can
capillarity. be threaded over the gate opening to
prevent it from opening[13]. Synonyms:
capillary percolation. See imbibition. karabiner; krab.

capillary potential. The scalar quantity that carbide, calcium carbide. A compound
represents the work required to move a (CaC2) of grayish color that reacts with
unit mass of water from the soil to a water to produce acetylene gas and
chosen reference location and energy calcium hydroxide [Ca(OH)2][13].
state[22]. Commonly used by cavers and miners
earlier in this century as a means of
capillary pressure. The difference in providing light in caves or mines. Some
pressure across the interface between two cavers still prefer carbide lights over
immiscible fluid phases jointly occupying electric lights. See also carbide lamp.
the interstices of a porous medium caused
by interfacial tension between the two carbide lamp. A carbide lamp, also known
phases[22]. as a miners’ carbide lamp or acetylene
lamp was introduced into mine use at
capillary rise. The height above a free about 1897. It consists of two chambers,
water surface to which water will rise by a water tank above and a removable
capillary action[22]. Synonymous with carbide canister below with a connection
height of capillary rise. valve to permit controlled seepage of
water into the calcium carbide. The
capillary stalagmite. Hollow stalagmite carbide and water react to generate
formed by saturated karst water pushed calcium hydroxide [Ca(OH)2] and
up through capillaries and small cracks in acetylene gas. The gas is passed through
a sinter crust covering permeable fluvial a filter into a tube and through a tiny
deposits on the floor of a cave; first burner-tip orifice designed for the
reported from Cuba, where such optimum mixture of air and acetylene.
stalagmites are composed of aragonite[10]. Once ignited, it burns with a brilliant
yellow-white flame produced by the
capillary tension. See moisture tension. incandescence of tiny carbon particles. A
reflector concentrates the light in a
capillary water. 1. Water held in the soil particular direction[13].
above the phreatic surface by capillary
forces[22]. 2. Soil water above carbonate. 1. A salt or ester of carbonic
acid; a compound containing the radical

30
CO3–2, such as calcium carbonate, CaCO3. usually termed calcium bicarbonate, can lose
2. A rock consisting mainly of carbonate carbon dioxide to the atmosphere and
minerals, such as limestone or precipitate calcium carbonate. This process
dolomite[10]. is responsible for the development of
speleothems underground and tufa or
carbonate-fluorapatite. A cave mineral — travertine at the surface[9].
Ca5(PO4,CO3)3F[11].
carnivore. An animal that lives by eating
carbonate hardness. Hardness of water the flesh of other animals[23]. See also
due to presence of dissolved bicarbonates herbivore; insectivore; omnivore.
of calcium and magnesium which can be
removed by boiling and hence the term cascading water. In reference to wells,
‘temporary hardness.’ Synonyms: ground water which trickles or pours
(French.) dureté temporaire; (German.) down the casing or uncased borehole
temporäre Härte, Carbonathärte; (Greek.) above the water level in the well through
parothiki sklipotis anthrakiki sklirotis; cracks or perforations[22].
(Italian.) durezza temporanea; (Russian.)
karbonatnaja zestkostj; (Spanish.) dureza casing. Permanent liner of a well[16].
temporal; (Turkish.) karbonat sertli™i;
(Yugoslavian.) turdoóa, trdota. casing joint. Welded or threaded
connection for tubular casing[16].
carbonate-hydroxylapatite. A cave
mineral — Ca5(PO4,CO3)3(OH)[11]. casing, surface. That part of a well casing
that extends above land surface[16].
carbonate rock. A rock that consists of one
or more carbonate minerals. Carbonate catch basin. 1. A reservoir or basin into
rock successions (or sequences) are those which surface water may drain. 2. A
in which carbonate rock is dominant, but basin to collect and retain material from a
which also contain rocks of other street gutter that would not readily pass
lithology[9]. through a sewer system.

carbonic acid dissolution. Dissolution of catchment. (Great Britain.) 1. An area into


calcium carbonate by carbon dioxide in which surface water may drain. 2. A
aqueous solution, loosely termed depression that collects rainwater (e.g.,
carbonic acid, is the dominant reaction in reservoir).
karst processes, including speleogenesis.
The reaction can be considered in several cation. An ion having a positive charge
ways but it is most simply represented as: and, in electrolytes, characteristically
moving towards a negative electrode[6].
CaCO3 + CO2 + H2O º Ca(HCO3)2
cation exchange. Ion exchange process in
The reaction is reversible. The solution which cations in solution are exchanged
containing the dissolved reaction product, for other cations from an ion exchanger[6].

31
cation exchange capacity. The sum total of tectonic caves also occur. Marginal
exchangeable cations that a porous candidates for use of the name cave
medium can absorb. Expressed in moles include riverbank undercuts and rock
of ion charge per kilogram of soil (or of shelters of various origins. In some
other exchanges such as clay)[22]. countries a cave is regarded as being a
horizontal opening, as opposed to a
causse. (French.) A limestone plateau in the pothole, which is a vertical opening. This
southeastern part of the central massif of usage is common in England but is not
France characterized by closed ubiquitous[9]. 2. A natural opening
depressions, caves, and avens (jamas); a formed in the rocks below the surface of
number of such plateaus in and around the ground large enough for a man to
the basin of the river Tarn constitute Les enter. It may consist of a single
Grandes Causses. This region was connected opening or a series of small or
considered by Cvijiƒ to exemplify karst large chambers connected by galleries[20].
development intermediate between 3. A similar artificial opening[10]. Related
holokarst and merokarst[10]. Synonym: to cavern. Synonyms: (French.) grotte,
(French.) causse; (German.) (Kalkstein caverne; (German.) Höhle, Grotte;
Plateau), Cauße; (Greek.) karstikón (Greek.) speleon; (Italian.) caverna,
oropédion; (Italian.) altopiano carsico; grotta; (Russian.) pescera; (Spanish.)
(Russian.) izvestnjakovoje karstovoje cueva; (Turkish.) ma™ara; (Yugoslavian.)
plato; (Spanish.) altiplano carstico; pec#ina. pec#, pes#tera, spilja, zijjalka, jama.
(Turkish.) kireçtaÕi düzlügü; See also active cave; bedding cave; cave
(Yugoslavian.) krs#ki plato, kras#ki plato. system; grotto; sea cave.

cave. 1. ‘A natural home in the ground, cave balloon. See cave blister.
large enough for human entry’ is probably
the most useful definition. This covers cave blister. 1. A small pimplelike cave
the enormous variety of caves that do formation, roughly oval in shape, gener-
occur but eliminates the many artificial ally loose, and having a core of mud[10].
tunnels and galleries incorrectly named 2. A partly or completely hollow
caves. The size criterion is arbitrary and hemispherical to nearly spherical
subjective, but practical, as it eliminates speleothem, usually of gypsum or
narrow openings irrelevant to explorers hydromagnesite, attached to a cave wall.
but very significant hydrologically, that Synonym: cave balloon.
may be better referred to as proto-caves,
sub-conduits or fissures. A cave may be a cave breakdown. 1. Enlargement of parts
single, short length of accessible passage, of a cave system by fall of rock masses
or an extensive and complex network of from walls and ceiling. 2. Heaps of rock
tunnels as long as the hundreds of that have collapsed from the walls and
kilometers in the Flint Mammoth Cave ceiling of a cave, generally called cave
System. Most caves are formed by breccia[10]. 3. Synonym for the collapse of
dissolution in limestone but sandstone caves, or, in American usage, for the
caves, lava caves, glacier caves and debris produced by collapse[18].

32
cave breathing. A resonance phenomenon (involving removal of carbonates and
in which air currents throb back and forth mineral impurities by water and by strong
through constricted passages in a cave acids), as well as by the carbonic acid
with periodicity of a few seconds to a few dissolution that dominates later cave
minutes. Synonyms: (French.) passage growth. Initial water movement can be
respirant; (German.) Grotte mit Resonanz; along primary pores in the rock (in coarse
(Greek.) anapneousa ope; (Italian.) grotta raffle limestones, oolites or chalk), along
a soffio alterno; (Spanish.) gruta relatively thin non-carbonate beds within
resonante; (Turkish.) ma™ara esintisi. See the succession, or along incipient or open
also blowing cave. fissures (joints, faults and bedding
planes). These potential water routes are
cave breccia. Angular fragments of rock initially very narrow and water movement
forming a fill in a cave, either cemented is severely restricted and laminar,
together by dripstone or in a matrix of allowing only very slow dissolutional
cave earth[10]. See also solution breccia. growth (see gestation), until enlargement
beyond the turbulent threshold
cave bubble. A nonattached hollow sphere, (breakthrough) permits faster flow and
usually of calcite, that has formed around accelerated cave growth. After
a gas bubble on the surface of a cave establishment of turbulent flow
pool. conditions the effects of dissolution are
augmented by mechanical abrasion and
cave coral. A rough, knobby growth of cal- collapse, which expose new rock. During
cite resembling coral in shape, generally the early development stages a network of
small; found on floor, walls, or ceiling of narrow openings is formed.
a cave[10]. Synonym: botryoid; coral for- Subsequently, geological factors guide the
mation; cave popcorn. See also preferential expansion of favorable
knobstone. routes, which capture more of the local
flow and enlarge, at the expense of less
cave cotton. Thin flexible filaments of favorable openings, to form caves. The
gypsum or epsomite projecting from a less favorable fissures are relegated to a
cave wall. Synonym: gypsum cotton. subordinate role in transmitting
See also gypsum flower. percolation water or, more rarely, in
carrying elements of overflow water
cave development. The inception of cave during floods. Also during the early
development in carbonate rocks begins if stages, all voids are water filled but as
water can move through the bedrock and permeability increases and true hydraulic
commence dissolution. The earliest flow conditions are established, the upper
water movement may be due to voids drain freely, forming a water table.
mechanisms (including ground-water Almost all caves therefore originate under
pumping and ionic diffusion effects) phreatic conditions but the overall
unrelated to those dominating later passage morphology is modified during
development. Similarly, inception may later growth into vadose or phreatic caves,
include physical and chemical dissolution enlarged from the original phreatic

33
imprint, above or below the water table. speleothem or the colloquial term
Ultimately, cave development evolves ‘stall’[9]. See also sinter; speleothem.
towards efficient drainage close to the water
table. Passage enlargement then becomes cave group. A number of caves or cave
regressive as collapse increases. The stage of systems, not interconnected but geo-
a cavernous karst collapsing extensively is graphically associated in some relief
relatively rarely achieved, being overtaken at feature or particular geological outcrop[10].
high latitudes and high altitudes by surface See also cave series.
lowering, but such collapse can contribute to
the chaotic land forms of tropical karst[9]. cave guano. Accumulations of dung in
caves, generally from bats; in some places
cave earth, cave fill. Insoluble deposits of partially mineralized[10].
clay, silt, sand, or gravel flooring or fill-
ing a cave passage. In a more restricted cave ice. Ice formed in a cave by natural
sense, cave earth includes only the finer freezing of water. Loosely but incorrectly
fractions: clay, silt, and fine sand applied to calcium carbonate dripstone
deposits[10]. Synonym: cave soil. and flowstone[10].

cave ecology. The study of the interaction cave-in. 1. The collapse of the ceiling or
between cave organisms and their side walls of a cave or of the land surface
environment, e.g. energy input from into a subterranean passage as a result of
surface, climatic influences[25]. undermining or of pressure from above[10].
2. The partial or complete collapse of
cave fill. Transported materials such as silt, earth material into a large underground
clay, sand and gravel which cover the opening, such as an excavation or a mine.
bedrock floor or partially or wholly block 3. The sudden slumping of wall material
some part of a cave[25]. into a pit. 4. A place where material has
collapsed or fallen in or down.
cave flower. An elongate curved deposit of
gypsum or epsomite on a cave wall in cave-in lake. A shallow body of water
which growth occurs at the attached whose basin is produced by collapse of
end[10]. Synonyms: gypsum flower; the ground following thawing of ground
oulopholite. See also anthodite; cave ice in regions underlain by permafrost.
cotton. Synonym: thermokarst lake.

cave formations. 1. Secondary mineral de- cave lake. Any underground lake. The
posits formed by the accumulation, drip- water can be in a partially drained
ping, or flowing of water in a cave[10]. 2. phreatic cave, and may then be the
Unsatisfactory term used to include all entrance to a sump, or it can be open over
varieties of calcite, gypsum and other, its entire surface. In vadose caves lakes
rarer, mineral cave deposits; therefore a are most commonly formed by ponding
synonym for the equally unwieldly behind banks of sediment or, in rarer
cases, behind very large gour barriers[9].

34
cave marble. Banded deposit of calcite or cave raft. A thin mineral film, usually of
aragonite capable of taking a high calcite, floating on a cave pool.
polish[10]. See also flowstone; onyx
marble. Cave Research Foundation (CRF.) An
organization of cavers united primarily
cave of debouchure. Outflow cave. for scientific exploration and study of
caves[13].
cave onyx. See onyx marble.
cave spring. See spring, cave.
cave pearl. 1. Carbonate concretion,
usually of calcite, that is spherical or caver. (American.) 1. A slang term for one
irregular in shape, with an internal who engages in the hobby of cave
structure of concentric banding round a exploration, or caving[9, 21]. 2. A person
central grain. Pearls form in pools of who explores caves in a safe manner
saturated water disturbed by dripping while showing respect for the cave (all
water, so that they are commonly found aspects of the cave), other cavers, and the
beneath high avens. Individual pearls land above the cave[13]. Synonym:
may be lmm or many centimeters in spelunker; (British.) potholer. See also
diameter. Movement of the larger ones speleologist.
may become impossible and they can then
become cemented to the pool floor. cavern. 1. Underground opening in soluble
Some caves contain spectacular displays rock similar to a cave. When used as a
of cave pearls; in Jackson’s Bay Cave, noun, it refers to large openings, but when
Jamaica, they cover large areas of passage used as an adjective it tends to refer to
floor behind low gour barriers[9]. 2. Small rock texture and so to small openings.
concretion of calcite or aragonite formed However, in some countries (e.g., Russia)
by concentric precipitation around a cavern refers to small openings in a
nucleus[10]. Synonyms: pisolite; pisolith; rock[20]. 2. A synonym of cave with the
(French.) perle des cavernes; (German.) implication of large size. 3. A system or
Höhlenperlen; (Greek.) speleomargarites; series of caves or cave chambers. 4. A
(Italian.) perle di grotta; (Russian.) cave, often used poetically or to connote
pescernij zemcug; (Spanish.) perla de larger-than-average size[10]. Synonyms:
caverna; (Turkish.) ma™ara incisi; (French.) caverne; (German.) Höhle,
(Yugoslavian.) peƒinski biseri, jamski Kaverne; (Greek.) speleon; (Italian.)
biseri. caverna, grotta; (Russian.) kaverna;
(Spanish.) caverna, cueva; (Turkish.)
cave pisolite. See cave pearl. kovuk; (Yugoslavian.) kaverna. See also
cave.
cave popcorn. See cave coral.
cavern breakdown. The process of cave
cave postule. A white, hemispherical wall enlargement which depends upon the
and roof deposit of calcite[25]. mechanical failure and eventual collapse

35
of sections of the cavern walls and cavern porosity. A pore system having
ceiling[22]. large, cavernous openings. The lower
size limit, for field analysis, is practically
cavern flow. Movement, often turbulent, of set at approximately the smallest opening
ground-water flow through caves, coarse that an adult person may enter.
sorted gravel, or large open conduits,
either by gravity or under pressure. cavern system. See cave system.

cavernicole. An animal which normally cave series. A group of caves of similar


lives in caves for the whole or part of its morphology in a particular district[10]. See
life cycle[25]. also cave group.

cavernous. Adjective used to describe a cave shield. A semicircular plate of


rock texture in which the rock contains reprecipitated calcite located beneath
openings generally of a small size[20]. joints in a cavern ceiling and believed to
Synonyms: (French.) caverneux; be formed by the seepage of hydrostatic
(German.) kavernös; (Greek.) speleothes; water along the joint. Two shields form
(Italian.) con grotte; (Russian.) beneath one joint, descending from each
kavernoznij; (Spanish.) cavernoso; side of the opening[22].
(Turkish.) kovuklu; (Yugoslavian.)
kavernozan. See also cavern. cave soil. See cave earth.

cavernous karren. Pitted, rubbly limestone cave spring. See spring, cave.
most commonly found in relatively recent
and Tertiary limestones of the humid cave system. 1. An underground network of
tropics[3]. See also covered karren; passages, chambers, or other cavities. 2.
karren. The caves in a given area related to each
other hydrologically, whether continuous
cavernous permeability. See conduit or discontinuous from a single opening[10].
permeability. Synonyms: (French.) réseau souterrain;
(German.) Höhlensystem; (Greek.)
cavernous rock. Any rock that has many speleothes systema, thiction; (Italian.)
cavities, cells, or large interstices (e.g., a sistema carsico sotterraneo; (Russian.)
cliff face pitted with shallow holes sistema podzemnih pescer; (Spanish.)
resulting from cavernous weathering). sistema de cavidades; (Turkish.) ma™ara
sistemi, serisi; (Yugoslavian.) peƒinski
cavernous weathering. Chemical and (spiljski) sistem, amski sistem. See also
mechanical weathering on a cliff face, in cave; cave group; cave series; cavern.
which grains and flakes of rock are
loosened so as to enlarge hollows and caving. The sport of exploring caves.
recesses. Synonyms: (British.) potholing;
spelunking. 2. A method of mining in
which the ore is allowed to cave or fall[10].

36
cavings. Rock fragments that fall from the ceiling slab, roof slab. A thin but extensive
walls of a borehole and contaminate the piece of rock that has fallen from the
well cuttings or block the hole. These ceiling of a cave in roughly horizontal
fragments must be removed by drilling or limestone[10]. See also cave breakdown;
circulation of drilling fluids before the ceiling block.
borehole can be deepened.
ceiling tube. A half tube remaining in the
cavitation. 1. The collapse of bubbles in a ceiling of a cave[10].
fluid, caused by static pressure being less
than the fluid vapor pressure. 2. A celestite. A cave mineral — SrSO4[11].
phenomena of cavity formation, or
formation and collapse, especially in cement. A microscopic textured nonskeletal
regard to pumps, when the absolute void-filling material precipitated on an
pressure within the water reaches vapor intragranular or intrasedimentary free
pressure causing the formation of vapor surface that holds the material together[20].
pockets[6]. Synonyms: (French.) ciment; (German.)
Zement; (Greek.) tsiménto; (Italian.)
cavity. A solutional hollow in a limestone cemento; (Spanish.) cemento; (Turkish.)
cave. çimento; (Yugoslavian.) vezivo cement.

cavity dweller. A coelobitic organism. cementation. The process of binding


granular material together by deposition
ceiling block. Roughly cubical joint- of cementing material at contact points of
bounded large block, which has fallen grains[16].
from the ceiling of a cave[10]. See also
cave breakdown; ceiling slab. cement grout. Cement slurry of pumpable
consistency[16].
ceiling cavity. Solutional concavity in the
ceiling of a cave. The orientation is cement slurry. Liquid cement
determined by joints or a bedding suspension[16].
plane[10].
cementing. See grouting.
ceiling channel. Sinuous channel
developed in the ceiling of a cave, cenote. (Spanish. after Mayan tzonet or
presumably during the phreatic phase of dzonot.) 1. Steep-walled natural well that
cave development[10]. extends below the water table; generally
caused by collapse of a cave roof. Term
ceiling meander. A winding upside-down used only for features in Yucatán[10]. 2.
channel in a cave ceiling[10]. Steep or vertical sided collapse doline
floored by a lake whose surface is at the
ceiling pocket. See pocket. regional water table. The term originates
from the many cenotes in the low karst
plateau of Mexico’s Yucatan, but has

37
been applied to flooded dolines in Florida locally in a single passage, where erosion
and elsewhere. Probably the most famous has been enhanced by collapse exposing
cenote is the sacred well of Chichen Itza, more rock to dissolution. Maximum
Yucatan; it has vertical sides and is 60m in chamber size is controlled by the strength
diameter, 30m deep and half full of water[9]. and shape of the limestone ceiling. The
Synonyms: (French.) cenote; (German.) largest chamber currently known,
cenote; (Greek.) voulismeno speleven. See Sarawak Chamber in Lubang Nasib
also jama; natural well. Bagus, at Mulu, Sarawak, is over 700m
long, up to 400m wide and nowhere less
centrifuge moisture equivalent. See than 70m high. It has formed where a
moisture equivalent. large stream eroded sideways as it cut
obliquely across the included bedding in
cerussite. A cave mineral — PbCO3[11]. unusually massive limestone. It is
doubtful whether a much larger chamber
chain gage. Water level measuring could exist without collapse of its roof[9].
device[16]. 2. The largest order of cavity in a cave or
cave system; it has considerable length
chalk. 1. Used as a proper noun chalk and breadth but not necessarily great
describes a rock unit of Cretaceous age, height. 3. (British.) A room in a cave[10].
that consists predominately of relatively Synonyms: (French.) salle; (german.)
soft, white, porous limestone with beds of Halle, Kammer, Dom; (Greek.) ypoyios
marl and bands or nodules of flint. The aethousa; (Italian.) sala; (Russian.) zal;
term is used without its initial capital to (Spanish.) sala, salón; (Turkish.) oda;
describe any rock with similar appearance (Yugoslavian.) dvorana. See also room;
and properties. Generally chalk has a passage.
relatively high primary permeability and
so rarely develops caves of explorable chandelier. Large variety of gypsum
size, though conduit-water flow does flower, with branching crystal structure
occur. Some harder chalks in northern that may hang many meters from a cave
France and south-eastern England hold ceiling. Very rare, except in Lechuguilla
explorable active and relict caves, which Cave of New Mexico[9].
extend for many hundreds of meters[9]. 2.
Soft poorly indurated limestone, generally channel. Natural or artificial watercourse
light in color; commonly composed of the bounded by banks[16].
tests of floating microorganisms in a
matrix of very finely crystalline calcite[10]. channel characteristics. Hydraulic
properties of stream channel[16].
chalcanthite. A cave mineral —
CuSO4"5H2O[11]. chasm. 1. A deep, fairly narrow breach in
the earth’s surface; an abyss; a gorge; a
chamber. (American.) 1. An enlargement deep canyon. 2. A deep, wide, elongated
in a cave passage or system, commonly gap in the floor of a cave[10]. Related to
formed at a junction of passages, or canyon, corridor. Synonyms: (French.)

38
gouffre, fracture ouverte; (German.) Kluft; lips[9]. 2. Light-cream or gray to black
(Greek.) chasma; (Italian.) fattura beante, rock composed of silica, found occurring
canyon; (Spanish.) cañon, taso; (Turkish.) as nodules or layers in limestone, or as a
derin yar2nt2; (Yugoslavian.) provalija. replacement of limestone[10].
See also ravine.
Chézy equation. An equation used to
chemical carbonate rock. Carbonate rock compute the velocity of uniform flow in
form by the precipitation of mineral an open channel: mean velocity of flow
matter in situ by chemical or biological (V) equals the Chézy coefficient © times
processes. the square root of the product of hydraulic
radius in feet (R) times the slope of the
chemical deposit. A sediment precipitated channel[1]. See also Froude number;
out of solution by chemical action[16]. Manning equation; Reynolds number.

chemical erosion. Processes partially chimney. 1. Nearly circular shaft rising


synonymous with chemical dissolution, upwards from the ceiling of a cave
but including any other form of rock towards the surface of the ground; if it
breakdown accelerated by chemical does not reach the surface it is termed a
changes of the constituent minerals[9]. blind chimney. If the chimney is formed
mainly by solution, it is related to a dome-
chemical equivalent. The expression of pit; if formed mainly by collapse of the
water characteristics such as hardness or roof along bedding planes, it is related to
alkalinity resulting from several ions in cenote[20]. 2. A narrow vertical shaft in
solution in terms of only one equivalent the roof of a cave, generally smaller than
concentration[16]. an aven; a dome pit[10]. Synonyms:
(French.) cheminée (aven); (German.)
chemical mobility. The tendency of an Schlot, Kamin; (Greek.) kapnothochos;
element to move in a given (Italian.) camino; (Russian.) truba;
hydrogeochemical environment[16]. (Spanish.) chimenea; (Turkish.) baca;
(Yugoslavian.) dimnjak.
chemical oxygen demand (COD.) The
measure of readily available oxidizable chimneying. Ascending or descending by
material contained in a water sample[16]. means of opposed body and/or limb
pressures against two facing walls[25].
chert, chert nodule. 1. Black, brown or
grey rock, consisting of very fine-grained chlorophyll. A group of pigments
silica, that occurs as horizons of nodules producing the green color of plants;
and discontinuous bands, generally less essential to photosynthesis[23].
than 200mm thick, within many
limestones. It is very hard and almost chock. A block of metal for use as a
insoluble in water, so commonly it chockstone[25].
projects from cave walls where it forms
passage or shaft ledges and waterfall

39
chockstone. A rock wedged between the Rijeka, mainly in Slovenia with some
walls of a cave passage[10]. parts in Italy and Croatia[9].

choke. 1. A blockage of inwashed mud, clastic. Pertaining to a rock or sediment


sand or boulders in a cave passage. Most composed principally of broken
boulder chockes are formed by collapse fragments that are derived from pre-
of a passage roof and may have an open existing rocks or minerals and that have
chamber or shaft above them; others are been transported some distance from their
formed by collapse and inwashed debris places of origin[6].
where a large old passage is cut by a
hillside. A passable route through a clastic carbonate rock. Carbonate rock that
choke may be opened by excavation, and is made up of carbonate grains (e.g.,
thereby lead to discovery of new passage shells, shell fragments, oolites).
— as was done so successfully in Ogof
Agen Allwedd[9]. 2. Rock debris or cave clastic rock; detrital rock. A sedimentary
fill completely blocking a passage[10]. rock derived from fragmentated other
preexisting rock or organic structures[16].
C-horizon. Zone of weathered parent
material in a soil profile[16]. clastokarst. Karst phenomena in clastic
rocks composed of detrital carbonate
chute. An inclined channel or trough in a material[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
cave[10]. clastokarst; (German.) Klastokarst?;
(Greek.) clastokarst; (Italian.) carsismo
ciénaga. (Spanish.) Wetland. See also clastico; (Russian.) klastokarst; (Spanish.)
wetland. clastokarst; (Turkish.) klastik karst;
(Yugoslavian.) klastokrs#, klastokras,
cimolite. A cave mineral — klastokarst.
Al4(SiO2)9(OH)12[11].
claustrophobia. An irrational fear of being
cistern. A small water reservoir used to in a closed space[25].
collect surface and rain water[16].
clay. 1. A rock or mineral fragment or a
classical karst. Originally the region called detrital particle of any composition
Kras in Slovenia, which gave its name to smaller than a very fine silt grain, having
the karst landscape. Used in this sense a diameter less than 1/256 mm (4
about 95% of the classical karst lies in microns, or 0.00016 in., or 8 phi units.)
Slovenia, with the remaining 5% This size is approximately the upper limit
extending to Italy. A slightly different of size of particle that can show colloidal
area was covered by descriptions of early properties. 2. A loose, earthy, extremely
investigations or karst phenomena, when fine-grained natural sediment or soft rock
the name classical karst was applied to a composed primarily of clay-size or
region between Ljubljana, Gorizia and colloidal particles and characterized by a
considerable content of clay minerals and

40
subordinate amounts of finely divided clayey silt. 1. An unconsolidated sediment
quartz, decomposed feldspar, carbonates, containing 40–75% silt, 12.5–50% clay,
ferruginous matter, and other impurities. It and 0–20% sand. 2. An unconsolidated
forms a plastic, moldable mass when finely sediment containing more particles of silt
ground and mixed with water, but retains its size than of clay size, more than 10%
shape on drying, and becomes firm, clay, and less than 10% of all other
rocklike, and permanently hard on heating or coarser sizes.
firing. 3. A term that is commonly applied
to any soft, adhesive, fine-grained deposit clay loam. A soil containing 27–40% clay,
(such as loam or siliceous silt) and to earthy 20–45% sand, and the remainder silt.
material, particularly when wet (such as
mud). 4. A term used by the International clay marl. 1. A whitish, smooth, chalky
Society of Soil Science for a rock or mineral clay. 2. A marl in which clay
particle in the soil, having a diameter less predominates.
than 0.002 mm (2 microns).
clay mineral. One of a complex and loosely
clay ball, clayball. A chunk of clay defined group of finely crystalline,
released by erosion of a clayey bank and metacolloidal, or amorphous hydrous
rounded by wave action. silicates, essentially of aluminum.

clay boil. A mud circle that suggests a claypan. A dense, heavy, relatively
welling-up or heaving of the central core. impervious subsurface soil layer that
owes its hardness to a relatively higher
clay colloid. 1. A clay particle having a clay content than that of the overlying
diameter less than 1 micron (0.001 mm.) material from which it is separated by a
2. A colloidal substance consisting of sharply defined boundary.
clay-size particles.
clay parting. 1. Clayey material between a
clay fill. Dry or wet clay that fills a cave vein and its wall. 2. A seam of hardened
passage[10]. carbonaceous clay between or in beds of
coal, or a thin layer of clay between
clay filling. Time interval between end of relatively thick beds of some other rock
phreatic solution of a cave and beginning (e.g., sandstone).
or deposition of flowstone[10].
clay plug. Fine flood deposits in a cut off
clayey sand. 1. An unconsolidated river meander[16].
sediment containing 50–90% sand and
having a ratio of silt or clay less than 1:2. clean sand. Sand with little or no clay
2. An unconsolidated sand containing content[16].
40–75% sand, 12.5–50% clay, and 0–20%
silt. cleavage. The tendency to cleave or split
along definite parallel planes, which may
be highly inclined to the bedding. It is a

41
secondary structure and is ordinarily closed depression, closed basin. 1. Any
accompanied by at least some karst hollow with internal drainage,
recrystallinization of the rock. including dolines, uvalas, poljes, cockpits
and all varieties of blind karst valleys, of
climate. The average weather conditions of both small and large scales[9]. 2. A
an area, including temperature, rainfall, general term for any enclosed topographic
humidity, wind, and hours of sunlight, basin having no external drainage,
based on records kept for many years[23]. regardless of origin or size[10].

climatic factor. A factor influencing closed karst. A karst terrane that is covered
hydrologic parameters due to the local by sediments. Synonyms: (Russian.)
climate[16]. skryty0 karst or zakryty0 karst. See also
buried karst; interstratal karst; mantled
clinometer. An instrument for measuring karst.
vertical angles or angles of dip[25].
closed traverse. A traverse which begins
clint. (British.) 1. Flat or sloping bare and ends at survey points with known
limestone outcrops (limestone co-ordinates and orientation or at the
pavements) weathered into straight-sided same point[25].
or furrowed blocks and ridges of
limestone which are separated by deep cloud. Large masses of coralloid or
clefts or solutionally widened joints botryoidal calcite, deposited under water,
(grikes) that often crisscross[20]. 2. Slabs with each mass reaching 200–800mm in
of limestone, parallel to the bedding, diameter. Famous examples hang above
forming a pavement. Widened joints, or the Lake of the Clouds in Carlsbad
grikes, isolate individual clints[10]. Cavens, New Mexico[9].
Synonym: (French.) lapiaz; (German.)
Flachkarren, Karrenfeld; (Greek.) pethion clusterite. See botryoid.
amaxotrochion thactyloglyphon; (Italian.)
campo carreggiato; (Russian.) karrovoe coarse. Composed of or constituting
pole; (Spanish.) campo de lapiaz, lenar; relatively large particles.
(Turkish.) pürtüklü, oluklu;
(Yugoslavian.) škrapari, škraplje. See coarse sand. 1. A geologic term for a sand
also grikes; karrenfeld; lapies; limestone particle having a diameter in the range of
pavement. 0.5–1 mm (500–1000 microns, or 1 to
zero phi units.) 2. An engineering term
clog, to. The action of blocking fluid flow for a sand particle having a diameter in
paths, especially around a well bore[16]. the range of 2 mm. 3. A soil term used in
the U.S. for a sand particle having a
clogger. A type of ascender without a diameter in the range of 0.5–1 mm (the
handle; used with a karabiner to keep it diameter range recognized by the
securely on the rope[25]. International Society of Soil Science is
0.2–2 mm).

42
coarse silt. A geologic term for a silt Units are usually cm2/kg[21]. See also
particle having a diameter in the range of coefficient of volume compressibility.
1/32 to 1/16 mm (31–62 microns, or 5 to
4 phi units). coefficient of permeability. An obsolete
term that has been replaced by the term
cockpit. (Jamaican.) 1. Any closed hydraulic conductivity[6].
depression having steep sides. 2. A
star-shaped depression having a conical coefficient of storage. See storage
or a lightly concave floor. The coefficient.
surrounding hill slopes are steep and
convex. Cockpits are the common type coefficient of transmissivity; coefficient of
of closed depressions in a kegelkarst[10]. transmissibility. An obsolete term
replaced by the term transmissivity.
cockpit karst. (Jamaican.) 1. Term
describing an area containing numerous coefficient of volume compressibility. The
scattered, yet closely spaced dolines; compression of a clay (aquitard) per unit
generally a tropical karst land form. The thickness, due to a unit increase of
corresponding Yugoslav term may more effective stress, in the load range
accurately be translated as ‘pock-marked’ exceeding preconsolidation stress. It is
karst. 2. Tropical karst topography expressed by the equation
containing many closed depressions
surrounded by steep-sided conical hills.
Divided by French and German
geographers into several types depending
on shape of hills[10]. Synonyms: (French.) in which e0 is the initial void ratio. Units
karst cockpit; (German.) Turmkarst, are usually cm2/kg[21]. See also coefficient
Kegelkarst; (Greek.) dolinovrithes karst; of compressibility.
(Italian.) campo carsico a doline;
(Spanish.) karst esponja; (Turkish.) cohesion. Shear resistance at zero normal
düdenli karst; (Yugoslavian) boginjavi stress. An equivalent term in rock
krÑ, kozavi kras. See also cone karst; mechanics is intrinsic shear strength.
Halbkugelkarst; Kegelkarst;
Spitzkegelkarst; tower karst. coliform organism. A microorganism, the
concentration of which is used as an
coefficient of compressibility. indication of the degree of biological
Compressibility is the aptitude of the soil pollution of water[16].
to be deformed. It is expressed by means
of a coefficient which is the ratio between collapse breccia. A mass of rock composed
a void ratio decrease from e0 to e and an of angular to rounded fragments of
increase in effective stress. The value av limestone or dolomite that has formed as
= e0–e)p represents the coefficient of the result of the collapse of the roof of a
compressibility for the range p0 to p0 + p. cave, of an underlying cave, or of an

43
overhanging ledge[10]. See also solution collector well. A central well with
breccia. horizontal sections of screened collector
pipe arranged radially to increase yield[16].
collapse chamber. An underground
chamber containing notable quantities of colloid. Extremely small solid particles,
collapsed material. The term is 0.0001 to 1 micron in size, which will not
commonly abused in describing the origin settle out of solution. It is intermediate
of cave chambers floored by collapse between a true dissolved particle and a
debris. Though wall and roof collapse are suspended solid which will settle out of
common modifying processes in larger solution[6].
chambers, it is important to remember
that such collapse cannot form a chamber, column. 1. A subsurface dripstone
as it can only take place into a pre- formation produced by the union of a
existing cavity[9]. stalactite and a stalagmite in a cave[20]. 2.
A flowstone formation, generally
collapse sink; collapse sinkhole. 1. A cylindrical, formed by the union of a
variety of closed depression that forms by stalactite and stalagmite[10]. Not to be
collapse of the rock above an existing confused with pillar. Synonyms:
cave passage or chamber[9]. 2. A closed (French.) colonne, pillier stalamitique;
depression formed by the collapse of the (German.) Tropfstein-Säule; (Greek.)
roof of a cave[10]. See also doline. stalaktitike stele; (Italian.) colonna
(stalagmitica o stalattitica) (Russian.)
collapse of caves. Collapse and breakdown kolonna; (Spanish.) columna; (Turkish.)
of cave walls and ceilings are continuing sütun; (Yugoslavian.) stup, steber, stolpic #.
aspects of cave development and See also pillar.
modification. Massive unfractured
limestone can easily span a void of over comminution. The reduction of a substance
100m, but thinly bedded, closely jointed, to a fine powder; pulverization;
faulted or poorly lithified limestone may trituration.
collapse into very small passages.
Collapse is a significant component of community. All the plants and animals that
cave erosion. As well as simple falls of live in a particular habitat and are bound
unsupported rock forming connections together by food chains and other
between passages, the collapse process interrelations[23].
exposes more rock surface area for
potential dissolution. As rates of collapse compaction. A decrease in the volume of a
are measured on a geological time scale mass of sediments from any cause. In
collapse in natural caves offers a general, compaction may be regarded as
negligible threat to explorers, in the decrease in the thickness of
comparison to the dangers of roof sediments, as a result of an increase in
collapse in mines[9]. vertical compressive stress, and is
synonymous with ‘one-dimensional
consolidation,’ as used by engineers. The

44
term compaction is applied both to the common necessities, such as food or
process and to the measured change in living space[23].
thickness. In thick fine-grained beds,
compaction is a delayed process involving complete well penetration, fully
the slow escape of pore water and the penetrating. 1. The property of a well
gradual transfer of stress from neutral to that penetrates an aquifer completely from
effective. Until sufficient time has passed the upper confining bed or water table to
for excess pore pressure to decrease to zero, the lower confining bed[16]. 2. A well that
measured values of compaction are is completed over the whole thickness of
transient[21]. See also compaction, residual; the aquifer to allow radial production over
compaction, specific. its entire completed length[16].

compaction, residual. Compaction that compressibility. The relative change in


would occur ultimately if a given increase volume with pressure of water or aquifer
in applied stress were maintained until matrix[16].
steady-state pore pressures were achieved,
but had not occurred as of a specified compressive stress. Normal stress tending
time because excess pore pressures still to shorten the body in the direction in
existed in beds of low diffusivity in the which it acts.
compacting system. It can also be
regarded as the difference between (1) the compromise boundary. 1. A plane
amount of compaction that will occur interface between two crystals which
ultimately for a given increase in applied evolved by mutual interference of their
stress, and (2) that which has occurred at respective growing faces. This interface
a specified time[21]. See also compaction; is a face of neither crystal. 2. A
compaction, specific. microscopic texture[20].

compaction, specific. The decrease in concentration gradient. The change in


thickness of deposits, per unit of increase solute concentration per unit distance in
in applied stress, during a specific period solute. Concentration gradients cause
of time[21]. See also compaction; Fickian diffusion (spreading) of solutes
compaction, residual. from regions of highest to regions of
lowest concentrations. In slowing
compass. An instrument with a magnetic moving ground water, this is the
needle which is free to point to magnetic dominant mixing process[22].
north. For survey the needle is either
attached to a graduated card or can be concretion. The localized deposition of
read against a graduated circle to measure mineral matter going out of solution in
the angle in degrees from the north sediments or tuffs, usually nodular or
clockwise[25]. irregular in shape[16].

competition. The struggle between condensation. The transition from vapor to


individuals or groups of living things for liquid state[16].

45
condensation nucleus. A small solid cone of depression. A depression of the
particle around which condensation potentiometric surface in the shape of an
occurs[16]. inverted cone that develops around a well
that is being pumped. It defines the area
condensation water. Atmospheric moisture of influence[6]. Synonym: cone of
deposited inside caves when the surface pressure relief (applied to artesian
temperature of the exposed rock falls aquifers only).
below the dew point of circulating air[19].
cone of impression. A rise of the
conduit; karst conduit. Relatively large potentiometric surface in the shape of a
dissolutional voids, including enlarged cone that develops around an injection
fissures and tubular tunnels; in some well[22].
usage the term is restricted to voids that
are water-filled. Conduits may include all cone karst. 1. A karst landscape dominated
voids greater than 10mm in diameter, but by low conical (or hemispherical) hills
another classification scheme places them that forms only in wet tropical climates.
between arbitrary limits of 100mm to The type example is Gunung Sewu in
10m. Whichever value is accepted in a Java. Individual hills are remarkably
particular context, smaller voids are uniform, each some few hundred meters
commonly termed sub-conduits[9]. in diameter and around 50m high.
Synonyms: (French.) conduite forcée; Between them lie broken valleys, dolines
(German.) Druckleitung (Leitung); or cockpits, draining into sinkholes.
(Greek.) siphon; (Italian.) condotta Erosion that seems to be initiated in
forzata; (Spanish.) conducto saturado; valley systems develops in such a way
(Turkish.) yeralt2su yolu, mecra. See also that the valleys break up into dolines, but
pressure flow tube; stream tube; siphon. the mechanisms leading to uniform
shaping of the hills are not fully
conduit flow; karst conduit flow. understood. The widespread cone karst in
Underground water flow within conduits. China is mostly known as fengcong, and
Conduit flow is generally turbulent, but its hills are generally more conical than
can also be laminar[9]. hemispherical in profile[9]. 2. A type of
karst topography, common in the tropics,
conduit permeability. Sometimes referred characterized by star-shaped depressions
to as cavernous permeability, this is a or dolines at the feet of many steep-sided
measure of the efficiency with which a cone-shaped hills; narrow steeply-walled
particular aquifer transmits water through valleys may be present[10, 20]. A variety of
conduits (see permeability)[9]. Kegelkarst. Synonyms: (French.) karst à
pitons; (German.) Kegelkarst, Turmkarst;
conduit porosity. That part of the porosity (Greek.) konoethes karst; (Italian.) carso
within an aquifer (usually a karst aquifer) di torri, carsismo con forme residuali
that is a function of the presence of coniche; (Russian.) karst s koniceskimi
conduits [9]. ostancami; (Spanish.) karst de conos;
(Turkish.) konili karst; (Yugoslavia.)

46
stoñasti krš, …okasti kras stoñ…sti, kras. confluence. Junction point of streams[16].
See also cockpit karst. Compare: cupola
karst, pinnacle karst, and tower karst. conformal mapping. The transposition and
solution of plane flow problems in a
confined. A modifier which describes a complex plane[16].
condition in which the potentiometric
surface is above the top of the aquifer[22]. conglomerate. Rock consisting of large
Synonymous with artesian. well rounded waterworn particles[16].

confined aquifer. 1. An aquifer bounded conical wall niche. See meander niche.
above and below by confining units of
distinctly lower permeability than that of conjugate joints or faults. Two sets of
the aquifer itself. 2. An aquifer joints or faults that are formed under the
containing confined ground water. same stress conditions (usually shear
Generally, a confined aquifer is subject to pairs).
pressure greater than atmospheric[6].
conjunctive use. The use of both surface
confined water. Water separated from the water and ground water[16].
atmosphere by impermeable rock
stratum[16]. connate water. Water entrapped in the
interstices of a sedimentary or extrusive
confining bed. A body of impermeable or igneous rock at the time of its
distinctly less permeable material deposition[22].
stratigraphically adjacent to one or more
aquifers[22]. Synonymous with confining consequent river. A river flowing down
unit. the original slope of geologic beds or
general slope of topography[16].
confining unit. 1. A hydrogeologic unit of
impermeable or distinctly less permeable conservation. The use of natural resources
material bounding one or more aquifers in a way that assures their continuing
and is a general term that replaces availability to future generations; the wise
aquitard, aquifuge, aquiclude[22]. 2. use of natural resources.
Means a body of impermeable or
distinctly less permeable material consolidation. 1. The binding of grains by
stratigraphically adjacent to one or more cementing material to solid matrix[16]. 2.
aquifers[22]. Synonymous with confining The gradual reduction in the water
bed. content (void ratio) of a saturated soil, as
a result of an increase in the pressure
confining zone. A geological formation, acting on it, because of the addition of
group of formations, or part of a overlying sediments or the application of
formation that is capable of limiting fluid an external load. A laboratory test
movement above an injection zone[22]. commonly known as a one-dimensional
See confining unit. consolidation test (odometric test), is

47
performed on soil samples to evaluate travertínico; (Turkish.) düÕüm;
consolidation. From such a test, the (Yugoslavian.) slap, prec#aga.
coefficient of consolidation, cv usually
expressed in cm2/sec, is calculated as the consumer. Any living thing that is unable
ratio to manufacture food from nonliving
substances, but depends instead on the
energy stored in other living things[23].
See also carnivore; decomposers; food
chain; herbivore; omnivore; producers.
where K is the hydraulic conductivity, mv
is the coefficient of volume consumptive use. The quantity of water
compressibility, and (w is the unit weight used annually by crops or natural
of water. The theory of consolidation vegetation due to transpiration, tissue
leads to a relation between degree of building, and evaporation from adjacent
consolidation and time: soil[16].

contact load. The solid material in sliding


or rolling contact with a stream bed[16].

In this expression U is the degree of contact spring. See spring, contact.


consolidation or the percentage of total
consolidation occurring in some time t; cv contaminant. 1. An undesirable substance
is the coefficient of consolidation; and H not normally present or an unusually high
is half of the sample’s thickness when the concentration of a naturally occurring
odometric test is performed[21]. substance in water or soil[22]. 2. Any
physical, chemical, biological, or
consolidated rock. Rock that has become radiological substance or matter in
hard and coherent through compression water[22]. See also pollutant.
and lithification[16].
contaminant plume. An elongated body of
constant-temperature zone. The area of a ground water containing contaminants,
cave where air temperature is unchanging emanating and migrating from a point
throughout the year and approximates the source within a hydrogeologic unit(s)[22].
average annual temperature
aboveground[23]. See also zonation. contaminate. To introduce a substance that
would cause (a) the concentration of that
constructive waterfall. A large rimstone substance in the around water to exceed
dam on a surface stream[10]. See rimstone the maximum contaminant levels; or (b)
dam. Synonyms: (French.) chute an increase in the concentration of that
incrustante; (German.) Waßerfall, substance in the ground water where the
inkrustierender?, Sinter...?, Sinterbecken; existing concentration of that substance
(Greek.) katarráktis; (Italian.) (vasche exceeds the maximum contaminant
d’incrostazione); (Spanish.) dique levels[22]. See also pollutant.

48
cooling water. Water used only for cooling
contamination. The addition to water of purposes[16].
any substance or property preventing the
use or reducing the usability of the water. cool spring. Spring water temperature
There is no specific limits, since the below mean annual surface
degree of permissible contamination temperature[16].
depends upon the intended end use, or
uses, of the water[6]. Sometimes coprolite. The fossilized excrement of
considered synonymous with pollution. vertebrates such as fishes, reptiles, an
mammals, larger than a fecal pellet,
continuous stream. A stream that is measuring up to 20 cm in length,
continuous in space from source to characterized by an ovoid to elongate
discharge point[16]. form, a surface marked by annular
convolutions, and a brown or black color,
contributing region. That region which and often composed largely of calcium
contributes to well discharge in inclined phosphate; petrified excrement[1].
water-table flow[16].
coprophage. A scavenger which feeds on
control. The combined effect of channel animal dung, including guano[25].
characteristics (area, shape, slope,
roughness) on rating curve[16]. coquina. Porous limestone composed of
broken shell fragments[16].
conulite. A hollow, cone-shaped speleo-
them formed when a conical depression is coralloid speleothem. Any variety of
drilled in cave mud by falling water. microcrystalline, coralloid or botryoidal
Subsequent erosion may remove the mud, calcite deposit that is distinguished by
isolating the calcite lining of the curved outer surfaces and curved internal
depression[10]. structures. Large examples, including
clouds, are formed under water. Smaller
convective diffusion. See mechanical varieties, also known as cave coral and
dispersion, coefficient. cave popcorn, are splash deposits, or are
precipitated onto cave passage walls from
convective transport. The component of mists or thin surface films of saturated
movement of heat or mass induced by water[9].
thermal gradients in ground water[22]. See
also advection. corrasion. Mechanical erosion performed
by such moving agents as water, ice, and
convection. The process whereby heat is wind, especially when armed with rock
carried along with the flowing ground fragments[10]. See also corrosion.
water[22].
corridor. 1. Long, narrow chasm enlarged
convergence. Net horizontal inflow of by action of water and into which surface
moisture per unit area[16]. runoff or stream may flow; may be

49
located along a fault plane, fissure, joint coupole. (French.) Cupola or hemispheric
or between two beds. Struga (Slavic) hill[10].
refers to such a corridor along a bedding
plane in a carbonate formation[20]. 2. cove. (Southern Appalachians.) Narrow
Relatively narrow passageway permitting steep-sided karst valley flanking
travel between two larger areas. 3. A limestone plateaus[10].
fairly level and straight passage that links
two or more rooms or chambers in a cave. covered karren. Any karren that is covered
4. Intersecting linear depressions on the by soil. Draining water is oversaturated
surface of the land, related to joints or with respect to CO2 so that corrosion is
dikes[10]. See also bogaz; struga; zanjón. extensive[3]. See also wave karren; root
Related to chasm; bogaz. Synonyms: karren; cavernous karren.
(French.) gouffre absorbant; (German.)
Karstgaße; (Greek.) apocheteftikos covered karst. 1. A fossil or currently
karstikos agogos; (Italian.) dolina developing karst in karst limestone which
allongata; (Russian.) coridor, hod; underlies superficial deposits or other
(Spanish.) callejón; (Turkish.) koridor; rock, and which may produce landforms
(Yugoslavian.) struga, bogaz. at the surface which reflect subsurface
karstification[19]; contrasted with naked
corrasion. Abrasion of the rock floor and karst, which is soil free. See also buried
walls of a stream channel by rock debris karst; interstratal karst; mantled karst;
carried in the water[9]. subsoil karst; sulfate-reduction karst. 2.
A generally subdued karst landscape
corrosion. 1. Chemical action of water developed where carbonate rocks are
containing carbonic acid (also humidic, affected by dissolutional processes
nitric, and other acids) on limestones and beneath a soil cover (see bare karst)[9].
dolomites causing partial solution and Synonyms: (French.) karst couvert;
related chemical changes in the rocks[20]. (German.) Bedeckter karst; (Greek.)
2. Erosion by solution or chemical kekalymenon karst; (Italian.) carso
action[10]. 3. The act or process of coperto; (Russian.) pokryty0 karst, pokritij
dissolving or wearing away metals[6]. See karst; (Spanish.) karst cubierto; (Turkish.)
also accelerated corrosion; alluvial örtülü karst; (Yugoslavian.) pokriveni krš,
corrosion; corrasion; solution. Compare pokriti kras.
aggressive water. Synonyms: (French.)
corrosion; (German.) Korrosion; (Greek.) cow’s tail. A length of rope used as a safety
chemeke thiavroses; (Italian.) dissoluzione, when crossing a rebelay[25].
corrosione; (Russian.) korrozija;
(Spanish.) corrosión; (Turkish.) eritme, crack. 1. Tight joint[16]. 2. A small fracture
yenme, kemirilme; (Yugoslavian.) (i.e. small with respect to the scale of the
korozija. feature in which it occurs).

corrosive. Property of aggressive water. crandallite. A cave mineral —


CaAl3(PO4)2(OH)5"H2O[11].

50
crawl, crawlway. A cave passage that is crooked hole. Borehole deflected from the
large enough to be negotiated on hands vertical[16].
and knees[10] or so small as to require a
caver to squeeze through on his/her back cross bedding. Oblique deposition of thin
or belly[13]. beds with respect to the main planes of
stratification[16].
creek, brook. Watercourse of lesser
volume than a river. cross fault. A geologic fault that is oblique
or at right angles to the strike direction of
crescentic wall niche. See meander niche. the beds.

crest line. Line connecting crests[16]. cross section. 1. Vertical section of a


geologic profile[16]. 2. A section of a cave
crest segment. The top part of a passage or a chamber across its width[25].
hydrograph[16].
crust stone. A fragile layer of flowstone
crest-stage indicator. A mechanical gage covering portions of walls of caves; looks
that preserves the indication of highest like a flaky crust. Found in some
water level rise[16]. Kentucky caves[10].

crevice. Opening in a rock formation or crustaceans. The large class of animals that
glacier[16]. includes lobsters, crayfish, amphipods,
isopods, and many similar forms.
crevice karst. An intricate irregular crevice Crustaceans typically live in water and
system that has formed by solution have many jointed appendages,
widening of closely spaced joints. segmented bodies, and hard
Crevices may be as much as 6 meters exoskeletons[23].
across and 20 meters deep. Especially
well developed near rivers in lowland cryokarst. 1. A non-karstic term. Land
New Guinea[10]. surface with closed depression (usually
small and shallow) formed by alternate
critical depth. The depth of flow in open freezing and thawing of permafrost or
channels when specific energy is ground-ice overlying different rock,
minimum[16]. including limestone. The term ‘cryokarst’
is more common in Europe while the term
critical depth flume. Venturi or Parshall ‘thermokarst’ is used in America[20]. 2. A
flume for discharge measurements[16]. karst-like periglacial, or formerly
periglacial, landscape superimposed upon
critical flow. Open channel flow with unconsolidated, superficial deposits.
Froude Number equal to unity[16]. See Cryokarst is characterized by small
also Froude Number. depressions or pits that develop due to
settlement of overlying deposits into
voids formed by the melting of entrapped

51
ice. Also known as thermokarst[9]. cuesta, hogback. A nonsymetrical ridge
Synonyms: (French.) cryokarst, due to a gently dipping stratum[16].
thermokarst; (German.) Thermokarst,
Cryokarst; (Greek.) thermokarst; (Italian.) cueva. (Spanish.) Cave, especially one that
criocarsismo; (Russian.) temokarst, is horizontal or nearly so[10].
criokarst; (Spanish.) criokarst,
thermokarst; (Turkish.) don karst2; cul-de-sac; dead end. A subterranean pas-
#, temokarst.
(Yugoslavian.) toplotni krs sage having only one entry[10].

cryptokarst. A karst term used to describe cumulative production. The sum total of
(a) the result of subsurface removal of volumetric discharge of a well since
limestone taking place beneath permeable production began[16].
loess resulting in a loss of limestone and
subsequent slow subsidence of the loess cupola. A hemispheric hill of limestone[10].
without noticeable surface expression, (b) See also cone karst; cupola karst; mogote;
the initial effects of intergranular solution pinnacle karst; tower karst. Synonyms:
of rock when there is practically no (French.) cupole; (German.) Halbkugel.
movement of water from microcavity to
microcavity, (c) the karst that develops in cupola karst. A type of karst topography
chalk beneath a mantle of its residual clay common in the tropics in which the
and chert, and (d) pockets in limestone residual hills rise in hemispherical or
which are filled with terra rossa or other dome-capped mounds from intervening
residual material and which may be depressions or sinkholes[20]. See also
actively forming, arrested in cone karst; cupola; pinnacle karst; tower
development, or ‘inherited’. Because this karst. Synonyms: (French.) karst à
term has been used for at least four cupules, coupole; (German.) Kegelkarst;
different meanings, it is recommended (Greek.) konoidhes karst; (Italian.)
that it be abandoned[17]. carsismo con forme residuali a cupola;
(Spanish.) karst de cupulas; (Turkish.)
cryptozoa. The assemblage of small #
kubbeli karst; (Yugoslavian.) kupolni krs
terrestrial animals found living in (kras).
darkness beneath stones, logs, bark, etc.
Potential colonizers of caves[25]. cupula (plural cupulae). A jellylike rod
projecting into the water from a
crystal cave. A cave in which much of the neuromast, part of a fish's or amphibian's
surface of the roof, walls, and floor is lateral line system. Vibrations in the
covered with well-formed mineral water cause the cupula to move, thus
crystals[10]. setting off nervous impulses that enable
the animal to detect nearby movements in
crystal pool. In caves a pool, generally the water[23]. [Not to be confused with
having little or no overflow, containing cupola.]
crystals[10].

52
current marking. Shallow asymmetrical cutter. 1. (Tennessee.) Solution crevice in
hollows, caused by turbulent waterflow, limestone underlying residual phosphate
that are distributed in rather regular deposits. 2. A karren-like groove formed
fashion over limestone surfaces[10]. See beneath the soil, more commonly referred
also scallop. to as subsoil karren[10]. See also karren.

current meter, current counter. A device cuttings. Rock chips loosened from the
used to measure the current velocity bottom of a borehole by drilling[16].
directly at a given point[16]. Synonym:
ammeter. cyanotrichite. A cave mineral —
Cu4Al2(SO4)(OH)12"2H2O[11].
curtain. 1. Sinuous, thin sheet (or sheets) of
dripstone formed on the roof or walls of a cycle. Regular periodic occurrence of an
cave or behind a waterfall[20]. 2. A wavy event[16].
or folded sheet of flowstone hanging from
the roof or projecting from the wall of a
cave; often translucent and resonant[10].
See also bacon; blanket; drapery. Related
to helictite and speleothem. Synonyms:
(French.) draperie stalagmitique;
(German.) Sinterfahne; (Greek.)
parapetasma stalaktitikon; (Italian.)
cortina stalattitica; (Russian.) zanavesj;
(Spanish.) bandera, cortina; (Turkish.)
perde; (Yugoslavian.) sigasta zavjesa,
sigasta zavesa.

curve, backwater. A water surface profile


in a stream or channel above a
constriction or impoundment[16].

curve, concentration. The rising limb on a


hydrograph curve[16].

curve, desorption. Curve of moisture


content verses soil moisture tension[16].

curve, drawdown. A plot of drawdown


with radial distance from a well[16].

curve fitting. The fitting of experimental


data points to a theoretical type curve[16].

53
D which states that in contrast to laminar
flow, the average volumetric discharge of
dam. A structure across a watercourse that flow is directly proportional to the square
impounds water; may be natural or root of the driving force and that the
artificial[16]. friction loss is equal to the hydraulic
head[5]. Note: Q=discharge, A=cross-
damping. The process of gradually sectional area, R=hydraulic radius of the
reducing amplitude of a periodic event conduit, g=gravitational acceleration,
such as acoustic oscillations in velocity f=some friction factor, dh/dL=gradient,
logging[16]. and I have attached a negative sign to
indicate that ground-water flow occurs in
dar geçit. See aisle. the direction of decreasing head. In most
instances, a negative sign is not included
Darcian velocity; seepage velocity. See because it is not possible to take the
specific discharge. square root of a negative number.

Darcy’s law. An empirical law given as dark adaptation. A change in the retina of
the eye sensitizing it to dim light (the eye
“becomes accustomed to the dark”)[25].
Compare light adaptation.

which states that the average volumetric dark zone. The part of a cave which
discharge of flow through a porous daylight does not reach[25].
medium is directly proportional to the
hydraulic gradient assuming that the flow dating of cave sediments. Determination
is laminar and inertia can be neglected. of the age of development of caves is
Note: Q=discharge, K=hydraulic normally impossible. Only the sediments
conductivity, A=cross-sectional area, they contain can be dated, and these must
dh/dL=gradient, and a minus sign is necessarily be younger than the
attached as a convention to indicate that containing passage. Geomorphological
flow occurs in the direction of decreasing correlations may allow more accurate
head[5]. dating of the cave erosion. The most
useful dating method in current use is
Darcy unit. A practical unit for the measure based upon a knowledge of the rates of
of intrinsic permeability[16]. decay of radioactive isotopes of uranium
to thorium in stalagmites. This technique
Darcy-Weisbach equation. An empirical allows measurement of ages in material
equation given as up to 350,000 years old. Dating of
stalagmites has confirmed that many cave
ages lie beyond this range. Electron spin
resonance (ESR) measures the cumulative
effects of radiation that are partly a
function of time and can give stalagmite

54
ages back to about 900,000 years. Deckenkarren. (German.) Solutional
Palaeomagnetism may recognize events pendant features in cave ceilings[10].
up to 2 million years old, but a sequence
of palaeomagnetically dated sediments is declination. The angle from true (or grid)
required to allow identification of the north to magnetic north for a given time
actual ages[9]. and place[25].

datum plane. A reference level to which declogging. The cleaning of clogged well
topographic or water levels in wells are surface or screens[16].
related[16].
decomposers. Living things, chiefly
daylight hole. A hole in the roof of a cave, bacteria and fungi, that live by extracting
reaching the surface[10]. energy from the decaying tissues of dead
plants and animals. In the process, they
dead cave. A dry cave in which all solution also release simple chemical compounds
and precipitation has ceased[10]. stored in the dead bodies and make them
available once again for use by green
dead end. See cul-de-sac. plants[23].

dead water. Standing, stagnant water[16]. decoration. Cave features due to secondary
precipitation of calcite, aragonite,
debris. 1. Any material found to have been gypsum, and other rarer minerals.
washed into a cave from some other
locality. 2. Coarse rock fragments deep percolation. The drainage of soil
resulting from erosion and disintegration water downward by gravity below the
of bedrock[16]. maximum effective depth of the root zone
toward storage in subsurface strata[22].
debris karren. These are pinnacles that
form in limestones with a thin sheet deflocculation. The breakup of flocs of gel
structure that soon fall into smaller structures by use of a thinner[6].
fragments[3]. See also pinnacles.
deformation. Changing of form, volume,
decalcification. Removal by solution of the and relative position of rock masses[16].
calcium carbonate constituents from a
rock or sediment, leaving a residuum of degradation. 1. Geological action of
noncalcareous material[9, 21]. Synonyms: wearing down a surface[16]. 2. the process
(French.) décalcification; (German.) of degrading water quality in an aquifer
Lösungsrückstand (Entkalkung); (Greek.) by the addition of contaminants, either
exasvestoses; (Italian.) decalcificazione; naturally or artificially. 3. The process by
(Russian.) dekaljcifikacija; (Spanish.) which various chemicals are altered to
decalcificación; (Turkish.) karbonat2n2 form new chemicals; breakdown.
giderme; (Yugoslavian.) dekalcifikacijâ.

55
degree of cementation. The degree to randomly in all directions and at almost
which a rock has been solidified due to any angle, resembling in plan the
cementation[16]. branching habit of certain trees. It is
produced where a consequent stream
degree of karstification. The ratio of the receives several tributaries which in turn
volume of openings to the total volume of are fed by smaller tributaries. It is an
a soluble massif, expressed as a indicative of insequent streams flowing
percentage. It is the sum of the activity across horizontal and homogeneous strata
indices from the initiation of or complex crystalline rocks offering
karstification, and so is normally applied uniform resistance to erosion. This
only to carbonate rocks with little or no pattern may form on top of the land
primary porosity[20]. Related to corrosion surface or below the land surface in karst
and solution. Synonyms: (French.) taux aquifers with anastomoses forming the
de karstification; (German.) Ausmaß smaller tributaries.
(Grad) der Verkarstung; (Greek.) vathmos
karstikiiseos; (Italian.) grado di density. The mass of water per unit volume,
carsificazione; (Spanish.) grado de usually stated in grams per cubic
karstificación; (Turkish.) karstlaÕma centimeter (gm/cm3), but may also be
derecesi; (Yugoslavian.) stupanj krs#kog measured in pounds per gallon (lb/gal),
procesa, stopnja zakrasevanja, stepen pounds per cubic foot (lb/ft3), and
karstifikacijé. kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3.)
Density of fresh water is taken to be 1.0.
degree of saturation. See percent
saturation. density current. A gravity-induced flow of
one current through, over, or under
delay. The lapse time between signal another, owing to density differences.
emission and signal reception in seismic Factors affecting density differences
logging[16]. include temperature, salinity, and
concentration of suspended particles.
delta. A triangular deposit of sediments at
the inflow of a river into an ocean or denudation. The wearing away of
lake[16]. overlying loose rock to top of bedrock[16].

demand. The rate of draft from an aquifer denuded karst. Subsoil karst or interstratal
or reservoir to meet a certain demand[16]. karst which has been exposed by erosion
of its cover[17]. See also exposed karst;
demineralization. The removal of mineral interstratal karst; subsoil karst.
matter from water[16]. Synonyms: (French.) karst dénudé;
(German.) nackter Karst, oberflächlicher
dendritic. Tree-like pattern[16]. Karst; (Greek.) apogymnomenon karst;
(Italian.) carso denudato, carso nudo;
dendritic drainage pattern. A drainage (Russian.) golij karst, otkritij karst;
pattern in which the streams branch (Spanish.) karst denudado; (Turkish.)

56
#
belirgin karst; (Yugoslavian.) ogoljeli krs desiccation crack. A crack formed in soil
# (krãs), razkriti kras.
(krãs), goli krs as a result of shrinkage to a drying
volume[16].
depletion. The withdrawal of water at a
greater rate than replenishment[16]. desorption. The reverse process of
sorption[22]. See also sorption.
deposition factor. The factor that describes
the settling of suspended solids within detritus. Loose material originating from
pore space[16]. disintegrated and weathered rock[16].

depression. A small hollow in a surface[16]. developed section. The result of


straightening out a section composed of
depression spring. See spring, depression. several parts with differing directions into
one common plane. Usually the plane is
depth gage. 1. Any device used to measure vertical and the length of the section
depths such as water level in wells[16]. 2. equals the plan lengths of the passages
Specific gage for measuring river stage[16]. and chambers comprising[25].

depth of penetration. In electrical development. The act of repairing damage


resistivity surveys, it is the depth to which to the formation caused by drilling
an electrical field penetrates into the procedures and increasing the porosity
subsurface as a function of electrode and permeability of the materials
spacing[16]. surrounding the intake portion of the
well[6].
desalinization. The process of salt
removal[16]. deviation. 1. Deflection of a recording from
a base line (e.g., the deviation from
desander. A device used to separate sand vertical of a borehole)[16]. 2. Usually a
from well water[16]. sling of rope or tape attached to a natural
anchor at one end and clipped to the rope
descender. A mechanical device for with a karabiner at the other. Used to
descending ropes[25]. avoid rub points on pitches[25]. Synonym:
redirection.
desert. 1. Region where precipitation is less
than 10 inches per year. 2. Region where dew-point. The point at which dew
the net moisture inflow is too small to formation starts for given temperature and
support vegetation[16]. humidity conditions[16].

desiccation. The removal of moisture by D-horizon. The zone of bedrock in a soil


evaporation or drying[16]. horizon[16].

diagenesis. Post depositional physical and


chemical changes in sediment[16].

57
diatomaceous earth. A light-colored, soft, influence of their kinetic activity in the
siliceous earth composed of the shells of direction of their concentration
diatoms, a form of algae. Some deposits gradient[22].
are of lake origin but the largest are
marine[6]. diffusion coefficient. See molecular
diffusion, coefficient.
differential water capacity. The absolute
value of the rate of change of water diffusion, convective. See mechanical
content with soil water pressure. The dispersion, coefficient.
water capacity at a given water content
will depend on the particular desorption diffusivity, soil water. The hydraulic
or adsorption curve employed. conductivity divided by the differential
Distinction should be made between water capacity (care being taken to be
volumetric and specific water capacity[22]. consistent with units), or the flux of water
per unit gradient of moisture content in
diffuse circulation; diffuse flow. the absence of other force fields[22].
Circulation of ground water in karst
aquifers (or other aquifers) under condi- diffusivity, hydraulic. The ratio of
tions in which all, or almost all, openings transmissivity divided by the storage
(primary and secondary) in the karstified coefficient or the hydraulic conductivity
rock intercommunicate and are full of divided by the specific storage[22].
water but have not been selectively
enlarged in specific zones by dissolution, dig. An excavation made to discover or
and so thus no concentration of ground extend a cave or to uncover artefacts or
water occurs in restricted conduits[9, 21]. animal bones[25].
The ground-water flow is generally slow-
moving, may be laminar, and have a dike. 1. A wall or embankment protecting
uniform discharge and slow response to lowlands from being flooded[16]. 2. A
storms. It is being replaced by the term, subsurface sheet-like igneous intrusion
slow flow, because significant confusion into bedrock fractures[16].
regarding its usage especially when
thought of as in terms of porous-media Dinaric Karst. The extensive expanse of
flow. Synonyms: (French.) circulation karst landscape stretching from Italy,
diffuse; (German.) Diffuse across the whole of southern Slovenia and
Grundwaßerbewegung; (Greek.) Croatia, into parts of south-west Bosnia
thiacheomenon ydhor; (Italian.) and across Montenegro, ultimately
circolazione carsica diffusa; (Spanish.) extending into Albania and Greece[9].
circulación saturada difusa; (Turkish.)
yayg2n dolaÕ2m; (Yugoslavian.) difuzno dip. 1. The angle between an inclined
te…enje. bedding plane in a rock sequence and the
horizontal. The dip value includes an
diffusion. Process whereby ionic or inclination and a direction and the two
molecular constituents move under the components are generally quoted in this

58
order and in the format l0° ENE or 10° discharge, natural. The discharge of water
towards 025° magnetic (etc.). The dip into surface water bodies or springflow[16].
direction is down the slope. True dip is
the maximum dip value of a given discharge hydrograph. A graph showing
bedding plane; other, lesser values, the discharge of water as a function of
obliquely down the same bedding plane, time[16].
referred to as apparent dips. The
direction at right-angles to the true dip, discharge pipe. A pipe through which a
where the dip value is zero, is known as pump discharges[16].
the strike[9]. 2. Maximum plunge of
sloping planar features (e.g bedding, discharge pressure. The pressure at which
fractures) within a geological formation a certain discharge takes place[16].
measured perpendicularly to the strike of
the features. See also strike; hade. discharge velocity. The rate of discharge of
water through a porous medium per unit
dipmeter survey. A geophysical borehole of total area perpendicular to the direction
logging method where the dip of the of flow.
penetrated strata is measured[16].
disconformity. A geological unconformity
diphenyl brilliant flavine 7GFF, direct between parallel beds, often with some
yellow 96. A yellowish dye initially series missing[16].
developed to color tennis balls and
subsequently shown to be useful in discontinuity. 1. A point where a
environmental tracing studies. Dye type: mathematical function becomes
Stilbene. See also fluorescent dyes. nondefined[16]. 2. An unconformity in
which the bedding planes above and
discharge. The volumetric flow of water below the break are basically parallel,
through a given cross section[16]. indicating a significant hiatus in the
orderly sequence of sedimentary rocks. 3.
discharge area. An area in which ground A surface at which seismic-wave
water is discharged to the land surface, velocities abruptly change.
surface water, or atmosphere[22].
discontinuity surface. Any surface across
discharge, evaporation. The direct which some property for a rock mass is
discharge of ground water to the discontinuous. This includes fracture
atmosphere by evaporation[16]. surfaces, weakness planes, and bedding
planes but the term should not be
discharge, hydraulic. The discharge of restricted only to mechanical continuity.
ground water through springs or wells[16].
dispersion. The spreading and mixing of
discharge, maximum. The maximum chemical constituents in ground water
discharge of a river or spring during high caused by diffusion and mixing due to
flow conditions[16].

59
microscopic variations in velocities disposal well. A well used for the disposal
within and between pores[6]. of waste into a subsurface stratum. See
also injection well[22].
dispersion coefficient. 1. A measure of the
spreading of a flowing substance due to dissociation. A chemical process that
the nature of the porous medium, with its causes a molecule to split into simpler
interconnected channels distributed at groups of atoms, or ions. For example,
random in all directions[22]. 2. The sum of the water molecule (H2O) breaks down
the coefficients of mechanical dispersion spontaneously into H+ and OH– ions[6].
and molecular diffusion in a porous
medium[22]. dissolution. See solution.

dispersion, longitudinal. Process whereby dissolution of limestone. The solubility of


some of the water molecules and solute calcite (and hence of limestone) in pure
molecules travel more rapidly than the water is very low, but is vastly increased
average linear velocity and some travel in the presence of carbon dioxide. This
more slowly which results in spreading of gas, dissolved in the water to produce
the solute in the direction of the bulk carbonic acid, permits dissociation of
flow[22]. calcium carbonate, and dissolution rates
and loads are therefore directly related to
dispersion, mechanical. See mechanical carbon dioxide content. This accounts for
dispersion. the importance to limestone dissolution of
plant growth; soil water contains greatly
dispersion, transverse. Spreading of the more carbon dioxide than stream waters.
solute in directions perpendicular to the Further dissolution occurs due to mixing
bulk flow[22]. of saturated waters of different carbon
dioxide content (see
dispersion zone. A zone of intermixing in Mischungskorrosion), because of a non-
miscible flow or in sea water linear relationship between carbonate
encroachment. See also transition saturation and carbon dioxide content.
zone[16]. This process is of major significance to
continued dissolution within the phreas.
dispersivity. A geometric property of a Cold water can dissolve more carbon
porous medium which determines the dioxide but, with respect to cave
dispersion characteristics of the medium development, this climatic factor is
by relating the components of pore overwhelmed by the higher organic
velocity to the dispersion coefficient[22]. activity producing more carbon dioxide in
warmer environments. Loss of carbon
displacement. 1. The process of replacing dioxide, by diffusion into open air, causes
one fluid in a porous medium by water to precipitate calcite as
another[16]. 2. A change in position of a speleothems. Limestone dissolution may
material point. See also miscible also be achieved by organic acids or by
displacement. strong acids, particularly sulphuric acid,

60
though such effects are normally far less the same aquifer, may have a
than that of carbon dioxide. Strong acid potentiometric surface lacking the ridge,
dissolution is probably involved in the and so may flow past the divide. See also
inception of most underground drainage. ground-water divide; water-table divide.
Dissolution by sulphuric acid formed by Synonyms: ground-water divide; ground-
oxidation of sulfide minerals or gases water ridge; water-table divide. 3. (a) The
may be a major cave-forming process in line of separation, or the ridge, summit, or
some regions, and was largely responsible narrow tract of high ground, marking the
for the enlargement of Carlsbad Caverns boundary between two adjacent drainage
and Lechuguilla Cave, New Mexico[9]. basins or dividing the surface waters that
flow naturally in one direction from those
dissolution zone. A laterally extensive zone that flow in the opposite direction; the
where extensive dissolution of bedrock line forming the rim of or enclosing a
has occurred. drainage basin; a line across which no
water flows. 3. (b) A tract of relatively
distortion. A change in shape of a solid high ground between two streams; a line
body. that follows the summit of an interfluve[1].
See also drainage divide.
distribution coefficient. The quantity of
the solute, chemical, or radionuclide DNAPL. Abbreviation for dense
sorbed by the solid per unit weight of nonaqueous phase liquid. Liquids falling
solid divided by the quantity dissolved in into this category have specific gravities
the water per unit volume of water[22]. greater than water (the specific gravity for
water is usually taken to be one), are
distribution, frequency. Distribution of the relatively immiscible with water, and tend
number of occurrences of a variate. to migrate downwards through the vadose
and phreatic zones in a relatively
disturbance. In geology, any change of the unimpeded manner. See also LNAPL;
original position of rocks by folding[16]. immiscible; NAPL.

disturbed sample. A sample disturbed with dog-tooth crystal; dog-tooth spar. A


respect to its original mode of packing variety of calcite in the form of sharp-
and sedimentation (e.g., a drill core)[16]. pointed crystals[10].

divide. 1. A line connecting the highest doline; sinkhole. A basin- or funnel-shaped


topographic elevations or ground-water hollow in limestone, ranging in diameter
crests that separate one drainage basin from a few meters up to a kilometer and
from another[16]. 2. A ridge in the water in depth from a few to several hundred
table or potentiometric surface from meters. Some dolines are gentle grassy
which the ground water represented by hollows; others are rocky cliff-bounded
that surface moves away in both basins. A distinction may be made by
directions. Water in other aquifers above direct solution of the limestone surface
or below, and even in the lower part of zone, (solution dolines), and those formed

61
by collapse over a cave, (collapse doline karst. Karst dominated by closed
dolines), but it is generally not possible to depressions, chiefly dolines, perforating a
establish the origin of individual simple surface[25].
examples[10]. Solutional enlargement is
either circular in plan, if there is one doline lake. A small karst lake occupying a
dominant vertical joint, or otherwise doline or closed depression in limestone.
irregular if there are several and can The term implies that the doline is at or
achieve dimensions of up to 1,000 meters near the ground-water table and in
in diameter and 100 meters deep. Where hydrological continuity with it, or that the
a karst bedrock is covered by superficial base of the doline is sealed with an
deposits, solutional enlargement permits impermeable layer such as clay[20]. See
the latter to subside into vertical fissures, also sinkhole pond. Synonyms: (French.)
creating subsidence cones or alluvial lac de doline; (German.) Dolinensee;
dolines, whose slopes are unstable (Greek.) limni dholina; (Italian.) lago di
because of the unconsolidated nature of dolina, lago carsico; (Russian.) karstovoe
the surface material. The bedrock ozero; (Spanish.) dolina laguna, torca
remains covered in the first instance. laguna; (Turkish.) obruk gölü;
Dolines are also formed by the large-scale (Yugoslavian.) krs#ko jezero, kras#ko jezero.
subsidence caused by cave roof-collapse
of near-surface caverns; in this instance, dolomite. 1. The pure mineral dolomite has
the collapse doline, the sides are cliff-like the composition CaMg(CO3)2 and has
and the floor composed of the irregular properties very similar to those of calcite.
blocks from the fragmented roof. Cave The rock dolomite consists mainly of the
roof-collapse is considered a relatively mineral dolomite, with subordinate
rare phenomenon. Closed depressions calcite, and has properties very similar to
receiving a stream are known as swallow those of limestone. The natural
holes or stream sinks. A doline which is dissolution of dolomite is generally
largely dependent upon snow for slower than that of limestone. Hence,
solution-enlargement is known as a kotlici dolomite karst is generally less well
or Schneedoline[19]. In America most developed than limestone karst, though
dolines are referred to as sinks or exceptions do occur in areas such as
sinkholes. See also jama; pit; ponor; north-west Canada. Large, deep caves
sink, sinkhole; stream sink; swallet; can form in dolomite, as in the Rand of
swallow hole; sumidero. Synonyms: South Africa[9]. 2. A mineral composed
(French.) doline; (German.) Dolinen, of calcium magnesium carbonate,
Karsttrichter; (Greek.) tholene; (Italian.) CaMg(CO3)2. 2. Rock chiefly composed
dolina, pozzo naturale; (Russian.) of the mineral dolomite[10]. Also called
karstovaja voronka, karstovaja kotlovina; dolostone.
(Spanish.) dolina; (Turkish.) düden,
kokurdan, huni; (Yugoslavian.) vrta…a, dolomitic limestone. A limestone
ponikva, dolac, do, duliba, kotli…, konta. containing a significant proportion of the
mineral dolomite but in which calcite is
more abundant (e.g. 10–45% dolomite,

62
90–55% calcite). Many dolomitic (French.) évorsion, marmite inversée;
limestones originate as calcite limestone that (German.) Deckenkolk; (Greek.) vathís
is subsequently affected by magnesium-rich lákkos me thólon; (Italian.) marmitta
water that replaces part of the calcite with inversa; (Spanish.) marmita inversa;
dolomite[9]. (Turkish.) kemerli obruk.

dolomitic flour (sand). A loose mealy rock donga. In the Nullarbor Plain, Australia, a
or residuum, produced by the shallow, closed depression, several meters
disintegration of dolomitic limestones deep and hundreds of meters across, with
under the processes of karstification[20]. a flat clay-loam floor and very gentle
Synonyms: (French.) sable dolomitique; slopes[25].
(German.) Dolomitsand, Dolomitasche;
(Greek.) dholomitikon alevron; (Spanish.) double brake bars. A rappel device used
arena dolomítica; (Turkish.) dolomit by cavers that consists of two carabiners
kumu; (Yugoslavian.) dolomitni pijesak, d. with a brake bar on each and connected
pesak, d. pesek. together with another carabiner or a metal
ring[13].
dolomitization. The process whereby
limestone becomes dolomite by the sub- downwarping. A down bending of stratum
stitution of magnesium carbonate for part to form a depression or syncline[16].
of the original calcium carbonate[10].
drag. The resistance force of flowing fluid
domain. A biological region of the earth's on a solid boundary[16].
crust[25].
drainage area. A horizontal projection of
dome. 1. A high shaft in a room or passage an area drained by a particular river
formed by solution[13]. 2. A large system[16].
hemispheroidal hollow in the roof of a
cave,formed by the breakdown and/or salt drainage basin. The land area from which
weathering, generally in mechanically surface runoff drains into a stream
weak rocks, which prevents bedding and channel or system of stream channels, or
joints dominating the form[25]. See also to a lake, reservoir, or other body of
dome pit. water[6]. In a karst setting, subsurface
drainage (internal drainage) may have
dome pit. 1. American term defined by boundaries defined on the basis of
Davis (1930) ‘Mammoth Cave possesses comprehensive ground-water tracing
several extraordinary vertical cavities of studies. See also ground-water basin.
which the arched tops are called domes
and the deep bottoms are called pits. The drainage density. A ratio of total channel
combined name, dome pits, is here used segments lengths cumulated for all orders
for them’. 2. A deep shaft in a cave, to basin area[16].
intersected by a passage at or near its
mid-section[20]. See aven. Synonyms:

63
drainage ditch. A small channel through potentiometric surface at a point caused
which surface water can drain[16]. by the withdrawal of water from a
hydrogeologic unit[22].
drainage divide. The rim of a drainage
basin[16]. See also divide; ground-water drawdown curve. A plot of drawdown
divide; water-table divide. with radial distance from a well[16].

drainage network. A system of streams driphole. 1. Hole in rock or clay produced


and rivers draining a given basin[16]. by fast-dripping water. 2. Hollow space
surrounded by precipitated material, such
drainage pattern. A geometric as the bottom of a stalactite[10].
arrangement of stream segments in a
drainage system[16]. dripline. A line on the ground at a cave
entrance formed by drips from the rock
drainage ratio. A ratio of runoff to above. Useful in cave survey to define
precipitation[16]. the beginning of the cave[25].

drainage system. A network of streams and dripstone. Calcium carbonate deposited


tributaries[16]. from water dripping from the ceiling or
wall of a cave or from the overhanging
drainage well. 1. A well installed to drain edge of a rock shelter; commonly refers to
surface water, storm water, or treated the rock in stalactites, stalagmites, and
waste water into underground strata[22]. 2. other similar speleothems; in some places
A water well constructed to remove composed of aragonite or gypsum[10].
subsurface water or to reduce a Synonyms: (French.) concrétions;
hydrogeologic unit’s potentiometric (German.) Tropfstein, Stalagmit, Stalaktit;
surface[22]. (Greek.) stalaktitis, stalagmitis; (Italian.)
concrezione; (Russian.) kapeljnik;
drain tile; french drain. A porous pipe (Spanish.) concreción (estalagmitjca o
used for collection of excess ground estalactítica); (Turkish.) damlataÕ2;
water[16]. (Yugoslavian.) sige, smugori. See also
flowstone.
drapery. A thin sheet of dripstone, equiv-
alent to curtain[10]. See also bacon; drowned karst. Karst topography that is
blanket; curtain. submerged by a change in sea level or
lake level. Synonym: karst noyé. See
draw. A natural depression or small also subaqueous karst.
valley[16].
drowned spring. See spring, drowned.
drawdown. 1. The vertical distance the
water elevation is lowered or the drought. A period of moisture deficiency
reduction of the pressure head due to the and absence of water for plant growth[16].
removal of water[22]. 2. The decline in

64
dry cave. A cave without a running is so close to the roof that crawling or
stream[10]. See also dead cave. swimming beneath the water surface is
needed to pass[10].
dry hole. A hole not obtaining any
production. A non-producing well[16]. dug well. A hand excavated well[16].

dry valley. 1. Valley that lacks a permanent dune limestone. (Australian.) See eolian
surface stream. Dry valleys are common calcarenite.
on carbonate rocks with good primary
permeability and occur on other Dupuit’s assumption. A simplifying
permeable rocks such as sandstone. Dry assumption for the solution of a free
valleys on cavernous limestone were surface well flow problem[16] (e.g. a
formed when streams flowed on the water-table aquifer.) It is based on the
surface, either before secondary assumption that the slope of the phreatic
permeability and cave systems developed, surface is negligibly small so that the
or when caves were blocked by ground equipotential lines are vertical and flow is
ice in periglacial climates. The valleys essentially horizontal.
became dry when underground drains
formed or were re-opened, capturing first duration curve. A cumulative frequency
part and then all of the surface drainage[9]. curve of a continuous time series of
2. A valley that lacks a surface water hydrologic parameters[16].
channel; common in the chalk of southern
England[10]. 3. Elongated recesses and Durchgangshöhle. (German.) See through
valleys at the bottom of which are cave.
dolines, jamas and caves. 4. A valley
form of fluvial or periglacial origin in dye gaging. See tracer gaging.
which surface drainage is intermittent or
totally absent. Fossil, usually with steep dye test. Determination of direction and
scree slopes, it is variously identifiable as rate of flow of streams by marking them
a product of nival processes or higher with dye at the infiltration area and then
water tables subsequently lowered by identifying and timing the reappearance
allogenic valley[19]. Synonyms: (French.) of color at lower-lying springs, in river
vallée sèche; (German.) Trockental; beds and elsewhere in a cave system[20].
(Greek.) xera kilas; (Italian.) valle morta, Synonyms: (French.) coloration;
valle asciutta; (Russian.) suhaja dolina; (German.) Färbung, Färbversuch;
(Spanish.) valle seco; (Turkish.) kuru (Greek.) chrostike ichnithetesis; (Italian.)
vadi; (Yugoslavian.) suha dolina. tracciamento con colorante; (Russian.)
method krasjascih, indikatorov; (Spanish.)
duck; duck-under. 1. A place where water coloración; (Turkish.) boya deneyi;
reaches the cave roof for a short distance (Yugoslavian.) bojenje, barvanje. See
and can be passed by quick submergence also tracer.
without swimming. 2. In cave diving, a
longer stretch of passage where the water dynamic phreas. See phreas, dynamic.

65
dynamic similarity. A scaling procedure of
model and prototype where the
relationship of dynamic parameters is
retained[16].

dynamometer. A device used to measure


the momentum force of a stream
velocity[16].

66
E effective precipitation. That part of
precipitation that contributes entirely to
Easting. 1. The distance of a point east of direct runoff.
the point of origin of the grid of a map or
some abbreviation of it[25]. 2. The effective rainfall. Effective precipitation
west-east component of a survey leg, or when only rainfall is involved[16].
of a series of legs or of a complete
traverse; east is positive and west is effective size. The 90%-retained size of a
negative[25]. sediment as determined from a grain-size
analysis; therefore, 10% of the sediment
ebb-and-flow spring; ebbing-and-flowing is finer and 90% coarser[6].
well. See spring, ebb-and-flow.
effluent. 1. The discharge of water or other
eccentric. Adjective or noun implying fluids from a spring. 2. A waste liquid
abnormal shape in speleothems, such as discharge from a manufacturing or
helictites[10]. treatment process, in its natural state or
partially or completely treated, that
eccentric well. A well that is not in the discharges into the environment[6].
center of the radius of influence[16].
effluent cave. See outflow cave.
ecology. The scientific study of the
relationships of living things to one effluent stream. See gaining stream.
another and to their environment. A
scientist who studies these relationships is elastic limit. The point on a stress/strain
an ecologist[23]. curve at which transition from elastic to
inelastic behavior takes place.
eddy. A non-laminar circulation of fluid at
boundaries of flow separation[16]. elastic properties. The properties
describing deformation of a solid[16].
effective abstractions. The difference
between total precipitation and effective elasticity. The property of a material that
precipitation[16]. allows the material to return to its original
form or condition after the applied force
effective diameter. A 10 percentile size has been removed.
(i.e. 10% diameter smaller than this
diameter)[16]. electric lamp. As used in caving, generally
a helmet-mounted headpiece (bulb,
effective hydraulic conductivity. See reflector, and lens) with a wire running to
hydraulic conductivity, effective. a battery carried elsewhere on the
person[13].
effective porosity. See porosity, effective.

67
electro-chemical gaging. Flow endogean. Pertaining to the domain
measurement based on electric detection immediately beneath the ground surface,
of electrolyte tracer flow[16]. i.e., in the soil or plant litter[25]. See also
endogenic, epigean, hypogean.
electrolyte. A chemical which dissociates
into positive and negative ions when endogenic. 1. Pertaining to, or living in, the
dissolved in water, increasing the zone immediately beneath the earth’s
electrical conductivity[6]. surface[9]. 2. Pertaining to geological
process originating within the earth[16].
elutriation. A washing process by See also endogean, epigean, hypogean.
decantation with water[16].
endokarst. The part of a vertically layered
embankment. A natural or artificial lateral karst system that is beneath the surface.
boundary of a river[16]. Endokarst includes the full spectrum of
underground voids and the dissolutional
embryo. A developing individual before its features that are present on the rock
birth or hatching[23]. surfaces surrounding them[9]. See also
exokarst.
emergence. A general term for the
outflowing water, for the opening or for energy head. Hydraulic head plus velocity
the area of outflow of a karst spring; head[16].
includes exsurgence and resurgence[20].
Synonyms: (French.) émergence; enthalpy. Heat content[16].
(German.) Ausflu$telle, Karstquelle;
(Greek.) pigházon ýthor (or kephalari); entrance capacity. The property of a soil to
(Italian.) risorgenza; (Russian.) vihod allow water to infiltrate (the maximum
karstovih vod; (Spanish.) fuente, value of this property)[16].
manantial, surgencia; (Turkish.) yüzeye
eriÕim; (Yugoslavian.) krško vrelo, krs#ki entrenchment. Erosion of an existing cave
izvor, obrh. See also exsurgence; floor by a freely flowing stream to form a
resurgence; rise. canyon passage that is commonly
narrower than the original passage.
encroachment. 1. The landward Where the stream entrenches an
advancement of saline waters into coastal originally tubular phreatic passage a
aquifers[16]. 2. The displacement of clean characteristic keyhole shaped profile
water by pollutants[16]. develops. Also known as vadose
entrenchment or incision[9].
end effect. A disturbance introduced by the
inflow and outflow sections in a flow entropy. The degree of thermodynamic
experiment[16]. disorder[16].

endellite. A cave mineral — environment. All the external conditions


Al2Si2O5(OH)4"2H2O[11]. surrounding a living thing[23].

68
eolian calcarenite. A terrestrial limestone epsomite. A cave mineral —
formed by the cementation by carbonates MgSO4"7H2O[11].
of calcareous coastal dune sand. Often
shorted to eolianite. Synonym: equation of hydrologic equilibrium. A
dune-limestone; aeolianite. Compare mass balance for a ground-water basin[16].
beachrock.
equipotential line or surface. 1. A contour
eolian deposit. Sediment material deposited line on the potentiometric surface along
by wind action[16]. which the pressure head of ground water
in the aquifer is the same. Fluid flow is
ephemeral stream. A stream flowing only normal to these lines in the direction of
in direct response to precipitation[16]. decreasing fluid potential[6]. 2. Line (or
surface) along which the potential is
epigean. Pertaining to, or living on, the constant[22].
surface of the earth. See endogean and
hypogean. equivalent per million. The number of
equivalent weights in a million parts per
epigeum. The surface environment[23]. weight solution[16].

epikarst; epikarst zone. A relatively thick erodible. Susceptible to erosion[16].


(the thickness may vary significantly, but
15 to 30 meters thick is a good erosion. 1. The general process or group of
generalization) portion of bedrock that processes whereby the materials of the
extends from the base of the soil zone and Earth’s crust are moved from one place to
is characterized by extreme fracturing and another by running water (including
enhanced solution. It is separated from rainfall), waves and currents, glacier ice,
the phreatic zone by an inactive, relatively or wind[6]. 2. The sequence of processes
waterless interval of bedrock that is of disintegration and transportation of
locally breached by vadose percolation. rock material[16].
Significant water storage and transport
are known to occur in this zone. erosion surface. The land surface resulting
Synonym: subcutaneous zone. from the action of erosion[16].

epikarstic flow. See subcutaneous flow. erosiveness. The capacity to erode[16].

epilimnion. Upper layer of stratified escarpment. A steep slope, often the result
water[16]. of faulting[16].

epiphreas, epiphreatic zone. The zone in a estavelle. (French.) An intermittent


cave system, immediately above the resurgence or exsurgence, active only in
phreatic zone, affected morphologically wet seasons. May act alternatively as a
and hydrologically by floods too large for swallow hole and as a rising according to
the cave to absorb at once[10]. ground-water conditions[10]. Opening in

69
karstic terrane which acts as a discharge evaporation suppression. The complete
spring during high potentiometric surface prevention of evaporation by mechanical
and as a swallet during low or physico-chemical means (e.g.,
potentiometric surface. Sea estavelles are monomolecular layer)[16].
known to exist[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
estavelle; (German.) Estavelle; (Greek.) evaporite. Rock formed by precipitation of
estavella; (Italian.) estavella; (Russian.) minerals from evaporating water, usually
estavella; (Spanish.) estavela; (Turkish.) from sea water. As sea water evaporates
su batar ç2kar2; (Yugoslavian.) estavela, the least soluble mineral contents
ponor-rigalo. precipitate first; these include calcium
carbonate that is deposited as fine-grained
esker. A stratified fluvio-glacial deposit in limestone. If evaporation continues, first
the form of a winding ridge[16]. gypsum, then halite and finally a number
of other sulfates and chlorides are
etched pothole. See solution pan. deposited[9].

estuary. The lower course of a river evaporativity. Evaporative power[16].


discharging into the sea and subject to
tidal currents[16]. evapotranspiration. 1. The combined loss
of water from a given area and during a
evaporate. A sedimentary rock formed by specified period of time, by evaporation
evaporation and precipitation of saline from the land and transpiration from
waters[16]. plants[22]. 2. The return of water in vapor
form to the atmosphere through the
evaporation. The changing or water from combined actions of evaporation, plant
the liquid or solid states into the gaseous transpiration, and sublimation[16].
state through heat exchange[16].
evolution. The process of natural
evaporation loss. The loss of precipitated consecutive modification in the inherited
water that is discharged to the atmosphere makeup of living things; the process. by
by evaporation[16]. which modern plants and animals have
arisen from forms that lived in the past[23].
evaporation opportunity. The amount of See also mutation.
water made available for discharge into
the atmosphere[16]. evorsion. Mechanical erosion by whirling
water that may carry sand and gravel;
evaporation pan. An open tank used to pothole erosion[10]. Mechanical erosion
measure evaporation[16]. by rotating or whirling water carrying
sand, gravel, cobbles, or boulders in
evaporation reduction. The rate control of suspension or as bedload[20]. Synonyms:
escape of water vapor from an open (French.) évorsion; (German.)
surface[16]. (Auswaschung), Auskolkung; (Greek.)
mihanikí diávrosis; (Italian.) evorsione;

70
(Spanish.) evorsión; (Turkish.) dev kazan2 experimental basin. A basin chosen for the
aÕ2nd2rmas2; (Yugoslavian.) vrtloñna thorough study of hydrological
erozija. phenomena[16].

exchange capacity. 1. The amount of exposed karst. A general term for bare
exchangeable ions measured in moles of karstic rocks outcropping at the surface of
ion change per kilogram of solid material the ground. It embraces karst areas
at a given pH. Synonymous with ion without any initial cover (naked karst) or
exchange capacity[22]. 2. The total ionic exposed by erosion of the residuum and
charge of the adsorption complex active soil (denuded karst) or of the
in the adsorption of ions[22]. See also allochthonous cover (exhumed karst)[20].
cation-exchange capacity. Karst topography in which cover is
absent[17]. Synonyms: (French.) karst
exhumed karst. A karstic outcrop which exposé; (German.) nackter Karst,
has been exposed by the erosion of an oberflächlicher Karst, wiederaufgedeckter
allochthonous cover; there is an Karst; (Greek.) akalypton karst; (Italian.)
implication that karstification (partial or carso denudato; (Russian.) golij karst,
complete) had preceded the removal of otkritij karst; (Spanish.) karst subaéro;
the cover[20]. Mantled karst or buried (Turkish.) belirgin karst; (Yugoslavian.)
karst which has been divested of its ljuti krš. See also denuded karst;
cover. It is the re-exposed portion of a exhumed karst; naked karst.
former landscape[17]. See also buried
karst; exposed karst; mantled karst. extensometer. An instrument used for
Synonyms: (French.) karst dénudé; measuring vertical deformation of fine-
(German.) wiederaufgedeckter Karst; grained beds in the subsoil under stress.
(Greek.) gymnothen karst; (Italian.) carso Vertical extensometers commonly are
riesumato; (Spanish.) karst exhumado; installed when land subsidence follows
(Turkish.) aç2k karst; (Yugoslavian.) ground-water withdrawal. Extensometers
ogoljeli krš (kras). also are used to measure small horizontal
displacements[21].
exogenic. Pertaining to processes on or near
the surface of the earth[16]. external loads. External loads causing
water level fluctuations in wells.
exokarst. All features that may be found on
a surface karst landscape, ranging in size exsurgence. 1. A term used to explain the
between tiny karren forms and extensive re-emergence at the surface, as a stream,
projes, belong to the exokarst[9]. See also of meteoric water which has fallen
endokarst. entirely upon and percolated through a
calcareous massif[19]. 2. A spring or seep
exoskeleton. An external skeleton. The in karstic terrane not clearly connected
hard body covering or shell of most with swallets a higher level. Synonyms:
invertebrate animals, including insects, (French.) exsurgence; (German.)
crayfish, and millipedes[23]. Karstquelle, Austrittßtelle; (Greek.)

71
karstiki pighi; (Italian.) risorgente
carsica; (Russian.) karstovij istoƒnik;
(Spanish.) exsurgencia; (Turkish.)
yüzeyde blirme; (Yugoslavian.) vrelo,
obrh. See also emergence; resurgence.

72
F along which there has been displacement
of the two sides relative to one another
fabric. The orientation in space of the parallel to the fracture[6]. This
elements composing a rock substance. displacement may be of a few centimeters
or many kilometers. See also joint fault
facet. See scallop. set; joint fault system.

facies. The lithologic appearance of a fault breccia. The assemblage of broken


rock[16]. rock fragments frequently found along
faults. The fragments may vary in size
facies change. The change in appearance from inches to feet.
that occurs when one lithologic unit ends
and a new one is encountered. fault cave. A cave developed along a fault
or fault zone[10].
failure. In rocks, failure means exceeding
of the maximum strength of a rock or fault gouge. A clay-like material occurring
exceeding the stress or strain requirement between the walls of a fault as a result of
of a specific design. the movement along the fault surfaces.

fall. The gross slope of a river[16]. fault line. The intersection of a fault with
the surface of the earth or any other plane
false floor. A remnant of a sheet of of reference[16].
flowstone, originally deposited on clastic
sediments that were subsequently washed fault plane. A plane on which dislocation
out from beneath. False floors may and relative movement has taken place[16].
survive as a complete bridge between
passage walls or just as projecting ledges. fault scarp. An elevation formed by
They may be thin and easily broken or movement of blocks along a fault
thick and very strong[9]. plane[16].

farangothes ipoyios thiavasis. See aisle. fault zone. A zone with numerous small
parallel faults[16].
fathometer. A water depth measuring
device[16]. feeding tube. In karst terrane, a more or
less straight and waterbearing
fault. 1. A fracture in the earth’s crust, underground gallery of regular cross-
across which relative rock movement has section. Synonyms: (French.) tunnel;
taken place, or continues to take place. (German.) Stro4mungsrohr, Karstgerinne;
Fault planes commonly guide vertical or (Greek.) karstikos ypoyios agogos;
sub-vertical shafts in caves, as well as (Spanish.) tubo; (Turkish.) akarsu
guiding sub-horizontal or oblique mecras2; (Yugoslavian.) vodonosni rov.
passages within the confines of the fault See also stream tube.
plane[9]. 2. A fracture or fracture zone

73
feldspars. A very common group of rock peak density, in contrast to the Western
forming minerals[16]. classification by hill shape. Fenglin is
therefore almost the equivalent of tower
fengcong; fengcong karst. (Chinese.) 1. A karst; its hills have very steep or vertical
karst, conspicuous in China, that is walls, and may have a height/width ratio
identified by its clustered limestone hills. greater than four. The limestone hills rise
Fengcong (pronounced ‘fungston’), which above level, alluviated plains, and the
translates as ‘peak cluster’, is a mature finest fenglin karst around Yangshuo,
karst normally developed during long Guangxi, in southern China, is one of the
uninterrupted periods of rapid dissolution world’s most dramatic landscapes. The
in wet tropical environments with high classification by hill density means that
levels of biogenic soil carbon dioxide. low residual cones scattered across a plain
The Chinese classify karst by the hill or are also referred to as fenglin by the
peak density, in contrast to the Western Chinese[9]. 2. Tower karst characterized
classification by hill shape. Fencong is as peak forest because the individual
almost the equivalent of cone karst; its towers appear as isolated groups on a
closely packed hills are conical rather plain. Dry valley networks separate
than hemispherical, with intervening individual towers[4]. See also fengcong;
dolines and disjointed valleys. The major fungling; mogote; tower karst.
occurrences are in Guizhou and Guangxi,
in southern China. Some cones in ferghanite. A cave mineral —
Guangxi are so steep that they have been U3(VO4)2"6H2O[11].
termed fengcong tower karst, but this
concept is best avoided[9]. 2. Tower karst ferric oxide. Rust; hematite (Fe2O3)[16].
characterized as peak cluster because the
individual karst towers appear to be ferrito zone. Zone of iron oxide
grouped together in clusters. Closed accumulation in soil under humid climate
depression among the peaks are conditions[16].
common[4]. See also fenglin; fungling;
mogote; tower karst. Fickian diffusion. The spreading of solutes
from regions of highest to regions of
fenglin; fenglin karst. (Chinese.) 1. A lower concentrations caused by the
karst, conspicuous in China, that is concentration gradient. In slow moving
identified by its isolated limestone hills. ground water, this is the dominant mixing
Fenglin (pronounced ‘funglin’) translates process[22].
from Chinese as ‘peak forest’, and is
distinguished from fengcong. Both fissure. Any discontinuity within the rock
fenglin and fengcong are mature karst mass that is either initially open or
normally only developed by long capable of being opened by dissolution to
uninterrupted periods of rapid dissolution provide a route for water movement.
in wet tropical environments with high Fissures in this sense, applied generally in
levels of biogenic soil carbon dioxide. karst, therefore include the primary
The Chinese classify karst by the hill or sedimentary bedding planes as well as

74
tectonic faults and joints. More out to become wells or vertical shafts[10].
specifically, the term has been used to See also vertical shaft.
describe voids with average dimensions
from 10 to 100mm[9]. See also conduit; Flachkarren. (German.) See clint.
fracture.
flank. A limb of a fold[16].
field capacity; field moisture capacity.
See specific retention. flash flood. A relatively short but very
intense flood[16].
field survey. Measurements taken in the
field[16]. flattener. A cave passage, which though
wide, is so low that movement is only
field test. A test run in the field under possible in a prone position[10]. See also
normal field conditions[16]. crawl.

field velocity of ground water. Actual flexure. A bend in a stratum with one flank
interstitial velocity of ground water[16]. or limb only[16].

fill terrace. An elevated valley surface flint. A concretionary form of silica, similar
formed by aggregation[16]. to chert, that occurs in chalk as tabular
sheets and layers of irregularly shaped
fine gravel. Rock aggregates of 1–2 mm nodules. Being very hard and relatively
diameter[16]. insoluble, flint tends to stand out from
chalk cliffs. Flint-rich horizons may also
fine sand. A silicon dioxide material with a influencer the inception of bedding-
grain diameter of 0.1– 0.25 mm[16]. related dissoluational conduits in chalk[9].

finite difference method. A numerical float gage. A device that indicates or


method used to approximate the solution records water levels with a float[16].
of partial differential equations[16].
floating pan. An evaporation pan floating
finite element method. A numerical in a water body with drum floats[16].
method used to approximate the solution
of partial differential equations. floe calcite. Very thin film of pure calcium
carbonate floating on the surface of a
firn. Compacted granular snow[16]. subterranean pool of very calm water[10].

firstkarren. (Austrian.) See Rillenkarren. flood. A high river flow overtopping banks.

fissure. An open joint or crack in rocks[16]. flood crest. The peak of a flood wave[16].

fissure cave. A narrow vertical cave or cave flooding method. A recharge method by
passage along a fissure. Fissures widen flooding a recharge area[16].

75
floodmarks. The marks left on fixed flow-mass curve. 1. A mass curve with
objects by flood waters[16]. runoff discharge as a hydrologic
quantity[16]. 2. The integral of the curve
flood plain. The surface or strip of of a hydrograph[16].
relatively smooth land adjacent to a river
channel, constructed by the present river flow line. The general path that a particle of
and covered with water when the river water follows under laminar flow
overflows its banks. It is built of conditions[22]. Flow lines are usually
alluvium carried by the river during drawn perpendicular to equipotential
floods and deposited in the sluggish water lines. See also equipotential lines.
beyond the influence of the swiftest
current[6]. flow net. 1. A graphical representation of
flow lines and equipotential lines for
flood profile. A continuous line two-dimensional, steady-state
representing the water surface for a given ground-water flow[22]. 2. A net of
rate of flow[16]. orthogonal streamlines and equipotential
lines applied in the graphical solution of
flood water. Water that has overflowed its Laplace’s equation[16].
confines; the water of a flood[1].
flow path. The subsurface course a water
flood-water zone. See epiphreas. molecule or solute would follow in a
given ground-water velocity field.
flood wave. A rise in the stage of a stream
that culminates in a crest before flow rate. Volumetric rate of flow[16].
receding[1].
flow, steady. A characteristic of a flow
floor pocket. See pocket. system where the magnitude and direction
of specific discharge are constant in time
flow, base. See base flow. at any point[22]. See also flow, unsteady.

flow, creep. Flow with a creeping motion flow, uniform. A characteristic of a flow
where inertial terms have been system where specific discharge has the
dropped[16]. same magnitude and direction at any
point[22].
flow, critical. See critical flow.
flow, unsteady. A characteristic of a flow
flow duration curve. A curve of system where the magnitude and/or
cumulative streamflow versus the direction of the specific discharge
corresponding per cent of time[16]. changes with time. Synonymous with
nonsteady flow. See also flow, steady.
flow gage. A gage used to measure flow
rate[16]. See also gage. flow velocity. See specific discharge.

76
flower. A cave flower is a group of crystals, fluorescein. A reddish-yellow crystalline
commonly of gypsum or mirabilite, that compound that imparts a brilliant green
grow by accretion at their bases on a cave fluorescent color to water in very dilute
wall. As the crystals grow, curve and solutions; used to label underground
splay, their form mimics that of a water for identification of an
flower[9]. emergence[10]. Also commonly known as
uranine. Dye type: Xanthene.
flowing artesian well. A well with its
potentiometric surface above the ground fluorescent dyes. Material used in
surface[16]. environmental tracing studies that may be
detected and measured in small
flowmeter. An instrument for measuring concentrations (.10–12 mg/L), are
volumetric flowrate[16]. inexpensive, relatively nontoxic, and are
relatively miscible with the water being
flowstone. Deposits of calcium carbonate, traced.
gypsum, and other mineral matter which
have accumulated on the walls or floors fluorometer, filter fluorometer. A highly
of caves at places where water trickles or sensitive instrument used for measuring
flows over the rock[10]. Layered deposits the fluorescence of water. It is commonly
of calcium carbonate precipitated on used in water tracing and tracer gaging.
rocks from water trickling over them[20]. Selected filters are used to control the
(French.) coulée stalagmitique; excitation and emission ranges for
(German.) Sinterfall, Sinter; (Greek.) specific fluorescent dyes of interest. See
asvestolithikon epiphlioma; (Italian.) also scanning spectrofluorophotometer.
colata stalagmitica, deposito,
concrezione, stalagmite; (Russian.) flushed zone. In geophysical well logging,
nateki; (Spanish.) colada estalagmítica; the zone around the well bore completely
(Turkish.) akmataÕ2; (Yugoslavian.) invaded by the mud filtrate[16].
kaskade. See also dripstone.
flute. See scallop.
fluid potential. The mechanical energy per
unit mass of a fluid at any given point in fluviokarst. 1. A karst landscape where the
space and time with regard to an arbitrary dominant landforms are valleys cut by
state and datum[22]. surface rivers. Such original surface flow
may relate either to low initial
fluorapatite. A cave mineral — permeability before caves (and hence
Ca5(PO4)3F[11]. underground drains) had developed, or to
reduced permeability due to ground
fluorite. A cave mineral — CaF2[11]. freezing in a periglacial environment. In
both cases the valleys become dry as karst
flume. A channel supported on or above development improves underground
ground[16]. drainage[9]. 2. Mixed terranes
characterized by both shallow karst and

77
erosional landscape[20]. 3. A food web. An interlocking system of food
predominantly karst landscape in which chains. Since few animals rely on a
there is much evidence of past or present single food source and since no food
fluvial activity[10]. Synonyms: (French.) source is consumed exclusively by a
fluviokarst; (German.) Fluviokarst; single species of animal, the separate food
(Greek.) fluviokarst; (Italian.) chains in any natural community interlock
fluviocarsimo; (Spanish.) fluviokarst; and form a web[23].
(Turkish.) akarsu karst2; (Yugoslavian.)
fluviokrš, fluviokras, fluviokarst. forestry compass. A lightweight, compact
instrument to be mounted on a tripod,
flux. See specific discharge. which functions as a compass and a
clinometer, and has a telescopic sight.
foaming agent. See surfactant. Some types facilitate measurement of
horizontal angles as well as bearings[25].
foiba. (Italian.) 1. A deep wide vertical
cavity or the swallow point of a river at formation. The fundamental unit in
the beginning of its underground course. rock-stratigraphic classification,
2. A natural vertical shaft in soluble rock, consisting of a distinctive mappable body
tending toward cylindrical shape; it may of rock[10]. See also cave formation;
or may not reach the surface. A dome speleothem.
pit[10].
formation temperature. The prevailing
fold. A bend in a geologic stratum with two temperature in a given subsurface
flanks, often in anticlinal and synclinal formation[16].
sequence.
formation stabilizer. A sand or gravel
food chain. A series of plants and animals placed in the annulus of the well between
linked by their food relationships; the the borehole wall and the well screen to
passage of energy and materials from provide temporary or long-term support
producer through a succession of for the borehole[6].
consumers. Green plants, plant- eating
insects, and an insect-eating bat would form factor. A factor indicating the shape
form a simple food chain[23]. See also and form of mineral aggregates
food web. influencing their hydrodynamic
properties[16].
food pyramid. The normally diminishing
number of individuals and amount of fossil. Any remains or traces of animals or
organic material produced at each plants that lived in the prehistoric past,
successive level along a food chain. The whether bone, cast, track, imprint, pollen,
declining productivity at each level or any other evidence of their
results from the constant loss of energy in existence[23].
metabolism as the energy passes along the
chain[23]. See also trophic level.

78
fossil cave. A fossil cave is an underground fracturing. A formation of breaks in a rock
cavity that formed when a carbonate due to folding or faulting[16].
succession was undegoing karstification
but subsequently buried. Most fossil francoanellite. A cave mineral —
caves have been infilled by younger H6K3Al5(PO4)8"13H2O[11].
sediments. See neptunian deposits,
palaeokarst, and relict cave. free pitch. Where a rope or ladder hangs
vertically and free of the walls[25].
fossil karst. See paleokarst.
free-surface stream. In a cave, a stream
fossile karst. (French.) See buried karst. that does not completely fill its
passage[10].
fouling. The process in which undesirable
foreign matter accumulates in a bed of free water. See gravitational water.
filter media or ion exchanger, clogging
pores and coating surfaces and thus free-water elevation. See water table.
inhibiting or retarding the proper
operation of the bed[6]. freezing point. The point at which a liquid
solidifies[16].
fountain. A free-flowing well or spring[16].
See also artesian well; spring, artesian. fresco. A half-section of a stalactite on the
wall of a cave.
fracture. 1. A break or secondary
discontinuity in the rock mass, whether or fresh water. Water that contains less than
not there has been relative movement 1,000 milligrams per liter (mg/L) of
across it. Faults, thrusts, and joints are all dissolved solids; generally more than 500
fractures, but bedding planes, which are mg/L is undesirable for drinking and
primary features, are not. In a more many industrial uses[22].
strictly hydrogeological context the term
has been used to classify voids in the size freshwater lens. 1. Body of fresh ground
range 0.1 to 10mm[9]. 2. Breakage of rock water found typically beneath permeable
strata[16]. 3. The general term for any limestone islands or peninsular land
mechanical discontinuity in the rock; it is, masses in the tropics. The lens-shaped
therefore, the collective term for joints, water body is bounded above by a water
faults, cracks, etc. See also conduit; table and below by a mixing zone
fissure. between fresh and saline ground water
along the halocline. In the center of the
fracture pattern. The spacial arrangement lens freshwater extends below sea-level,
of a group of fracture surfaces. and another set of springs exists where
dissolutional conduits associated with the
fracture spring. See spring, fracture. lower limit of the lens intersect the rock
surface below sea-level[9]. 2. A lenticular

79
form of a freshwater body under oceanic funicular regime. The distribution of
coasts[16]. continuous liquid phase along pore walls
with gaseous phase at the pore center[16].
friction head. Head loss due to energy
dissipation by friction[16].

friend. A mechanical camming device used


for anchors[25].

Froude number. A dimensionless


numerical quantity used as an index to
characterize the type of flow in a
hydraulic structure that has the force of
gravity (as the only force producing
motion) in conjunction with the resisting
force of inertia. It is the ratio of inertia
forces to gravity forces, and is equal to
the square of a characteristic velocity
(mean, surface, or maximum velocity) of
the system divided by the product of a
characteristic linear dimension (e.g.
diameter or depth) and the gravity
constant, acceleration due to gravity, all
of which are expressed in consistent units
in order that the combinations will be
dimensionless. The number is used in
open-channel flow studies or where the
free surface plays an essential role in
influencing motion[1] such as in karst
conduits that are not necessarily flowing
at pipe-full conditions. See also Chézy
equation; Manning equation; Reynolds
number.

fullflow spring. See spring, fullflow.

fungling; fungling karst. (Chinese.)


Isolated limestone hill in alluvial plain,
probably similar to mogote[10]. See also
fencong; fenglin; mogote; tower karst.

80
G geohydrologic system. The geohydrologic
units within a geologic setting, including
gage well. A stilling well in which stage any recharge, discharge, interconnections
measurements are performed[16]. between units, and any natural on
man-induced processes or events that
gage station. The point at which stage could affect ground-water flow within or
measurements are performed[16]. among those units[22]. See also ground-
water system.
gaining stream. A stream or reach of a
stream whose flow is being increased by geohydrologic unit. An aquifer, a
inflow of ground water[22]. confining unit or a combination of
aquifers and confining units comprising a
galena. A cave mineral — PbS[11]. framework for a reasonably distinct
geohydrologic system[22].
gallery. A rather large, nearly horizontal
passage in a cave[10]. geohydrology. The branch of hydrology
relating to the quantitative treatment of
galvanometer. A sensitive current meter[16]. ground-water occurrence and flow[16].

gardening. Clearing stones or other loose geological column. A vertical cross section
material from a route, usually a pitch, through a sequence of formations[16].
which might otherwise be dangerous to a
caver continuing[25]. geological map. A map on which is
recorded geologic information, such as
gas-expansion method. The measurement the distribution, nature, and age
of porosity based on the Boyle-Mariotte’s relationships of rock units (surficial
gas laws[16]. deposits may or may not be mapped
separately), and the occurrence of
geo. See blowhole. structural features (folds, faults, joints),
mineral deposits, and fossil localities. It
geode. Hollow globular bodies varying in may indicate geologic structure by means
size from a few centimeters to several of formational outcrop patterns, by
decimeters, coated on the interior with conventional symbols giving the direction
crystals[10]. and amount of dip at certain points, or by
structure-contour lines[1].
geochemistry. The science of the
qualitative and quantitative identification geological organ. A cylindrical or funnel-
of the elements and their distribution in shaped cavity in relatively soluble
the earth[16]. bedrock which typically has a vertical
orientation and is partly or wholly filled
geodesy. The science of measuring the with material similar to the overlying
geometrical properties of the earth[16]. sediment cover. They are produced by
solution of bedrock and concomitant

81
subsidence of its sedimentary cover. and failure, mining disasters, pollution
Most have a diameter of 25 cm to 7 m and waste disposal, and seawater
and a depth of 2 to 30 m, but some may intrusion[1].
be much larger. A depth/diameter ratio of
5 to 20 may be considered representative. geologic log. A vertical cross section of the
In actuality, geological organs are a type lithologic column indicating geologic and
of subsidence doline that develops under petrographic data[16].
a cover of younger rock or sediment[17].
Synonyms: (French.) Orgue géologigue, geologic similarity. A model-prototype
poche de dissolution, puits naturel; length ratio[16].
(Belgian.) abannet, cavité de dissolution;
(German.) geologische Orgel, Orgel, geology. The study of the planet Earth—the
unterirdische Doline, Verwitterungssacke, materials of which it is made, the
naturlicher Schacht, Erdorgel, Erdpfeife, processes that act on these materials, the
Riesentoph, Bodenkarren, (British.) sand products formed, and the history of the
pipe, sand-gall, gravel-pipe, pipe, pocket planet and its life forms since its origin.
deposit, gull; (Italian.) organo geologico; Geology considers the physical forces that
(Roumanian.) orgile geologice; (Czech.) act on the Earth, the chemistry of its
geologické varhany; (Polish.) organy constituent materials, and the biology of
geologiczne; (Russian.) organ truba, its past inhabitants as revealed by fossils.
kamin; (Serbo-Croatian.) geološke Clues on the origin of the planet are
orgulje; (Slavic) geološke orglje, zapolvje sought in a study of the Moon and other
jaški; (Dutch.) geologische orgelpijp, extraterrestrial bodies. The knowledge
aardpijp. thus obtained is placed in the service of
man—to aid in discovery of minerals and
geological section. A vertical section fuels of value in the Earth’s crust, to
through a sequence of rock masses or identify geologically stable sites for major
strata[16]. structures, and to provide foreknowledge
of some of the dangers associated with
geologic control. The influence of geologic the mobile forces of a dynamic Earth[1].
factors on hydrogeologic features[16].
geomorphic process. The process
geologic correlation. The correlation of responsible for the formation and
geologic formations as shown in geologic alteration of the earth’s surface[16].
logs over a given area[16].
geomorphology. The science of the origin
geologic hazard. A naturally occurring or and evolution of land forms[16].
man-made geologic condition or
phenomenon that presents a risk or is a gestation. The gestation phase of
potential danger to life and property. speleogenesis follows the inception
Examples include landsliding, flooding, phase, and the two in combination are
earthquakes, ground subsidence, coastal essentially equivalent to the more
and beach erosion, faulting, dam leakage commonly used term ‘initiation’. The

82
transition from inception to gestation may are ephemeral. The most extensively
correspond to the establishment of explored glacier caves were the Paradise
gravitational laminar flow conditions, and Caves on Mount Rainier, USA, whose
gestation is complete when turbulent flow passages extended for many kilometers,
is achieved[9]. before the glacier wasted away and the
caves were destroyed[9]. 2. Cave in ice
Ghyben-Herzberg conditions. Equilibrium formed within or at the base of a
condition at the interface of immiscible glacier[10].
freshwater bodies and saltwater bodies in
coastal aquifers[16]. glaciofluvial. Pertaining to the meltwater
streams flowing from wasting glacier ice
gibbs. An ascender with its cam operated and especially to the deposits and
by the weight of the caver[25]. landforms produced by such streams[6].

glacial deposit. Sedimentary deposits due glaciokarst. 1. A karst landscape that was
to transport by glaciers[16]. glaciated during the cold periods of the
Pleistocene and displays major landforms
glacial drift. Sediment material contained, of relict glacial origin. Bare rock scars,
transported, and deposited by glaciers[16]. locally with glacial striations, and
limestone pavements are characteristic,
glacial groove. A groove cut into bedrock due to the lack of rapid soil formation on
by rock fragments at the bottom of a the limestones since glacial stripping.
moving glacier[16]. Dolines within a glaciokarst are mostly
small and immature, as are caves, except
glacial till. An unassorted mixture of where pre-glacial passages are
glacial drift[16]. Synonym: boulder clay; intercepted. Glaciokarst is almost
till. synonymous with alpine karst, and some
of the finest is developed on the high
glaciation. A covering of the land surface plateaus of the Calcareous Alps, south of
by glacier ice[16]. Salzburg, Austria[9]. 2. A glaciated
limestone region possessing both glacial
glacier. An extensive body of ice covering and karst characteristics[10]. (French.)
the land surface[16]. karst glaciaire; (German.) Gebiet mit
karst und Glazial-Formen; (Greek.)
glacier cave. 1. A cave carved out of the ice pagheto-karst; (Spanish.) glaciokarst;
inside a glacier, not to be confused with (Turkish.) buzul karst2; (Yugoslavian.)
an ice cave. Passages are formed by glaciokrs#, glaciokras, glaciokarst. See
meltwater descending from the glacier also alpine karst; nival karst.
surface via crevasses, or by melting on
the glacier base. Through caves may glade. 1. (Jamaican.) An elongate
connect sinkholes (sometimes called depression, having steep sides, in which a
moulins) to glacier snout resurgences, but generally flat floor is divided into small
due to ice movement most glacier caves basins separated by low divides. 2.

83
(Tennessee.) Limestone pavement having graben. A depression formed by a fault
extensive growth of cedar trees[10]. See also block moving downward on the two
uvala. bounding faults[16].

globularite. Small crystals of calcite tipped gradation. The leveling of a surface to a


with spheres composed of radiating common level[16].
fibers[10].
grade. 1. Inclination or slope[16]. 2. The
gloop. Synonym for blow hole. Also class of a cave survey on the basis of the
spelled gloup. precision of the instruments and the
accuracy of the methods[25].
goethite. A cave mineral — FeO(OH)[11].
graded. An engineering term pertaining to a
goly0 karst. (Russian.) See naked karst. soil or an unconsolidated sediment
consisting of particles of several or many
gooseneck. The part of a winding valley sizes or having a uniform or equable
resembling in plan the curved neck of a distribution of particles from coarse to
goose. Normally found as part of an fine[6].
entrenched meander[1].
gradient. The change in hydraulic head
gorge. A narrow passage or canyon in a over some given distance (dh/dL) with
mountain system[16]. See also canyon. ground-water flow usually occurring in
the direction of decreasing hydraulic head
gour. Flowstone deposit, normally of which requires by convention, the
calcite, built up along the edge of a pool attaching of a minus sign to any equation
due to precipitation from a thin film of utilizing a gradient for flow. The
overflow water. Once initiated, by maximum value of the directional
calcite-saturated water overflowing from derivative[16].
floor hollows, development is self-
enhancing, and the gours can grow into grain packing. The spatial arrangement of
large dams many meters high and wide. grains forming porous medium[16].
Inside the gour pool, more calcite may be
precipitated as crystals or pearls. Large grain per gallon (gpg.) A common basis for
flights of gours occur in many caves, with reporting water analyses in the water-
spectacular and well known examples treatment industry in the United States
around the Hall of Thirteen in the Gouffre and Canada. One grain per U.S. gallon
Berger, France. Large travertine, gours equals 17.12 milligrams per liter[6].
can form in the open air, as at Band-i-
Amir, Afghanistan[9]. See also rimstone grain shape. The geometrical aspect of
barrage; rimstone barrier; rimstone dam. grains[16].

granular. Of structure clearly showing


grain shape[16].

84
granule. Small rounded grain or rock clints from one another. Synonyms:
fragment[16]. (British.) gryke; (French.) lapiaz;
(German.) Kluftkarren. See also clint;
grape formation. See botryoid. bogaz; limestone pavement.

gravel. Waterworn rounded rock grains and grotto. 1. Hole in small cave or cavern
fragments[16]. which has eroded in the wall of a main
cave. 2. Widely open and shallow cave
gravimetric moisture content. The ratio of within a vaulted roof. 3. A cave or
water weight to the weight of solid chamber preceded by a narrower
particles[16]. passage[20]. 4. A small cave, natural or
artificial. 5. A room, in a cave system, of
gravitational head. The component of total moderate dimensions but richly
hydraulic head related to the position of a decorated[10]. A grotto is often intricately
given mass of water relative to an decorated, and may occur above, at, or
arbitrary datum[22]. below sea-level[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
grotte, baume, balme; (German.) Höhle,
gravitational water. Water which moves Grotte; (Greek.) speleon; (Italian.) grotta;
into, through, or out of the soil or rock (Russian.) grot; (Spanish.) gruta;
mass under the influence of gravity[22]. (Turkish.) ma™arauk; (Yugoslavian.) nis
#a.
gravity component. The component acting
in the direction of gravitation[16]. ground air. See soil air.

gravity drainage. The flow of water ground slope. The inclination of the land
towards a well under its own weight[16]. surface with the horizontal[16].

gravity spring. See spring, gravity. ground water, phreatic water. 1. The part
of the subsurface water that is in the
grid north. The direction of a north-south phreatic zone[10]. Its lower limits are the
grid line on a map. Except for the zone of rock flowage or the lowest fully
north-south grid line through the point of confining bed; its upper limits are the
origin of the grid, it will differ slightly uppermost fully confining bed or the
from true north[25]. water table[16]. 2. Used loosely and
incorrectly by some to refer to any water
grike. (British.) 1. A solutionally enlarged beneath the surface. See also phreas;
vertical or steeply inclined joint in the phreatic water; phreatic zone.
surface of a karstland, extending for up to
a few meters into the limestone[10]. 2. A ground-water artery. A tubular body of
vertical or sub-vertical cleft in a permeable water-filled material
limestone pavement developed by surrounded by confining beds[16].
solution along a joint or system of
crisscrossing joints[20]. Grikes separate

85
ground-water barrier. Rock or artificial water released from the zone of
material which has a relatively low saturation[22].
permeability and which occurs below the
land surface where it impedes the ground-water divide. 1. A ridge in the
movement of ground water and water table or other potentiometric
consequently causes a pronounced surface from which ground water moves
difference in the potentiometric surface away in both directions normal to the
on opposite sides of it[22]. ridge line[22]. 2. A dividing line between
two ground-water basins. 3. In well
ground-water basin. 1. A general term hydraulics, the streamline with no flow
used to define a ground-water flow representing the boundary of the aquifer
system that has defined boundaries and region contributing to well discharge[16].
may include permeable materials that are See also divide. Synonyms: divide;
capable of storing or furnishing a water-table divide.
significant water supply; the basin
includes both the surface area and the ground-water flow. The movement of
permeable materials beneath it[22]. 2. The water in the zone of saturation[22].
area throughout which ground water
drains towards the same point; it can be ground-water flux. The rate of
larger than the accompanying surface ground-water flow per unit area of porous
water drainage basin if permeable layers or fractured media measured
extend outside of the topographic perpendicular to the direction of flow[22].
divide[16]. See also drainage basin. See also specific discharge.

ground-water cascade. The flow of ground ground-water inventory. The complete


water over a subsurface barrier[16]. quantitative accounting for all volumes of
ground water[16].
ground-water cement. A cementing
material precipitating at the water ground-water mound. A raised area in a
table[16]. water table or other potentiometric
surface created by ground-water
ground water, confined. Ground water recharge[22].
under pressure significantly greater than
atmospheric and whose upper limit is the ground water, perched. Unconfined
bottom of a confining unit[22]. See also ground water separated from an
confined; confining unit; confined underlying body of ground water by an
aquifer. unsaturated zone. Its water table is a
perched water table. Perched ground
ground-water dam. A geological stratum water is held up by a perching bed whose
serving as a subsurface dam[16]. permeability is so low that water
percolating downward through it is not
ground-water discharge. 1. Flow of water able to bring water in the underlying
from the zone of saturation[22]. 2. The

86
unsaturated zone above atmospheric velocity is the average ground-water flux
pressure[22]. See also perched ground water. passing through the cross-sectional area
of the geologic medium through which
ground-water pumping. 1. Directed or flow occurs, perpendicular to the flow
oscillatory ground-water movement, direction, divided by the effective
along incipient fissures in the rock, that porosity along the flow path. If discrete
occurs due to very small but significant segments of the flow path have different
relative movements of the rocks hydrologic properties, the total travel time
themselves, maybe as a diurnal, tidal will be the sum of the travel times for
process. It may be one of the driving each discrete segment[22].
mechanisms of earliest, inception, phase
of speleogenesis[9]. The pumping of a ground water, unconfined. Water in an
water well to provide water for drinking, aquifer that has a water table.
irrigation, and manufacturing. but may Synonymous with phreatic ground
also be conducted for dewatering water[22].
purposes.
grout. A fluid mixture of cement and water
ground-water recharge. The process of (neat cement) of a consistency that can be
water addition to the saturated zone or the forced through a pipe and placed where
volume of water added by this process[22]. required. Various additives, such as sand,
bentonite, and hydrated lime may be
ground-water reservoir. A reservoir in the included in the mixture to meet certain
void space beneath the water table[16]. requirements. Bentonite and water are
sometimes used for grout[6].
ground-water system. A ground-water
reservoir and its contained water. Also, grout curtain. The filling of void spaces in
the collective hydrodynamical and rocks to prevent the flow of water into
geochemical processes at work in the and through the rock; most commonly
reservoir[22]. associated with dams.

ground-water table. The surface between grouting. The operation by which grout is
the zone of saturation and the zone of placed between the casing and the sides of
aeration. Also, the surface of an a well bore to a predetermined height
unconfined aquifer[6]. Synonym: water above the bottom of the well. This
table. secures the casing in place and excludes
water and other fluids from the well
ground-water travel time. 1. The bore[6].
time-required for ground water to travel
between two locations[22]. 2. The time grünkarst. See subsoil karst.
required for a unit volume of ground
water to travel between two locations. gryke. See grike.
The travel time is the length of the flow
path divided by the velocity, where

87
guano. An accumulated deposit of animal evaporite precipitated from sea water and
excrement. In caves it is most commonly is therefore soluble in water and may
associated with bat colonies, but cave contain dissolutional caves. Mineral
dwelling birds such as swifts may also gypsum is formed in some caves by
contribute. Guano is only abundant in reactions between the host limestone and
tropical regions and may be dry and sulfates (including sulphuric acid) derived
powdery, or a foul, wet, sludge — as in from oxidized sulfide minerals (see
the Niah Caves of Sarawak. It is a vital pyrite). Gypsum, also referred to as
food source for many troglobites. selenite, commonly occurs as transparent
Consisting mainly of phosphates and crystals, blades, needles or fibres in cave
nitrate it is valued as a fertilizer or an clay deposits. A more spectacular form is
ingredient of explosives and has as fibrous or curved crystals that may
commonly been mined. Over 100,000 develop into cave flowers on cave walls
tons of bat guano have been extracted and ceilings, as for example in parts of
from Carlsbad Caverns, USA[9]. See also the Flint Mammoth Cave System, USA,
cave guano. or grow into large, hanging chandeliers,
as in Lechuguilla Cave, New Mexico[9]. 2.
guano cave. A cave containing large A mineral composed of hydrous calcium
amounts of guano[13]. See also cave sulfate[10], CaSO4"2H20.
guano.
gypsum cave. Both vadose and phreatic
guanobia. An animal association feeding caves can form in gypsum, which is very
on guano. Not considered true soluble in water, but they are uncommon
cavernicoles as guano is not confined to because gypsum rock rarely survives total
caves. dissolution in the near-surface
environments associated with explorable
gulf. Steep-walled closed depression having caves. Gypsum caves certainly exist at
a flat alluviated bottom; in some gulfs a depth within buried evaporate sequences.
stream flows across the bottom[10]. In areas of wet climate gypsum caves are
generally seen only if encountered by
gull. A widened fissure formed by land man-made excavations. In contrast,
slipping along valley sides, generally gypsum caves are more common and
where massive beds such as limestone more extensive in areas that have
overlie weaker rocks[9]. See also tectonic experienced a long period of dominantly
cave; windypit. arid climate. The most spectacular
gypsum caves are in the Podolie region of
gully. A deep erosional channel[16]. the Ukraine, where joint guided maze-
cave systems are very extensive —
gushing spring. See spring, vauclusian. Optimisticeskaja has around 180km of
passsage[9].
gypsum. 1. White or colorless mineral or
rock composed of the hydrated calcium gypsum flower. See cave flower.
sulfate, CaSO4.2H2O. Gypsum rock is an

88
gypsum karst. A karst landscape developed
on, or perhaps above, gypsum or similar
evaporite rock sequences. Dissolution of
gypsum by ground water in buried,
interstratal, situations is common and the
effects of such dissolution may be
expressed at the land surface in the form
of subsidence depressions. There are
extensive areas of gypsum karst in North
America and the Ukraine but British
examples are limited to rare caves,
exposed by quarrying, and subsidence
depressions above dissolved gypsum
beds, such as those around Ripon,
Yorkshire[9].

89
a tube remaining in the roof or wall of a
H cave[10]. See also tube.

habitat. The immediate surroundings Hagen-Poiseuille equation. The equation


(living place) of a plant or animal; used to define the laminar flow of water
everything necessary to life in a particular in either fractures or tubes and is given as
location except the organism itself[23].

hade. The angle of inclination of a fault (or


joint) plane measured relative to the
vertical[9]. See also dip. for laminar flow in fractures

Halbhöhle. (German.) See rock shelter. and

Halbkugelkarst. (German.) Tropical karst


topography containing dome-shaped
residual hills surrounding depressions, a
kind of Kegelkarst. Also called for laminar flow in tubes
Kugelkarst[10].
which states that the average volumetric
half-exposed karren. These are patches of discharge of flow through either type of
soil on otherwise bare limestone that opening is directly proportional to the
attack the rock by means of biogenic type, shape, and dimensions of a
CO2[3]. particular pore and the hydraulic
gradient[5]. Note: Q=discharge, w=width
of the fissure, b=open portion of the long
half-blind valley. Blind valley in which the dimension of the fissure, r=radius of the
stream overflows in floodtime when the tube, ( and µ are the specific weight and
swallow hole can not accept all the dynamic viscosity of water respectively,
water[10]. dh/dL=gradient, and a minus sign is
attached to the equations to indicate that
half tube; half-tube. 1. An inverted flow occurs in the direction of deceasing
channel with semi-circular cross section hydraulic head.
seen in cave-passage ceilings, most
clearly where the ceiling is an uneroded halite. The mineral form of sodium chloride
bedding surface. The half tube originates (NaC1), or rock salt. Halite occurs,
as part of a phreatic tube guided by the sometimes to considerable thicknesses, in
bedding plane, and the lower half is many buried-rock successions, from
subsequently removed by vadose which it has been extracted both by
enlargement. The presence of half tubes mining and by redissolving it in water
provides important evidence of early pumped from and back to the surface.
phreatic-cave development[9]. 2. Trace of The existence of brine springs indicates
that natural water movement occurs

90
through buried halite sequences, hardness. 1. Property of water that prevents
presumably through voids that could be lathering because of the presence of
thought of as caves. Although distinctive cations, mainly calcium and magnesium,
halite (or salt) karst features are known in which form insoluble soaps[10]. 2. The
some arid areas, a range of features sum of calcium and magnesium ions
analogous to those found on karstic rocks expressed as the equivalent amount of
such as limestone are unlikely to form, calcium carbonate (CaCO3)[16]. 3. The
and less likely to be preserved, due to property to form insoluble salts of fatty
halite’s relative weakness and very high acid (soap)[16].
solubility. In Britain expressions of salt
karstification are limited to relatively hardpan. This develops when there are
subdued surface features. The “flashes” secondary calcium carbonate
of the Cheshire area, are hollows, cementations in the lower part of the soil
sometimes transformed into water-filled profile[16]. Synonym: mortar bed. See
meres, formed by subsidence of overlying also caliche; havara; nari.
rocks and superficial deposits where salt
has been dissolved from buried halite harness. An arrangement of tape for
beds of Triassic age[9]. attaching the lower body (seat harness) or
the upper (chest harness) to ascenders or
hall. In a cave, a lofty chamber which is descenders[25].
much longer than it is wide[10]. See also
gallery. havara. Name given in Cyprus to a soft
porous carbonate formation, up to several
halocline. A locally steep salinity gradient meters thick, found capping many
along the interface between fresh ground- formations and containing fragments and
water and saline ground-water, such as is minerals derived from older rocks; it is
found at the base of the freshwater lens probably a type of hardpan or caliche[20].
common beneath many limestone islands See also caliche; kafkalla.
in the tropics. Water mixing and
microbial activity are important haystack hill. (Puerto Rican.) In the
influences on dissolution along the tropics, rounded conical hill of limestone
halocline, as shown for instance in blue developed as a result of solution. Term
holes[9]. replaced by mogote[10]. Synonyms:
(French.) mogote; (German.) Mogote;
halomorphic soil. Saline and alkali soils. (Italian.) mogote, rilievo carsico residuo;
(Spanish.) mogote; (Turkish.) konik
hanging blade. A blade projecting down kireçtaÕ2 tepesi; (Yugoslavian.) hum. See
from the ceiling[10]. See also blade. also mogote.

hannayite. A cave mineral — head. The energy contained in a water


(NH4)2Mg3H4(PO4)4"8H2O[11]. mass, produced by elevation, pressure, or
velocity[6].
hardening. The process of induration[16].

91
head loss. That part of head energy which is shape is created by crystal lattice
lost because of friction as water flows[6]. distortion and crystal form changes within
the calcite, but what causes these is
head, static. The height above a standard uncertain. Impurities may plan a role, and
datum of the surface of a column of water rare groups of parallel growing helictites
(or other liquid) that can be supported by may be wind-guided[9]. 2. Irregular, twig-
the static pressure at a given point. The like, crystalline growths with varying
static head is the sum of the elevation orientations but often in crystal
head and the pressure head[22]. continuity, formed in caves by
precipitation from bicarbonate
head, total. The total head of a liquid at a solutions[20]. 3. A curved or angular
given point is the sum of three twiglike lateral projection of calcium
components: (a) the elevation head, carbonate having a tiny central canal,
which is equal to the elevation of the found in caves[10]. Also known as
point above a datum, (b) the pressure eccentric anemolite[20]; eccentric
head, which is the height of a column of stalactite. Synonyms: (French.)
static water that can be supported by the excentrique; (German.) exzentrisch
static pressure at the point, and (c) the gekrümmter, Tropfstein, Excentriques;
velocity head, which is the height to (Greek.) stalaktits akanonistos; (Italian.)
which the kinetic energy of the liquid is stalattiti anomale, eccentiche; (Spanish.)
capable of lifting the liquid[22]. estalactita excentrica; (Turkish.)
düzensiz sark2t; (Yugoslavian.) heliktit.
head water. The upper reach of a stream[16]. Related to curtain, dripstone, speleothem.

heat of condensation. The heat released in heligmite. An eccentric growing upward


transforming a substance from its vapor from a cave floor or from a shelf in a
to its liquid state[16]. cave. A curved or angular thin stalag-
mite[10].
heat of vaporization. The heat necessary to
change water from the liquid to the helmet. A miner's, climber's or other kind
gaseous state[16]. of non-metallic, protective helmet used in
caving.
heel-print karren. See Trittkarren.
hematite. A cave mineral — Fe2O3[11].
helictite. 1. Generally small variety of
stalactitic calcite growth that is twisted hemimorphite. A cave mineral —
and contorted with no apparent regard for Zn4Si2O7(OH)2"H2O[11].
gravity. Helictites form on cave walls,
ceilings, and on stalactites. The growth herbivore. An animal that eats plants, thus
develops as seepage water loses carbon making the energy stored in plants
dioxide from near its tip, having been available to carnivores[23]. See also
supplied to that point by capillary action carnivore; insectivore; omnivore.
through a fine central canal. The helictite

92
heterogeneity. A characteristic of a hod. See aisle.
medium in which material properties vary
from point to point[22]. holokarst. 1. Karst area with little or no
surface runoff or streams; it is underlain
heterogeneous. The unequal spacial by thick carbonate rocks and is
distribution of aquifer properties[16]. characterized by well developed karst
surface topography from karren to poljes,
hexahydrite. A cave mineral — extensive subsurface karst features like
MgSO4"6H2O[11]. caves, caverns, galleries, chimneys, etc[20].
2. Cvijiƒ’s term for a karst area like that
hibbenite. A cave mineral — of the Dinaric Karst of Slovenia. Such
Zn7(PO4)4(OH)2"7H2O[11]. areas have bare surfaces on thick deposits
of limestone that extend below sea level,
hibernation. A prolonged dormancy or well developed karren, dolines, uvalas,
sleeplike state in which animal body poljes, deep ponors, and extensive cave
processes such as heartbeat and breathing systems; they have little or no surface
slow down drastically and the animal drainage[10]. Synonyms: (French.)
neither eats nor drinks. Nearly all holokarst; (German.) Holokarst; (Greek.)
cold-blooded animals and a few holokarst; (Italian.) olocarsismo,
warm-blooded animals hibernate during carsismo, maturo; (Spanish.) holokarst;
the winter in cold climates. Extremely (Turkish.) tam karst; (Yugoslavian.)
large aggregations of bats, crickets, and # (kras), holokarst. Contrast
potpuni krs
spiders hibernate in some caves[23]. causse, merokarst.

histo, histoplasmosis. The disease caused homogeneity. A characteristic of a medium


by the fungus Histoplasma capsulatum, in which material properties are identical
found in bird and bat guano, especially in everywhere[22].
the southern USA and the tropics. An
occupational disease of cavers, aviary and homogeneous. The even spacial
poultry workers, guano miners, and distribution of aquifer properties[16].
maintenance workers. Infection is usually
caused by breathing the microscopic homogeneous fluid. A fluid that occurs in a
spores, which infect the lungs, or single phase[16].
sometimes the eye. Flu-like symptoms
accompanied by low-grade fever, hook gage. A gage for the precise position
breathing difficulties and pain, and measurement of liquid levels[16].
miasma may start about 14 days after
exposure and continue for weeks, months, hopeite. A cave mineral —
or rarely until death, usually from Zn3(PO4)2"4H2O[11].
complications. Treatable with various
anti-fungals, such as itroconazole. Often horizontal angle. The difference in
misdiagnosed, as the standard tests may direction of two survey lines measured
give a false negative[23]. clockwise in a horizontal plane[25].

93
horst. A block having been uplifted along humidity can be done from tables, special
its boundary faults[16]. slide rules or calculators, graphs, or
complex equations[23]. See also
Horton number. Expresses the relative hygrometer; psychrometer.
intensity of erosion process in a drainage
basin[16]. humus-water grooves. This is a special
type of meandering karren or wall karren
hot-seat rappel. A method of rappelling in in which the water originated in humus
a cave with the rope running under one covering. Water originating from a
leg, up across the opposite shoulder and humus cover has an excess of CO2 and is
controlled with a hand. The friction of therefore, very aggressive and can
the rope on the body creates a lot of heat, dissolve large amounts of limestone.
hence its name[13]. Thus humus-water grooves can be very
deep but after approximately 2–3 meters,
hoya, hoyo. (Spanish.) A very large closed the grooves flatten out and continue as
depression. Used in Puerto Rico for normal meanders or wall karren[3]. See
doline, in Cuba for polje[10]. also meander karren; wall karren.

hum. 1. Karst inselberg. Residual hill of huntite. A cave mineral —


limestone on a fairly level floor, such as CaMg3(CO3)4[11].
the isolated hills of limestone in poljes.
In some tropical areas, used loosely as hydration. The act by which a substance
synonym for mogote[10]. 2. Yugoslavian takes up water by absorption and/or
term for an isolated residual hill on the adsorption[6].
bottom of a polje[20]. Synonyms:
(French.) butte témoin; (German.) hydraulic barrier. A general term referring
(Karstinselberg), Hum; (Greek.) karstiki to modifications of a ground-water flow
martyree lophi; (Italian.) testimoni system to restrict or impede movement of
carsici; (Russian.) karstovij ostanec; contaminants[22].
(Spanish.) hum; (Turkish.) karst
adatepesi; (Yugoslavian.) hum. See also hydraulic conductivity. 1. A
karst inselberg; mogote. proportionality constant relating hydraulic
gradient to specific discharge which for
humidity, absolute. The moisture content an isotropic medium and homogeneous
by weight per unit volume of air[16]. fluid, equals the volume of water at the
existing kinematic viscosity that will
humidity, relative. The ratio, expressed as move in unit time under a unit hydraulic
a percentage, of the amount of water gradient through a unit area measured at
vapor actually present in air of a given right angles to the direction of flow[22]. 2.
temperature, as compared with the The volume of water that will move
greatest possible amount of water vapor through a medium in a unit of time under
that could be present in air at that a unit hydraulic gradient through a unit
temperature. Calculation of relative area measured perpendicular to the

94
direction of flow[22]. 3. The ability of a hydraulic jump. 1. A standing surge of
rock unit to conduct water under specified water passing from below critical depth in
conditions[10]. It is typically expressed as open channel flow[16]; often occurs in
gpd/ft2, ft/day, or m/day. caves. 2. An abrupt depth variation in
rapidly varying channel flow[16].
hydraulic conductivity, effective. The rate
of flow of water through a porous hydraulic profile. A vertical section of the
medium that contains more than one potentiometric surface[16].
fluid, such as water and air in the
unsaturated zone, and which should be hydraulic radius. The ratio of the filled
specified in terms of both the fluid type cross-sectional area to wetted
and content and the existing pressure. perimeter[16].

hydraulic diffusivity. See diffusivity, hydrochemical facies. Distinct zones that


hydraulic. have cation and anion concentrations of
diagnostic chemical character of water
hydraulic discharge. The discharge of solutions in hydrologic systems which is
ground water through springs or wells[16]. describable within defined composition
categories[22].
hydraulic fracturing. The formation of
artificial fractures in rock systems around hydrocompaction. The process of volume
a well by high pressure fluid injections[16]. decrease and density increase that occurs
when moisture-deficient deposits compact
hydraulic gradient. 1. The change in static as they are wetted for the first time since
head per unit of distance in a given burial[21]. Synonym: shallow subsidence.
direction. If not specified, the direction
generally is understood to be that of the hydrogeologic. Those factors that deal with
maximum rate of decrease in head[22]. 2. subsurface waters and related geologic
Slope of the water table or potentiometric aspects of surface waters.
surface[22]. 3. A chance in the static
pressure of ground water expressed in hydrograph, characteristic. A hydrograph
terms of the height of water above a based on the unit step process.
datum, per unit of distance in a given
direction[22]. hydrodynamic dispersion. 1. The
spreading (at the macroscopic level) of
hydraulic head. The height above a datum the solute front during transport resulting
plane (such as sea level) of the column of from both mechanical dispersion and
water that can be supported by the molecular diffusion[22]. 2. The dynamic
hydraulic pressure at a given-point in a dispersion of fluid particles in flow
ground-water system. For a well, the through a porous medium due to velocity
hydraulic head is equal. to the distance changes in the pore channels[16].
between the water level in the well and
the datum plane[22].

95
hydrodynamic dispersion, coefficient of. hydrologic budget. The quantitative
See dispersion coefficient. accounting of all water volumes and their
changes over time for a given basin or
hydrogeochemistry. The geochemistry of province[16].
water as related to the occurrence of
subsurface water[16]. hydrologic properties. Those properties of
a rock that govern the entrance of water
hydrogeologic. Those factors that deal with and the capacity to hold transmit, and
subsurface waters and related geologic deliver water, such as porosity, effective
aspects of surface waters[6]. porosity, specific retention, permeability,
and the directions of maximum and
hydrogeologic unit. 1. Any soil or rock minimum permeabilities[22].
unit or zone which by virtue of its
hydraulic properties has a distinct hydrology. The study of atmospheric,
influence on the storage or movement of surface, and subsurface waters and their
ground water[22]. 2. Means a soil or rock connection with the water cycle[16].
unit or zone which by virtue of its
porosity or permeability, or lack thereof, hydromagnesite. A cave mineral —
has a distinct influence on the storage or Mg5(CO3)4(OH)2"4H2O[11].
movement of ground water[22].
hydrometeorology. Meteorology dealing
hydrogeology. The study of subsurface with water in the atmosphere[16].
waters in their geological context[16].
hydrometric station. A station at which
hydrograph. 1. A graph relating stage, there usually are a number of hydrometric
flow, velocity, or other characteristics of measurements being performed[16].
water with respect to time[22]. 2. A time
record of stream discharge at a given hydrometry. The science of water
cross section of the stream or of the measurements[16].
stream surface elevation at a given
point[16]. hydrophilic. Having a great affinity for
water[16].
hydrograph separation. The separation of
a hydrograph into its different hydrophobic. The repelling of water[16].
components to analyze flow
contributions[16]. hydrophyte. A plant requiring large
amounts of moisture for growth[16].
hydrography. The geographical description
of water bodies on the earth’s surface[16]. hydrosphere. That part of the earth that
contains liquid or solid water[16].
hydrologic barrier. See barrier,
hydrologic. hydrostatic pressure. The pressure due to a
column of water[25].

96
hydrostratigraphic unit. See hypogean. Pertaining to, or living in,
hydrogeologic unit. regions deeper than the endogean zone.
See also epigean.
hydroxylapatite. A cave mineral —
Ca5(PO4)3(OH)[11].

hydrozincite. A cave mineral —


Zn(CO3)2(OH)6[11].

hyetograph. A graph of rainfall intensity


against time[16].

hygrometer. 1. An instrument that reads


the humidity in the air directly; some are
based on a hair's ability to shrink or
expand with humidity, or on certain
electronic chips. Generally, a
psychrometer is more accurate at higher
humidities (above 95%)[23]. 2. Apparatus
for the direct measurement of the relative
humidity in the atmosphere[16]. See also
psychrometer.

hygroscopic nucleus. Small solid particles


around which water condensates (cloud
formation)[16].

hydroscopic water. Condensed water at a


solid surface[16].

hypogeum. The subterranean


environment[23].

hypolimnion. A deep layer in stratified


water[16].

hydroscopic coefficient. The amount of


absorbed water on the surface of soil
particles in an atmosphere of 50% relative
humidity at 25°C[16].

97
I only[16]. 3. Absorption of water by plants.
Synonym: capillary percolation.
ice. Crystallized water formed below the
freezing point (H2O)[16]. immiscible. 1. Two or more liquids that are
not readily soluble[22]. 2. The chemical
ice cave. 1. Any cave in rock that is partly property of two or more phases that, at
filled with ice. The term should not be mutual equilibrium, cannot dissolve
applied to glacier caves. The ice may completely in one another, e.g., oil and
form in massive icicles and flows, when water[22]. 3. The quality of liquids
percolation water from unfrozen rock exhibiting a clear interface where they are
seeps into a cave containing freezing air in contact; not miscible[16].
drawn in from outside. This is a seasonal
situation in many alpine caves, and if impermeable. A characteristic of some
winter freezing exceeds summer melting geologic material that limits their ability
the ice may become permanent, as in to transmit significant quantities of water
Austria’s Dachstein and Eisriesenwelt under the pressure differences ordinarily
caves. Alternately water vapor may found in the subsurface[22].
crystallize out as hoar frost, commonly
forming large hexagonal ice crystals that impervious. Not permitting the flow of
line the walls of a freezing cave, as in water[16].
Grotte Valerie, northern Canada[9]. 2. A
cave, generally in lava or limestone, in impervious lens. An impermeable, lens-
which the average temperature is below shaped body of sediment in an otherwise
0°C., and which ordinarily contains permeable aquifer[16].
perennial ice. Ice may have the form of
stalactites, stalagmites, or flowstone[10]. imported water. Water coming from
(French.) glacière; (German.) ‘Eishöhle’; outside the ground-water basin under
(Greek.) paghoménon spíleon; (Italian.) consideration[16].
ghiacciata naturale, grotta ghiacciata;
(Russian.) ledjanaja pescera; (Spanish.) impound. The collecting of water by
cueva helada, cueva de hielo; (Turkish.) damming[16].
buz ma™aras2; (Yugoslavian.) ledena
peƒina, ledenjac #a, ledena jama. See inception. The earliest stage of
glacier cave. speleogenesis. The start of the inception
phase marks the transition from ‘rock
illite. A clay mineral. with no caves’ (in the widest sense) to
‘rock with caves’, and extends through
imbibition. 1. The absorption of a fluid, whatever time interval is required for
usually water, by a granular rock or other gravitational laminar flow conditions to
porous material, under the force of be established in a given situation (see
capillary attraction, and in the presence of gestation and initiation)[9].
pressure. 2. Fluid displacement in porous
media as a result of capillary forces

98
inception horizon. A part of a rock induced infiltration. An increase in
succession that is particularly susceptible infiltration from a surface water body by
to the effects of the earliest cave forming the lowering of the original water table[16].
processes and hence is critical to the
origin of most non-tectonic caves. By induced recharge. A method of
virtue of physical, lithological or withdrawing ground water at strategic
chemical deviation from the predominant points to induce natural recharge[16].
carbonate facies within the sequence, it
passively or actively favors the localized indurated rock. A rock that has been
inception of dissolutional activity[9]. See hardened and solidified by diagenetic
also inception. processes[16].

incision. See entrenchment. infiltrability. The ease of infiltration[16].

initiation. The early parts of speleogenesis, infiltration. The downward entry of water
generally up to the point of breakthrough into the soil or rock[22].
from laminar to turbulent flow, at an
average conduit diameter of 10mm. infiltration basin. A basin in which water
Initiation includes, but is not the same as, is spread for recharge.
inception[9].
infiltration capacity. The maximum rate at
inclinometer. An instrument to measure the which a soil or rock is capable of
inclination of surfaces[16]. absorbing water or limiting infiltration[22].

incoherent material. Unconsolidated infiltration gallery. A horizontal conduit


material[16]. for the purpose of intercepting ground
water[16].
incrustation. 1. Deposition of a crust (of
calcite, etc.) upon an object by infiltration index. The average rate of
precipitation from water oversaturated infiltration throughout a given rain
with salts (calcium bicarbonate, etc.)[20]. storm[16].
2. The deposition of mineral matter by
water[16]. Synonyms: (French.) infiltration rate. 1. The rate at which a soil
incrustation; (German.) Krustenbildung; or rock under specified conditions
(Greek.) epiphlioma; (Italian.) absorbs falling rain, melting snow, or
incrostazione; (Russian.) obrazovanie surface water expressed in depth of water
natecnih kor; (Spanish.) incrustción; per unit time[22]. 2. A characteristic
(Turkish.) kabuk ba™lama, kabuklaÕma; describing the maximum rate at which
(Yugoslavian.) inkrustacija. water can enter the soil or rock, under
specified conditions, including the
induced activity. The activity or response presence of an excess of water. It has the
of a system that has been subjected to an dimensions of velocity[22].
artificial excitation[16].

99
infiltrometer. Apparatus for measuring the input point. Points where water enters an
amount of infiltration[16]. underground drainage route or aquifer.
An obvious type of input point is a
inflow cave, influent cave. Cave into surface sink or swallow hole, where
which a stream flows or formerly allogenic drainage has direct access to a
entered[10]. conduit system within a carbonate
aquifer. Less obvious are points where
influent stream. See losing stream. drainage enters a potential carbonate
conduit-system from adjacent non-
infrared light. Light not visible to the carbonate strata (such as a porous
human eye, with wavelengths longer than sandstone aquifer) or where water utilizes
those of visible red light and shorter than a fracture system to pass through
those of radio waves[23]. otherwise relatively impermeable beds
and into the carbonate aquifer[9].
initial abstraction. The maximum amount
of rainfall absorbed without producing insectivore. An animal that feeds on
runoff[16]. insects. Almost all species of North
American bats are insectivores[23]. See
inject, to. 1. The introduction of also carnivore; herbivore; omnivore.
pressurized fluids into a porous
subsurface formation[16]. 2. The in-situ density. The density of water
introduction of tracer materials (e.g. measured at its actual depth[22]. See also
fluorescent dyes) into the subsurface. potential density.

injection head. A swivel head connector insulated stream. A stream neither


through which drilling fluid is injected receiving nor abstracting water from a
into the drill pipe[16]. ground-water body because of an
impermeable bed[16].
injection well. Well used for emplacing
fluids into the subsurface[22]. insurgence. A term proposed to describe a
point of inflow for surface water into
injection zone. A geological ‘formation,’ subsurface conduits. It has not gained
group of formations, or part of a wide usage and is not recommended for
formation receiving fluids through a well. use. Diffuse insurgence may be used to
describe the slow percolation of water
injectivity. The capacity of a well or through overburden and tight pores in the
formation to accommodate pumped in rock. Confluent insurgence may be
liquid[16]. applied to water entering the rock via
identifiable streams sinking into the
inlet cave. A cave developed beneath a subsurface while a confluent insurgence
swallow hole where a surface watercourse complex would apply to a cluster of
first passes underground in karst insurgences. Abandoned insurgences is
limestone[19]. the term applied to inflow points no

100
longer used by infiltrating water. An interflow. Subsurface runoff[16].
overflow insurgence is the term used to
describe insurgences utilized only during intergranular stress. The stress between
periods of high flow[12]. grains in a solid matrix[16].

intake area, recharge area. The surface intergranular voids. Generally primary or
area in which water is absorbed into an secondarily enhanced voids within rocks,
aquifer eventually to reach the zone of with average dimensions of 0.00l to
saturation[10]. 0.lmm. Such voids, or pores, may
provide interconnected porosity in many
interaquifer flow. The flow that occurs karst rocks and allow early water
between aquifers through fracture movement under laminar flow
openings or through the wellbore[16]. conditions[9].

interbedded. Pertaining to beds or intermittent spring. See spring,


sedimentary material intercalated in a intermittent.
parallel fashion into a main stratum[16].
intermittent stream, intermittent river. 1.
interbedding. A bed between layers of A stream or river which flows only in
different material[16]. direct response to precipitation or to
intermittent discharge of a spring; not
interception. The abstraction of direct confined to karst areas, but not
rainfall on vegetation cover[16]. uncommon in them[20]. 2. A stream or
river that flows at irregular intervals[16].
interception loss. That part of rainfall Synonyms: (French.) cours d’eau
retained by the aerial portion of intermittent; (German.) intermittierender
vegetative cover[16]. Fluß, episodischer periodischer Fluß;
(Greek.) dialípon potamós; (Italian.)
interdigitation. The lateral interlocking of torrente intermittente; (Spanish.)
sedimentary series[16]. corriente intermitente; (Turkish.) kesintili
akarsu; (Yugoslavian.) sus#ica, suvaja.
interface. 1. The contact zone between two Contrast with interrupted river.
materials of different chemical or
physical composition[22]. 2. The contact intermontane basin. A basin lying between
plane of two immiscible liquids[16]. two mountain ranges[16].

interference. The condition occurring when internal drainage. Drainage in a closed


the area of influence of a water well basin and not reaching the sea[16]. It is
comes into contact with or overlaps that common in maturely karsted terranes
of a neighboring well, as when two wells where surface water bodies are relatively
are pumping from the same aquifer or are nonexistent.
located near each other[6].

101
interstice. 1. An opening in a rock or soil interstratal karst. Karst topography that is
that is not occupied by solid matter[22]. 2. covered by and developed beneath pre-
An opening or space which may be karst rock or sediment and may or may
occupied by air, water, or other gaseous not be part of the contemporary
or liquid material[22]. Synonymous with landscape. It is younger than its cover
void, pore. See also pore; pore space; and is formed by the solution of soluble
porosity; porosity, effective; porosity, rock in the subsurface, most commonly
primary; porosity, secondary. beneath relatively insoluble rock such as
sandstone or chert. The term refers to
interstitial ice. Ice occurring below the areal solution rather than to cave
surface in soil pores[16]. development but is also applicable to
rejuvenated mantled karst and rejuvenated
interstitial medium. Spaces between grains buried karst. Subsoil karst is transitional
of sand or fine gravel filled with water to interstratal karst[17]. Synonyms:
which contains phreatobia[25]. (French.) karst sous-jacent; (German.)
unterirdisches Karstphänomen; (Greek.)
interstitial water. Water held in small kalyménon karst; (Italian.) carso coperto;
wedge like interstices at grain contact[16]. (Spanish.) karst interstradal; (Turkish.)
tabakalar aras2 karst. See also buried
interstratal karst; interstratal karst; denuded karst; covered karst.
karstification. 1. Features formed by the
dissolutional removal of all or part of a inter-permafrost karst. See permafrost
buried rock unit. Interstratal-karst karst; sub-permafrost karst.
features are common within highly
soluble evaporite rocks such as gypsum interrupted river, interrupted stream. 1.
and halite, and may be equally common, A river which flows for part of its course
but less readily recognized, within the on the surface, and part underground in
preserved remnants of carbonate caves[20]. 2. A stream interrupted over
successions. Interstratal karst should not space[16]. 3. A discontinuous stream[16].
be confused with buried karst. The finest Synonyms: (French.) rivière interrompue;
interstratal karst in Britain is the (German.) periodischer Fluß ?, Karstfluß,
extensive cave development in the versickernder Fluß; (Greek.)
limestones beneath the Namurian thiakekoménos potamós; (Russian.)
Millstone Grit plateaux of South Wales, peresihauchaj reka, syhaja reka;
where the large collapse dolines in the (Spanish.) rio sumente; (Turkish.) yer yer
Millstone Grit are interstratal-karst akan nehir; (Yugoslavian.) sus#ica,
landforms[9]. 2. The process of suvaja, periodiƒka rijeka (reka). See
karstification of highly soluble rocks also lost river; intermittent stream.
(e.g., gypsum, anhydrate, and salt) that
are overlain by less soluble rocks (e.g., intrinsic permeability. See permeability,
shales), but are still selectively dissolved intrinsic.
by circulating ground water[10].

102
inundation. The covering of an area by migrates to an aquifer or surface water
flood waters[16]. body[22].

invaded zone. In geophysical well logging, irrotation flow. Potential flow or flow with
the zone in which an appreciable amount no rotational component[16].
of mud filtrate has penetrated[16].
isobath. A line of equal depth[16].
invasion. In geophysical well logging, the
penetration of a fluid into the porous isochrone. A line connecting water levels
medium[16]. in observation wells for a given instant in
time[16].
invasion depth. The depth to which drilling
mud filtrate penetrates into a isohyet. A line of equal rainfall[16].
formation[16].
isopiestic line. A contour on a piezometric
invertebrate. An animal, such as a surface connecting points of equal static
planarian, snail, or crayfish, without a level[16].
backbone[23]. See also vertebrate.
isopleth. A line of equal distance from the
inverted siphon. See water trap. point of outflow of a basin[16].

ion. An element or compound that has isopotal line. A line of equal infiltration
gained or lost an electron so that it is no capacity[16].
longer neutral electrically and now carries
a charge[6]. isotherm. A line of equal temperatures[16].

ion mobility. The ease with which ions isotope tracer. Tracer which is an isotope
move in an electrolytical solution[16]. of an element present in the water; it may
be artificial (added to water) or natural
irreducible saturation. The lowest water (present in the water)[20]. Synonyms:
saturation obtainable by mechanical (French.) traceur isotopique; (German.)
reduction methods[16]. Markierung durch radioaktive Isotopen;
(Greek.) isotopicos ichnithetis; (Italian.)
irrigation. The artificial watering of fields tracciante isotopico; (Russian.) izotopnij
for crop production[16]. indikator; (Spanish.) trazador isotópico;
(Turkish.) izotop izleyicisi;
irrigation requirement. The water needed (Yugoslavian.) izotopni traser.
for crop production exclusive of
precipitation[16]. isotropic. Equal properties in all directions.

irrigation return flow. The part of isotropic mass. A mass having the same
artificially applied water that is not property or properties in all directions[22].
consumed by evapotranspiration and that

103
isotropy. The condition in which the
property or properties of interest are the
same in all directions[22].

izdan. A general Yugoslavian term for a


ground-water reservoir from which
ground water may readily be extracted; it
is not specifically a karst term[20].

104
J joint pattern. A group of joints which form
a characteristic geometrical relationship,
jama. 1. (Slavic.) Vertical or steeply in- and which can vary considerably from
clined shaft in limestone, known as abîme one location to another within the same
or aven in France and as pothole in geologic formation.
England. 2. Any cave[10]. Synonyms:
(French.) jama; (German.) Abgrund, joint-plane cave. A cavity high in relation
Schacht, Schlund; (Greek.) karstikon to width developed along steeply dipping
phrear; (Italian.) abisso, foiba, pozzo, joint planes[10].
voragine; (Russian.) karstovij kolodec,
karstovaja sahta; (Spanish.) sima, pozo, jumar. An ascender with a simple
avenc; (Turkish.) obruk; (Yugoslavian.) finger-operated safety catch, a handle and
bezdan, japaga, zvekara, pekel, brezno, several attachment points[25].
prepad, propast. Related to cenote,
doline, obruk, pit, shaft, shake hole. juvenile water. Water that has not been
part of the hydrosphere before and is
jarosite. A cave mineral — derived from the earth’s interior[16].
KFe3(SO4)2(OH)6[11].

joint. 1. A break of geological origin in the


continuity of a body of rock occurring
either singly, or more frequently in a set
or system, but not attended by a visible
movement parallel to the surface of the
discontinuity. 2. A junction or
connection of mechanical elements such
as drill pipe[16]. See also fracture.

joint diagram. A diagram constructed by


accurately plotting the strike and dip of
joints to illustrate the geometrical
relationship of the joints within a
specified area of geologic investigation.

joint or fault set. A group of more or less


parallel joints or faults.

joint or fault system. A system consisting


of two or more joint or fault sets or any
group of joints or faults with a
characteristic pattern (e.g., radiating,
concentric, etc.).

105
K limestone surfaces; they vary in depth
from a few millimeters to more than a
kafkalla. A term used in Cyprus for the meter and are separated by ridges. In
hardened upper portion of crust of modern usage, the terms are general,
havara[20]. See also caliche; havara. describing the total complex of superficial
solution forms found on compact pure
kame. A stratified glacial sand and gravel limestone. Classified into several kinds,
deposit forming a small, conical hill[16]. the most common of which are:
Rillenkarren — shallow channels sepa-
Kamenica, Kamenitza. (German, possibly rated by sharp ridges 2-3 centimeters
of Slavic origin; plural, Kamenice.) A apart; Rinnenkarren — flat-bottomed
small depression (a few meters in grooves several centimeters apart;
diameter and several centimeters deep) in Kluftkarren — joints enlarged by solu-
a level calcareous surface, enlarged by the tion; Spitzkarren — large deep grooves
solution effect of water collecting extending down from steep spires or
between slight undulations. It is pinnacles; meandering karren
developed vertically at first by stagnant (Mäanderkarren) — small winding or
water; the steep sides thus evolved then meandering channels; round karren
induce the flow of water which flutes the (Rundkarren) — karren having rounded
slope and so eventually widens the basin. channels and intervening rounded ridges,
Sediments and low orders of plant life probably reexhumed after formation
frequently collect on the even floor, the under soil or peat; Flachkarren — equiv-
latter aiding further solution by alent to the English clint; Bodenkarren —
reactivating the pH of the water[19]. karren formed beneath the soil[10].
Synonyms: (French.) kamenice; Synonyms: (French.) lapiés; (German.)
(German.) Opferkeßel; (Greek.) lakouva, Karren, Schratten; (Greek.)
ythrolakkos; (Russian.) bljudoe; thaktyloglyphae, amaxotrochiae; (Italian.)
(Spanish.) cuenco, tinajita; (Turkish.) campo solcato; (Russian.) karri;
erime tavas2; (Yugoslavian.) kamenica, (Spanish.) lapiaz; (Turkish.) erime olu™u;
skalne kotlice, scalba, skalnica. See also (Yugoslavian.) škrape, škripovi, griñine,
solution pan; water pot. ñlebici, s#kraplje.

kankar; kunkar. (Australian.) See caliche. Karren, free. (German.) Bare karst; water
flows unhindered over the limestone
Kannelierungen. (German.) See surface[3].
Rillenkarren.
Karrenfeld; Karren field. (German.) An
kaolin. A common clay mineral . [16] area of limestone dominated by karren[10].
These appear as bare karst and consist of
karabiner. See carabiner. the sum of exposed and half-exposed
karren, occasionally also of covered
Karren. (German.) Channels or furrows, karren which have become exposed.
caused by solution on massive bare They range in size from a few hectares to

106
a few hundred square kilometers[3]. karst aquifer. See aquifer, karst.
Synonym: (Turkish.) erime olu™u alan2.
See also clint; grike. karst barré. (French.) 1. A karst terrane of
limited area completely surrounded by
karst. (Internationally used term, originally rocks of low permeability[10]. 2. Term for
the German form of the Slavic word kras karst areas whose lower part is enclosed
or krš, meaning a bleak waterless place; it and bordered by more or less impervious
is the German name for a district east of rocks which impedes ground-water flow
Trieste having such terrane.) A terrane, out of the karst area. Synonyms:
generally underlain by limestone or (French.) karst barré; (German.)
dolomite, in which the topography is Riegelkarst; (Greek.) phragmenon karst;
chiefly formed by the dissolving of rock, (Spanish.) karst cerrado; (Turkish.) setli
and which may be characterized by karst; (Yugoslavian.) zagaceni krs# (kras),
sinkholes, sinking streams, closed depres- zajezeni kras.
sions, subterranean drainage, and
caves[10]. The term karst unites specific karst base level. Level below which
morphological and hydrological features karstification does not or has not taken
in soluble (mostly carbonate) rocks. place[10]. Synonyms: base level of
Morphological features include karren, karstification[20]; (French.) niveau de base
dolinas (sinkholes), jamas, ponors, karstique; (German.) Korrosionsniveau;
uvalas, poljes, caves, caverns, etc. (Greek.) basis apokarstoseos, or better
Hydrological features include basins of ‘patoma apokarstoseos’; (Italian.) livello
closed drainage, lost rivers, estavelles, di base della attività carsica; (Spanish.)
vauclusian springs, submarine springs, nivel de base kárstico; (Turkish.)
more or less individualized underground karstlaÕma tabani; (Russian.) bazis karsta;
streams and incongruity of surface and (Yugoslavian.) baza krškog procesa, baza
underground divides. Karst is understood karstifikacije, baza zakrasevanja.
to be the result of natural processes in and
on the earth’s crust cause by solution and karst breccia. See collapse breccia;
leaching of limestones, dolomites, solution breccia.
gypsum, halite, and other soluble rocks[20].
Synonyms: (French.) karst; (German.) karst bridge. A natural bridge or arch in
Karst; (Greek.) karst; (Italian.) carso, limestone[10].
carsismo; (Russian.) karst; (Spanish.)
karst; (Turkish.) karst; (Yugoslavian.) karst couvert. (French.) See covered karst.
krš, kras. See also buried karst; cone
karst; covered karst; exhumed karst; karst fens. 1. Marshes developed in
Halbkugelkarst; Holokarst; Kegelkarst; sinkhole terrain; swampy solution fens[10].
Merokarst; microkarst; naked karst; 2. Marsh or swamp formed by plants
paleokarst; pseudokarst; relict karst; overgrowing a karst lake or seepage.
Spitzkegelkarst; subjacent karst; Synonyms: (French.) marais karstique;
syngenetic karst; thermokarst; tower (German.) Karstsumpf ?; (Greek.)
karst. karstikon elos; (Italian.) palude o

107
acquitrinio carsico; (Russian.) karstovoje karstiki limni; (Italian.) lago carsico;
boloto; (Spanish.) laguna karstica; (Russian.) karstovoe ozero; (Spanish.)
(Turkish.) karst batakl2™2; (Yugoslavian.) lago kãrstico; (Turkish.) karstik gölü;
lokva, kal. (Yugoslavian.) krško (krasko) jezero.

karst fenster. See karst window. karst margin plain. A plain generally on
limestone between higher country of
karst fossile. (French.) See buried karst. limestone on one side and of less pervious
rocks on the other, but having a cover of
karst hydrology. 1. The branch of impervious detritus, which allows surface
hydrology dealing with hydrological drainage[10].
phenomena on and in regions and areas
composed totally or in part of rocks karst noyé. (French.) See drowned karst.
which are soluble in water, such as
limestones, dolomites, gypsum, and karst nu. (French.) See exposed karst.
halite[20]. 2. The drainage phenomena of
karstified limestones, dolomites, and karst plain. 1. Large flat surface in karst
other slowly soluble rocks[10]. Synonyms: formed by erosion and corrosion[20]. 2. A
(French.) hydrologie karstique; plain on which closed depressions,
(German.) Hydrologie des Karsts; subterranean drainage, and other karst
(Greek.) karstike hydrologia; (Italian.) features may be developed. Also called
idrologia carsica; (Russian.) gidrologija karst plateau[10]. Synonyms: (French.)
karsta; (Spanish.) hidrología kárstica; plateau karstique; (German.) Karstebene,
(Turkish.) karst hidrolojisi; Karstrandebene, Korrosionsfläche;
(Yugoslavian.). (Greek.) karstikon pedhion; (Italian.)
piano carsico; (Russian.) karstovaja
karst inselberg. A residual hill of soluble ravnina; (Spanish.) llanura kárstica;
rock in a polje[20]. Synonyms: (French.) (Turkish.) karst ovas2; (Yugoslavian.)
inselberg karstique; (German.) krs#ka zaravan, površ, kras#ki ravnik. See
Karstinselberg (Hum, Mogote); (Greek.) also marginal polje.
karstiki martyres lophi; (Italian.) rilievo
carsico residuo; (Russian.) karstovij karst polje. See polje.
ostanec; (Spanish.) relieve kástico
residual; (Turkish.) karst tepesi; karst pond. Closed depression in a karst
(Yugoslavian.) hum. area containing standing water[10].

karst lake. 1. Lakes on karst surface, karst river. 1. A river (or stream) flowing
frequently connected with ground water; in a karstic area, either on the surface of
lakes in subterranean hollows (caves and the ground or through an underground
caverns)[20]. 2. A large area of standing cave system[20]. 2. A river that originates
water in extensive closed depression in from a karst spring[10]. Synonyms:
limestone[10]. Synonyms: (French.) lac de (French.) rivière karstique; (German.)
karst; (German.) Karstsee; (Greek.) Karstfluß; (Greek.) karstikós potamós;

108
(Italian.) corso d’acqua carsico; karst valley. 1. Valleys in karst are
(Russian.) karstovaja reka; (Spanish.) río normally distinctive due to the lack of
kárstico; (Turkish.) karst nehiri; integrated surface drainage. Most are
(Yugoslavian.) krs#ka rijeka, kraska reka. either blind (due to being closed where
the drainage sinks underground), headless
karst seep. Place where karst ground water or pocket (where a river emerges from a
oozes out at the surface of the ground; spring) or dry (where surface flow has
sometimes overgrown and then forming a been lost due to underground capture).
karst fen[20]. Synonyms: (French.) The exception is the allogenic valley,
suitement karstique; (German.) where a river completely traverses a karst,
Karstgrundwaßer-Austritt; (Greek.) normally because underground conduits
karstiki thiaroi; (Russian.) visacivanie at or below valley floor level are
karstovih vod; (Spanish.) zona de immature. Fine examples of allogenic
absorción; (Turkish.) karst s2z2nt2s2; karst valleys are Dove Dale in the Peak
(Yugoslavian.) mo…ilo. District and France’s Tarn Gorge[9]. 2.
Elongated solution valley in limestone[20].
karst shaft. A vertical or steeply-sided 3. Valley produced by collapse of a
natural opening a few tens to a few cavern roof[10]. Synonyms: (French.)
hundred meters deep, formed by solution vallée karstique; (German.) Karsttal,
or erosion of vertical or sub-vertical Karstgaße; (Greek.) Karstik2 kilás;
fractures or fissures by down flowing (Italian.) valle carsica; (Russian.)
surface water. Such a pit, formed from karstovaja dolina; (Spanish.) valle
above, may connect with a chimney kárstico; (Turkish.) karst vadisi;
formed from below. Synonyms: (French.) (Yugoslavian.) krška (kraska) dolina.
karst shaft; (German.) Schacht, Schaft;
(Greek.) karstikós lákkos; (Italian.) karst vert. See subsoil karst.
voragine, inghiottitoio; (Russian.)
karstovaja sahta; (Spanish.) sima; karst water. Water discharged from karst
(Turkish.) karst bacas2; (Yugoslavian.) springs which posses characteristics,
jama. Related to dolina, jama, obruk, pit. primarily that of calcium content,
indicating solution during the passage of
karst sous-jacent. (French.) See interstratal that water across and through karst
karst. limestone. That part of karst spring water
which is derived from watercourses
karst spring. See spring, karst. sinking into the rock (and therefore
originates mainly on impermeable rock) is
karst topography. Topography dominated said to be allogenic; that which derives
by features of solutional origin[10]. from precipitation over the karst area
Geomorphically, the dominant features alone is said to be autochthonous - the
usually but not always obviously present, distinction between resurgence and
are sinkholes and caves. In tropical exsurgence waters[19].
regions, karst towers (e.g. mogotes) may
also dominate the landscape.

109
karst well. Term applied to features that besides corrosion, such phenomena as
result from the solution enlargement and mechanical erosion, jointing, and
rounding of joints (grikes) to produce faulting[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
cylindrical pits[8]. See also grike; joint. karstification; (German.) Verkarstung;
(Greek.) apokarstosis; (Italian.)
karst window. 1. Depression revealing a carsificazione; (Russian.)
part of a subterranean river flowing across karstoobrazovanie; (Spanish.)
its floor, or an unroofed part of a cave. 2. karstificación; (Turkish.) karstlaÕma;
A small natural bridge or arch which can (Yugoslavian.) okršavanje, zakrasevanje,
be seen through[10]. 3. A through opening karstifikacija.
in natural limestone walls, formed by the
joining of karst grottos as a result of karstland. A region characterized by karst
dissolution processes[20]. Synonyms: topography[10].
(French.) fenêtre karstique; (German.)
Karstfenster; (Greek.) karstikon Karstrandebene. (German.) See karst
parathyron; (Italian.) finestra carsica; margin plain.
(Russian.) karstovoe okno; (Spanish.)
dolina en ventana; (Turkish.) karst katavothron. (Greek.) A closed depression
penceresi; (Yugoslavian.) krsko (krasko) or swallow hole[10].
okno.
Kegelkarst. (German.) A general term used
karstic. Occasionally used as the adjective to describe several types of tropical
form of karst[10] and pertaining to karst humid karst characterized by numerous,
landforms or processes[19]. closely spaced cone-, hemispherical-, or
tower-shaped hills having intervening
karstification. 1. The processes of solution closed depressions and narrow
and infiltration by water, mainly chemical steep-walled karst valleys or
but also mechanical, whereby the surface passageways[10]. See also cockpit karst;
features and subterranean drainage cone karst; Halbkugelkarst; tower karst.
network of a karstland are developed to
form a karst topography, including such keld. See rising.
surface features as dolines, karren, and
mogotes and such subsurface features as kernmantel rope. A rope with a plaited
caves and shafts. An area currently or sheath around a core of parallel or twisted
formerly undergoing karstification, and strands[25].
thus characterized by karst landforms, is
said to be karstified[19]. 2. The process by krab. See carabiner.
which karst is formed. The term has been
given a wide range of meaning, from keyhole passage; keyhole. 1. This very
almost a synonym or corrosion of soluble descriptive name derives from the cross-
rocks by water to a term comprising all sectional shape of a cave passage that
processes responsible for the consists of a phreatic tube with a vadose
development of karst features including, canyon cut in its floor. It is the classic

110
example of a two-phase cave passage that cavers[13]. See also prusik knot; prusiking.
originated and began its development in
the phreas and was then modified by kras; krš. A slavic word meaning bleak,
vadose entrenchment. As this sequence is waterless place, from which the term
the result of water table lowering by karst is derived[10]. See also karst.
normal surface erosion, keyholes are
common. Some keyholes are so small Kugelkarst. See Halbkugelkarst.
that the lower slot is impassable and the
caver has to squeeze along the upper tube; kunker. See caliche.
others are very large. Spectacularly long
is the 5km of keyhole forming the
Fissures in Castleguard Cave, Canada. A
tube 6m in diameter tops an irregular
tapering canyon 15m deep that must be
traversed on sloping ledges at mid-level[9].
2. A small passage or opening in a cave;
in cross section, rounded at the top,
constricted in the middle, and rectangular
or flared out below[10]. They appear as
keyholes when viewed in cross section.
They are formed when underground
streams flowing in a tubular passage
begin downcutting to form a canyon
passage[15]. See also canyon passage;
passage; tubular passage; vertical shaft.

klinkenberg effect. The slip of gas


molecules at the pore wall giving
apparently higher permeability than
would be obtained by liquid
measurements[16].

Kluft. See aisle.

Kluftkarren. (German.) See grike.

knobstone. Speleothem, larger, more


pronounced, and more widely separated
than cave coral[10].

knots. Various methods of securing or tying


ropes or webbing material together by

111
L landfill. A general term indicating a
disposal site for refuse, dirt from
laboratory coefficient of permeability, excavations, junk[6], and hazardous
standard coefficient of permeability. wastes.
Permeability defined for controlled
temperature conditions (60NF) as gallons land-form. A topographic feature of the
per day per square foot (gpd/ft2) under a earth’s surface[16].
unit gradient[16]. See also Meinzer unit.
land pan. An evaporation pan used to
labyrinth. See network; maze cave. measure evaporation from a land surface;
pan is usually mounted at the land
lacustrine formation. A sedimentary surface[16].
formation of lacustrine origin.
land subsidence. The subsidence of a
ladder. In caving, a flexible, lightweight surface due to a loss of support[16]. Often
ladder of galvanized or stainless steel occurs as a result of over pumping
wires and aluminium alloy rungs[25]. underlying aquifers or as a result of
mining activities. In karst terranes,
lag time. A time lapse between the onset of subsidence can occur as a result of man-
a given event and the produced results[16]. made changes to the natural hydrologic
system (ground-water withdrawals or
lagoon. A body of relatively shallow water storm-water injection) or as a
near a sea shore, with or without a direct consequence of the natural dissolution
connection to the sea[16]. process. Subsidences may be sudden or
progress slowly over time.
lake. 1. As used in speleology, a body of
standing water too deep to walk across[10]. land surface. That part of the lithosphere
2. In caving, a body of standing water in a usually not covered by water[16].
cave, but used for what would be called a
pond or pool on the surface[25]. 3. A body land-use. A particular utilization of a land
of fresh inland water[16]. surface especially with respect to its
influence on the hydrologic cycle[16].
laminar flow. Flow in which the head loss
is proportional to the first power of the landslide. The sliding down of earth and
velocity[22]. Water flowing in a laminar rock on a slope[16].
manner will have streamlines that remain
distinct and the flow direction at every lapiés. (French; sometimes spelled lapies or
point remains unchanged with time. lapiaz.) Term for a region with outcrops
Synonymous with streamline flow, of small regular pillars, cones, or blocks
viscous flow. of carbonate rock[20]. Synonyms:
(French.) lapies; (German.) Karren;
lamination. The layering or very thin (Greek.) lapiaz, lenar; (Italian.) lapia,
bedding of sedimentary rocks[16]. solcato, carregiato; (Russian.) karri;

112
(Spanish.) lenar; (Turkish.) erime olu—u, explorable cave when completely cooled.
lapya; (Yugoslavian.) škrapa, griñine, Most lava caves are just very long tubes,
bridine, ñlebici. See karren, rock-rill, though branching and multiple levels may
grikes. occur as dictated by flow patterns and re-
invasions of older tubes. On Kilauea
larva (plural larvae). An active immature Volcano, Hawaii, the Kazumura Cave is
stage in an animal’s life history when its 47km long and descends 888m, but its
form usually differs from the adult form, tubes, mostly 5m in diameter, lie less than
such as the grub stage in the development 20m beneath the sloping surface of the
of a beetle or the tadpole stage in the life lava[9]. 2. A cave in a lava flow, generally
history of a frog[23]. See also formed by gas blistering the surface or by
metamorphosis; pupa. lava flowing out from beneath a solidified
crust, forming a tube or tunnel[10]. 3. An
lateral line system. A series of sensory empty tubular supply channel from which
organs, usually appearing in a line or liquid lava has drained[16]. See also lava
series of lines on the sides and heads of karst; pseudokarst.
fishes and larval amphibians. The system
enables the animal to sense vibrations in lava karst. A non-karst term. Subsurface
the water[23]. See also cupula; neuromast. openings formed in lava flows due to
outflow of liquid lava from beneath a
lateral moraine. A glacial deposit at the solidified crust or due to gas blisters.
flank of a glacier, often constituted by Tubes or tunnels are formed with such
debris from valley walls[16]. pseudokarst features as lava stalactites
and also collapse structures and basins of
laterite. A tropical ferruginous clay soil[16]. closed drainage. Lava karst does not arise
through solution of the rock by circulating
lateritic soil. A red colored soil with high water and thus is not a true karst[20].
iron oxide content[16]. Synonyms: (French.) pseudo-karst;
(German.) (Vulkanischer Karst), Lava-
lava bed. A lava flow of considerable areal Karst, Pseudokarst; (Greek.)
extent and relatively small thickness[16]. pseudokarst; (Italian.) pseudocarsismo
vulcanico; (Spanish.) volcanokarst
lava cave, lava tube. 1. A cave that formed (general), tubo volcanico (tube, tunnel),
in a partly cooled, broadly basaltic or jameo (collapse structure), malpaís
phonolitic lava, not by erosion but by (topographic feature similar to lapiés);
molten material flowing away. In most (Turkish.) lav karst2, a ldat2c2 karst. See
cases, an initial active lava conduit is also lava cave; pseudokarst.
formed when a flowing surface lava
stream has a roof grow over it by lay. The way in which strands of a rope or
accretion of chilled solidified material. cable are twisted[25].
Insulated inside its conduit the lava can
continue to flow and develop an airspace layer. A sheetlike deposit of sediment[16].
above it, which is preserved as an Bed or stratum of rock[16].

113
leachate. 1. Materials removed by the flow across a unit (horizontal) area of a
process of leaching[22]. 2. A liquid that semipervious layer into (or out of) an
has percolated through soil rock or waste aquifer under one unit of head difference
and has extracted dissolved or suspended across this layer. Synonymous with
materials[22]. coefficient of leakage[22].

leaching. 1. The removal of materials in leaky aquifer. Aquifers, whether artesian


solution from soil, rock, or waste[22]. 2. or water-table, that lose or gain water
Separation or dissolving out of soluble through adjacent less permeable layers[22].
constituents from a porous medium by
percolation of water[22]. lecontite. A cave mineral —
(NH4,K)Na(SO4)"2H2O[11].
lead. A passage noticed but as yet
unexplored[25]. leg. A part of a survey traverse between two
successive stations[25].
lead-acid cell. A rechargeable acid battery
for use with an electric cap lamp[25]. leucophor. One of a family of optical
brightening agents that have been used
leader. In caving, the person directing the with some degree of success in water-
activities of a caving party, especially tracing experiments. It has no color, but
with regard to safety[25]. is readily detected by its distinctive
fluorescence under ultra-violent light[9].
leak. An opening in an aquiclude that
permits penetration of water from other levee. An artificial bank to prevent
formations into the main aquifer[16]. overbank flow of a river[16].

leakage. 1. The flow of water from one level. 1. Within a cave, a group of passages
hydrogeologic unit to another. The developed in the same horizontal plane[10].
leakage may be natural, as through 2. The altitudinal relation of a cave floor
semi-impervious confining layer, or man- to an outside surface[10]. 3. The surface of
made, as through an uncased well[22]. 2. water in a well or standing reservoir[16].
The natural loss of water from artificial
structures as a result of hydrostatic lift. The vertical pumping distance between
pressure[22]. the water level in a well to the land
surface[16].
leakage factor. The factor describing
leakage flow into or out of a leaky light hole. (Jamaican.) 1. A hole in the roof
aquifer[16]. of a cave through which light enters;
sometimes a nonfunctioning swallow
leakance. 1. The ratio K’/b’, in which K’ hole[20]. 2. Fossil or abandoned swallow
and b’ are the vertical hydraulic con- hole[10].
ductivity and the thickness, respectively,
of the confining beds[22]. 2. The rate of

114
lime. Calcium oxide, CaO; used loosely and blocks (clints or dalles) by solution-
incorrectly in referring to limestone[10]. enlargement of vertical joints[19]. 3.
Horizontal or sloping platforms of bare
lime sink. See sinkhole. limestone whose surface usually
coincides with bedding-plane partings of
limestone. Sedimentary rock containing at the rock; often eroded into clint and
least 50% calcium carbonate by weight. grikes rock forms[20]. Synonyms:
The purer limestones consist almost (French.) plateforme calcaire; (German.)
entirely of calcite; less pure rocks may be Kalk Plattform, Limestone Pavement;
referred to as, for example, muddy (Greek.) karstikon lithostroton;
limestone. Some limestones are porous (Spanish.) lapiaz entrecruzado; (Turkish.)
with diffuse permeability; these rarely kireçtaÕ2 döÕemesi. See also clints;
become truly cavernous, though some grikes; Karrenfeld.
fissure flow may occur. Where ground-
water flow in less porous rocks is limestone sink. see sinkhole.
restricted to bedding related fissures and
secondary fractures it can, even when limnology. The study of lakes[16].
moving very slowly, corrode the almost
entirely soluble rock and lead to true cave line of seepage. See seepage line.
development[9].
lineation. The parallel orientation of
limestone pavement. 1. A level, or gently structural features that are lines rather
inclined, bare limestone surface scored than planes. Some examples are parallel
and fretted by karren. The stripping of orientation of the long dimensions of
soil or cover rocks to expose the bare minerals, long axes of pebbles, striae on
rock pavement is a glacial process, and slickensides, and cleavage-bedding plane
the development of the karren — both the intersections.
dissolutional enlargement of the joints
and also the dissolutional carving of lintel line. A line on the ground at a cave
runnels — is largely post-glacial. entrance perpendicularly beneath the
Limestone pavements are characteristic outer edge of the rock above; may or may
features of glaciokarst and occur not coincide with the dripline[25]. See also
extensively in the north of England, in the dripline.
Burren of County Clare in Ireland and on
many high alpine limestones[9]. 2. A bare liquid. An incompressible or nearly
plane surface of limestone, parallel to the incompressible fluid.
bedding, commonly divided into blocks
(clints, Flachkarren) by solutionally liquid medium. Contains the aquatic
widened joints (grikes, Kluftkarren), and cavernicoles[25].
pitted by solution pans[10]. 3. A
glaciokarstic landform, produced on a lithologic factor. The factor influencing
glacially planed limestone surface which composition, texture, and sequence of
has subsequently become dissected into rock types[16].

115
lithology. 1. The physical characteristic of a to migrate downwards through the vadose
rock, including composition, grain size, and to float on top of the water table. See
texture, degree of cementation (or also LNAPL; immiscible; NAPL.
lithification) and structure, that determine
the rock type[9]. 2. The physical loam. Calcareous clay[16].
properties and aspect of a rock[16].
localized circulation. Circulation in karst
lithosol. A rocky soil[16]. aquifers in which the water moves in
certain preferred zones and does not
lithosphere. That part of the earth’s crust occupy all or most of the openings below
containing solid rocks[16]. this level[10]. Synonyms: (French.)
circulation préfèrentielle; (German.)
lithostratigraphy. A formal naming system Örtlich begrenzte Karstwaßer-
that allows the description of rock Zirkulation; (Italian.) circolazione
successions in terms of recognizable carsica parziale; (Spanish.) circulación
defined units on a local scale. The units, localizada; (Turkish.) yersel dolaÕim;
which comprise supergroups, groups, (Yugoslavian.) lokalizirana (lokalna)
formations, members and beds in cirkulacija. Compare diffuse circulation.
decreasing order of size, are described on
the basis of observable characteristics[9]. lodgement till. Glacial till deposited from
slowly melting ice at the base of a
littoral zone. The coastal strip where rocks glacier[16].
that are above sea-level are in contact
with rocks that are generally below sea- loess. Fine-grained and poorly consolidated
level. Where suitable aquifer conditions windblown sediment, mainly of silt.
occur across the littoral zone, notably Great thicknesses of loess are found in
around relatively young carbonate islands, areas marginal to hot and cold deserts,
fresh ground-water interfaces with saline where the prevailing wind deposits fine
ground-water at the halocline and dust particles blown from the desert
dissolutional processes are enhanced by basins or out of glaciofluvial sediments.
mixing water and, possibly, by microbial Loess is a common allogenic component
effects[9]. of soils on limestones. Large numbers of
artificial caves have been excavated in the
live cave. Cave in which there is river hillsides of soft loess in central China[9].
action or active deposition of
speleothems. Compare active cave[10]. longitudinal fault. A fault having the same
direction of strike as the surrounding
LNAPL. Abbreviation for light nonaqueous strata[16].
phase liquid. Liquids falling into this
category have specific gravities that are longitudinal section; long section. A
less than water (the specific gravity for section along the length of a cave passage
water is usually taken to be one), are or chamber or combination of these, or
relatively immiscible with water, and tend along a survey traverse in a cave[25].

116
loosest packing. The three-dimensional low flow. The lowest sustaining flow during
arrangement of particles with the highest base runoff conditions of a river[16].
possible void volume per unit cell[16].
Lycopodium spores. 1. The spores of a club
losing stream. A stream or reach of a moss, with individual structures about
stream in which water flows from the 0.03mm in diameter. Easily transported
stream bed into the ground[22]. In karst by and almost indestructible in cave
terranes, losing streams may slowly sink water, the spores can be dyed a variety of
into fractures or completely disappear colors, and offer a valuable water-tracing
down a ponor. Synonym: influent stream. technique. Preparation and collection of
See also ponor; stream sink. the spores is very tedious, and the method
lacks the convenience of using simple
lost circulation. The result of drilling fluid dyes[9]. 2. Spores of Lycopodium
escaping from a borehole into the clavatum, which can be used in natural or
formation by way of crevices within the dyed color as a label in studying
formation[6]. It is a common occurrence ground-water movement in karst areas[10].
in most karst aquifers due to the existence
of large subsurface voids that are lysimeter. A device for measuring
sometimes intersected during a drilling percolation and leaching losses from a
program. column of soil under controlled
conditions[22].
lost river. 1. A surface river or stream
flowing onto or over karst that then
disappears completely underground
through a swallow hole (ponor) and
which may or may not rise again and flow
as a resurgent surface river or stream[20].
2. In a karst region, a surface stream that
enters an underground course[10].
Synonyms: (French.) perte de rivière;
(German.) Flußversickerung,
Flußchwinde; (Greek.) chanomenos
potamos; (Russian.) iscezajuscaja reka;
(Spanish.) rio sumente; (Turkish.) kay2p
nehir; (Yugoslavian.) ponornica,
ponikalnica. See also ponornica; sinking
stream. Compare intermittent river.

lower confining bed. An impermeable bed


underlying an aquifer[16].

lower course. The part of a water course


near a discharge point[16].

117
M young, which are nursed on milk from the
mother's breast[23].
Ma. Internationally accepted abbreviation
for million years, commonly applied to manatial. (Spanish.) Spring. See also
measurements of geological time. This spring.
abbreviation is currently used in
preference to My[9]. Manning equation. An equation used to
compute the velocity of uniform flow in
macrokarst. Karst area with large open channel: V=1.486/n R2/3 S1/2, where
morphological features. The term is not V is the mean velocity of flow (in cfs
easily defined because it lacks limits[20]. units), R is the hydraulic radius in feet, S
Synonym; (Italian.) merocarsismo. is the slope of the channel or sine of the
Compare microkarst. slope angle, and n is the Manning
roughness coefficient[1]. See also Chézy
macropore. A pore with dimensions such equation; Froude number; Reynolds
that capillary forces become less number.
important during flow[16].
manometer. A pressure measuring device
magnesian limestone. Common but loose for determining the hydraulic head
synonym for dolomitic limestone or developed by a flowing fluid[16].
dolomite rock. The magnesian limestone
of northern England is a rock sequence of mantled karst. Karst topography that is
Permian age that includes a locally wholly or partly covered by a relatively
variable number of beds of dolomitic thin veneer of post-karst rock or sediment
limestone[9]. and is part of the contemporary
landscape[17]. See also buried karst;
magnesite. A cave mineral — MgCO3[11]. covered karst.

magnetic north. The direction to the north marble. 1. Metamorphosed and


magnetic pole at a given place and time. recrystallized carbonate rock that is
This differs from the direction towards generally capable of supporting cave
which the north end of a compass points development. For example much of the
by a small individual compass error and Antro del Corchia in Italy and many caves
by the effect of any local magnetic in the South Nordland area of Norway
attraction[25]. have formed in marble[9]. 2. Limestone
recrystallized and hardened by heat and
malachite. A cave mineral — pressure. 3. Commercially, any limestone
Cu2(CO3)(OH)2[11]. that will take a high polish[10].

mammals. The class of animals that marine relict. An animal whose presently
includes bats, mice, man, and many extinct ancestors lived in salt water but
others. They typically have a body became adapted to life in fresh water
covering of hair and give birth to living

118
when an area formerly covered by the sea massive structure. A homogenous
became dry land[23]. structure without any oriented features[16].

marine water. Ocean water having invaded master cave. Best defined as a low level
coastal aquifers[16]. trunk streamway cave with many
tributaries. The old concept of the master
marginal polje. 1. Flat plain surrounded by cave being formed at the water table
higher limestone country on all except should be disregarded. The Leck Fell
one side which consists of impermeable Master Cave, in the Yorkshire Dales, is
ridges or hills. Such a feature is normally 2km long, partly a vadose canyon, partly a
found on the edge of a karst area or drained phreatic tube and partly a
region[20]. 2. Flat limestone plain which is submerged tube. Part of it therefore lies
surrounded by higher country but is below the water table while elsewhere its
bordered on one side by impervious presence controls the water table. The
rock[10]. Synonyms: (French.) polje French equivalent, ‘collecteur’, is more
marginal; (German.) Randpolje, descriptive of the master cave’s true role.
Semipolje; (Greek.) perithoriakón ‘polje’; The depth to a currently active master
(Italian.) polje marginale; (Spanish.) cave is dictated by interactions between
polje marginal; (Turkish.) kenar gölova; local topography, stratigraphical factors
(Yugoslavian.) rubno polje, robno polje. and geological structure. In the low hill
See Randpolje. Compare blind valley. karst of England and Kentucky, active
master caves lie at depths of around
marker bed. A bed with characteristic 100m, but in Monte Canin, Italy, and the
features that can be followed over large Hautla Plateau, Mexico, they lie at depths
areas for identification purposes[16]. of 1000m. The collecteur of the Gouffre
Berger, France, is met just 250m down
marl. Unconsolidated sedimentary rock but can be followed to a depth of over
consisting largely of calcium carbonate 1000m, down the dipping limestone beds,
and clay; usage varies from calcareous thus emphasizing the local dominance of
clay to earthy limestone, and in some stratigraphical over topographical
parts of the United States, the term has factors[9].
been used for any unconsolidated
sedimentary rock containing fossil
shells[10]. match point. A common point in the
superposition of a type curve over
mass curve. A graph of cumulative values measured data in aquifer test analyses.
of a hydrological quantity against time[16].
matric potential. The energy required to
mass density. Mass per unit volume of a extract water from a porous medium to
substance[16]. overcome the capillary and adsorptive
forces[22].
mass flowmeter. A measuring device for
mass flow rates[16].

119
matrix. The solid framework of a porous mean value. The statistical average or
system[22]. measure of central tendency[16].

maximum basin relief. The elevation meander. 1. Overdeveloped and self-


difference between basin mouth and exaggerated bend is a stream course either
highest point within a basin perimeter[16]. on the surface or underground, caused by
more erosion on the outside than on the
maze cave. A cave with an essentially inside of a bend due to natural wash of
horizontal network of interconnecting and the flow. Undergound meanders
mainly contemporaneous passage loops. commonly originate within bedding plane
Three broad types of maze cave have guided elements of the phreas, where a
been described — anastomotic, network single dominant tube has gathered
and spongework — and these may be drainage from the surrounding area.
subdivided on the basis of how they Following uplift and the onset of vadose
developed by slow-moving water, conditions any stream that utilizes the
restricted to a confined, artesian aquifer, meandering tube incises rapidly and the
or by water that is ponded due to imposed meander course is entrenched
backflooding. A mechanism of into the underlying rocks. Such incision
potentially great importance, particularly or entrenchment produces characteristic
in the context of the inception of network tall, narrow, twisting vadose canyons, to
maze caves, is multiple, diffuse input such an extent that the French describe
from adjacent, permeable but non- them as ‘meandres’. Canyons may
cavernous rocks. Spectacular joint- meander more at their lower levels, due to
guided maze caves such as Knock Fell enlargement during incision[9]. 2. A loop-
Caverns and the Devis Hole Mine like bend in a river due to lateral erosion
Caverns occur in the thin Yoredale activities[16]. 3. In a cave, an arcuate
limestones of the northern Pennines, but curve in a channel formed by lateral
the most extensive mazes are in the Black shifting of a cave stream[10]. See ceiling
Hills of Dakota, USA (including Jewel meander; meander niche.
Cave) and in the Ukrainian gypsum karst
(including Optimisticeskaja)[9]. See also meander belt. A zone within which
maze cave pattern. meandering of a stream occurs[16].

maze cave pattern. A cave system which meandering karren. These are small
consists of a labyrinth of intersecting grooves cut directly into the rock surface,
passages of rather uniform character that generally a few centimeters wide and
form closed loops. See also anastomotic deep. Their size remains the same or
cave pattern; maze cave; network cave decreases downslope and usually exhibit
pattern; spongework cave pattern. small meanders with typical undercut
slopes and slip-off slopes. They
mean deviation. A linear mean of absolute frequently appear in the bottom of larger
deviations[16]. grooves such as rinnenkarren[3]. See also

120
wall karren; humus-water grooves. medium sand. Grain particle with a
Synonym: (German.) Mäanderkarren. diameter of 0.25 to o.5 mm[16].

meander niche. A conical or crescent-- Meinzer unit. A measure of hydraulic


shaped opening in the wall of a cave, conductivity as gpd/ft2 under a unit
formed by the downward and lateral hydraulic gradient[16].
erosion of a stream on the floor of a
passage[10]. melanterite. A cave mineral —
FeSO4"7H2O[11].
measuring flume. An artificial channel
used for discharge measurements. melting. The passage from the solid to the
liquid state due to temperature
measuring weir. A device used to measure increases[16].
flow rates indirectly through a weir head.
melting point. The temperature at which a
mechanical ascender. A mechanical device solid substance is transformed into its
that is the same as an ascender, but is liquid state[16].
used to clarify the use of a mechanical
device instead of a rope ascender knot[13]. meltwater. Water derived from the melting
See also ascender. of snow pack or of a glacier[16].

mechanical cover. A mechanical covering meniscus. A free surface or interface


of a free water surface to prevent formed by liquid in a capillary tube[16].
evaporation.
mercury column. A cylindrical bore in a
mechanical dispersion. The process manometer filled with mercury[16].
whereby solutes are mechanically mixed
during advective transport caused by the mercury injection method. A
velocity variations at the microscopic measurement of porosity by mercury
level. Synonymous with hydraulic injection into a sample[16].
dispersion[22].
merokarst. 1. Defined by Cvijiƒ to indicate
mechanical dispersion, coefficient. The imperfect karst topography as found on
component of mass transport flux of thin, impure, or chalky limestone where
solutes caused by velocity variations at surface drainage and dry valleys are
the microscopic level. Synonymous with present in addition to some karstic fea-
convective diffusion[22]. tures[10]. 2. Karst developed in soluble
rocks retaining considerable surface
median. A value dividing frequency of drainage. Synonyms: (French.)
varieties into two equal portions[16]. merokarst; (Turkish.) yar2 karst.
Contrast perfectly formed Holokarst.
medicinal spring. See spring, medicinal. Compare causse.

121
mesh. 1. An opening in a sieve screen[16]. 2. microclimate. "Little climate." The
Number of openings per inch[16]. environmental conditions, such as
temperature; humidity, and air movement,
mesophyte. A plant growing under in a very restricted area, such as a
intermediate moisture conditions[16]. sheltered nook in a cave wall[23].

metabolic rate. The rate at which a living microgour. Miniature rimstone dams with
thing transforms food into energy and associated tiny pools of the order of 1cm
body tissue. The higher its metabolic wide and deep on flowstone[25].
rate, the more food it must consume.
Most cave animals live at a reduced microhabitat. A miniature habitat within a
metabolic rate[23]. larger one; a restricted area where
environmental conditions differ from
metabolism. The sum of the chemical those in the surrounding area. A sheltered
activities taking place in the cells of a nook in a cave wall is an example of a
living thing; the sum of the processes by microhabitat within the cave[23].
which a living thing transforms food into
energy and living tissue[23]. microkarren. Very small dissolutional
channels, commonly 1–3mm across;
metamorphosis. A change in the form of a parallel, convergent or randomly
living thing as it matures, especially the intersecting on a limestone surface.
drastic transformation from a larva to an Though found in all climatic regions they
adult[23]. See also pupa. are most conspicuous in semi-arid and
periglacial environments, where
meteoric water. Water recently involved in dissolutional processes are minimal and
atmospheric circulation[16]. very slow. The random patterns of some
microkarren may be due to the effects of
meteorology. The science dealing with all condensation water[9].
physical phenomena occurring in the
atmosphere[16]. microkarst. 1. Karst area with small
morphological features. Term is not
mexican onyx. See onyx marble. easily applied because it lacks limits[20].
2. Karst topography in which all surficial
micrite. A microscopic texture. An features are small; an area dominated by
abbreviation of ‘microcrystalline calcite minor karst features[10]. Compare
ooze’ which refers to precipitated finely macrokarst.
crystalline carbonate sediments in grains
from 1 to 4 microns in diameter[20]. microspar. A microscopic texture. Mosaic
Synonyms: (French.) micrite; (Greek.) of tiny (4 to 10 micron diameters) clear
micrite; (Italian.) micrite; (Spanish.) calcite crystal[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
micrita; (Turkish.) mikrit; (Yugoslavian.) microsparite; (Greek.) mikrosparítis
mikrit. See biomicrite, peloid. (mikroskopikón, mosaikón kristállon);

122
(Italian.) microsparite; (Spanish.) The resultant mixture is undersaturated
microesparita; (Turkish.) mikrospar. and capable of further calcite dissolution,
because the relationship between calcite
middens. Accumulations of animal solubility and carbon dioxide partial
droppings other than guano and often pressure is non-linear[9].
found in caves; may be solidified[13]. See
also cave guano; guano cave; coprolite. miscible. 1. Two or more liquids that are
mutually soluble (i.e. they will dissolve
migration. The movement of water, in each other[22]. 2. The chemical property
contaminants, or other fluids in the of two or more phases that, when brought
geologic substratum, mostly by natural together, have the ability to mix and form
causes[16]. one phase[22].

mine drainage. Waters coming from or miscible displacement. 1. The mutual


passing through surface or subsurface mixing and movement of two fluids that
mine workings[16]. are soluble in each other[22]. 2. The
displacement of a fluid saturating a
mine water. Water accumulating in a mine. porous medium by another fluid
completely miscible with the first fluid[16].
minerals. Mineral components of a rock, Synonymous with miscible-phase
often in macrocrystalline form[16]. displacement.

mineral spring. See spring, mineral. mixing length. The length over which
mixing occurs, especially of momentum
mining of ground water. The permanent in turbulent flow[16].
depletion of ground-water reserves[16].
mixture corrosion. See
minor karst features. See karren; rill; Mischungskorrosion.
solution pan.
mode. The most frequently occurring
mirabilite. The natural white mineral form variate in a frequency distribution[16].
of hydrated sodium sulfate,
Na2SO4"10H2O[9], which may grow as model. 1. A conceptual, mathematical, or
cave flowers or in various other forms physical system obeying certain specified
similar to those of gypsum. conditions, whose behavior is used to
understand the physical system to which
Mischungskorrosion. (German.) it is analogous in someway[22]. 2. A
Dissolution of calcite (and hence of conceptual description and the associated
limestone) by ground water that is derived mathematical representation of a system,
from the mixing of two different waters subsystem, components, or condition that
that were originally saturated with carbon is used to predict chances from a baseline
dioxide but had reached saturation under state as a function of internal and/or
differing carbon dioxide partial pressures. external stimuli and as a function of time

123
and space[22]. 3. A simplified system moisture equivalent. The percentage of
bearing some physical similarity to a water retained in a soil sample 1 cm thick
prototype[16]. after it has been saturated and subjected
to a centrifugal force 1000 times gravity
model technique. A method of solving for 30 min. Centrifuge moisture
complex physical problems through the equivalent is the water content of a soil
application of simplified models[16]. after it has been saturated with water and
then subjected for 1 hour to a force equal
mogote. A steep-sided hill of limestone, to 1000 times that of gravity[22].
generally surrounded by nearly flat
alluviated plains: karst inselberg. Orig- moisture tension. The equivalent negative
inally used in Cuba in referring to pressure of water in an unsaturated porous
residual hills of folded limestone in the medium equal to the pressure that must be
Sierra de los Organos but now used applied to the medium to bring the water
internationally for karst residual hills in to hydraulic equilibrium through a porous
the Tropics[10]. Differs from cone, cupola, permeable material with a pool of water
pinnacle and tower karst in its shape of the same composition. Synonym:
which reflects its karstification history[20]. capillary tension[22].
Synonyms: (French.) mogote; (German.)
(Karstinselberg), Mogote; (Greek.) moisture volume percentage. The ratio of
‘moghotis’ (apókrimnos, asvestólofos the volume of water in a soil to the total
perikliómenos apó proschomatikas bulk volume of the soil[22].
pediadas); (Italian.) mogote, rilievo
carsico residuo; (Spanish.) mogote; moisture weight percentage. The moisture
(Turkish.) karst kal2nt2 tepesi; content expressed as a percentage of the
(Yugoslavian.) hum. See also hum; karst oven-dry weight of a soil[22].
inselberg; pepino hill.
mold. A microscopic form of fungus
moisture content. 1. The ratio; expressed responsible for much food spoilage and,
as a percentage, of either (a) the weight of in caves, for conspicuous tufts quickly
water to the weight of solid particles covering scats, dead insects and bats, and
expressed as moisture weight percentage even wooden structures such as
or (b) the volume of water to the volume ladders[23].
of solid particles expressed as moisture
volume percentage in a given volume of molecular diffusion (diffusion.) The
porous medium[22]. 2. The gravimetric process whereby solutes are transported at
water vapor content of air[16]. See also the microscopic level due to variations in
water content. the solute concentrations within the fluid
phases[22]. The kinetic energy generated
moisture deficiency. The quantity of water by the transport of ionic or molecular
required to restore moisture to field constituents results in some dispersion of
capacity in a desiccated soil[16]. a chemical.

124
molecular diffusion, coefficient of. The caverns. When in suspension, they give
component of mass transport flux of the water the appearance of milk. Name
solutes (at the microscopic level) due to originated in 1714 by M. B. Valentini
variations in solute concentrations within (Fénelon)[20]. 3. Moonmilk consists of a
the fluid phases. Synonymous with variety of hydrocarbonates some of which
diffusion coefficient[22]. are associated with particular species of
bacteria. A common mineral in
molecule. A stable configuration of atomic moonmilk from temperate caves is
nuclei and electrons bound together by hydromagnesite; cold caves yield
electrostatic and electromagnetic forces. moonmilk of calcite after hydrocalcite[20].
It is the simplest structural unit that Synonyms: (French.) mondmilch;
displays the characteristic physical and (German.) Bergmilch, Montmilch;
chemical properties of a compound[6]. (Greek.) speleogala; (Italian.) latte di
monte; (Russian.) kamennce moloko;
mollisol. A soil layer subject annual (Spanish.) mondmilch, leche de luna;
thawing and freezing, often becoming (Turkish.) dik karstik kal2nt2;
mobile upon thawing[16]. (Yugoslavian.) gorsko mlijeko (mleko).
Also mountain milk.
monetite. A cave mineral — CaHPO4[11].
moor. A wet peat bog[16].
monohydrocalcite. A cave mineral —
CaCO3"H2O[11]. moulin. The French word for ‘mil’, moulin
has been used to describe partially
monomolecular film. A layer of dissolutional, partially scoured pockets
monomolecular thickness of a polar cut in rock, particularly the potholes
substance spread over a free water surface formed in the beds of surface and
to prevent evaporation. underground streams. In some areas
sinkholes in the surface of glaciers, which
montgomeryite. A cave mineral — may provide access to glacier caves, are
Ca4MgAl4(PO4)6(OH)4"12H2O[11]. also referred to as moulins[9].

montmorillonite. A clay mineral mountain milk. See moonmilk.


containing magnesium oxide (MgO) in its
structure[16]. moraine. A mound, ridge, or other distinct
accumulation of unsorted, unstratified
moonmilk. 1. A white plastic calcareous glacial drift, predominantly till, deposited
cave deposit composed of calcite, huntite, chiefly by direct action of glacier ice[6].
or magnesite. From Swiss dialect moon-
milch, elf’s milk. Corrupt spelling morphometric analysis. A geodetic and
mondmilch is common[10]. 2. Deposits geometric description of basin and stream
consisting mainly of very fine particles of network or to a sinkhole plain[16].
calcium and magnesium carbonate
precipitated from water in caves and

125
mud. Water saturated fine clayey earth My. See Ma.
material[16].

mud crack. Desiccation cracks appearing


in drying mud surfaces due to
shrinkage[16].

mud pendulite. A pendulite with the knob


coated in mud[25].

mud stalagmite. 1. Stalagmitic column


made of mud or clay with about 30%
calcium carbonate cement. There may be
some coarse noncalcareous detritus in the
core of such a column[20]. 2. Stalagmite
composed principally of clay or sandy
clay and commonly less than 30%
calcium carbonate[10]. Synonyms:
(French.) stalagmite d’argile; (German.)
Stalagmit aus Tonschlamm; (Greek.)
pilostagmitis; (Italian.) stalagmite di
fango; (Spanish.) ostalagmita de barro;
(Turkish.) çamur dikiti. Related to
stalagmite.

mudflow. A flow of water saturated


unconsolidated debris[16].

multiaquifer formation. A formation with


several aquifers overlying each other[16].

multiaquifer well. A well completed and


tapping several aquifers[16].

mutation. A sudden change in the genetic


material of an organism's germ cells,
resulting in offspring that possess
characteristics markedly different from
those of either parent. Mutations
generally are harmful, but occasionally
may improve an organism’s chances for
survival[23]. See also adaptation;
evolution.

126
N (Turkish.) a—iz geçit; (Yugoslavian.)
sutjeska, klisura, soteska.
Nackter karst. (German.) See exposed
karst. native ground water. Original ground
water[16].
Nacktkarst. (German.) See exposed karst.
natural arch. 1. A residual portion of the
naked karst, bare karst. Karst topography roof of a subsurface karst cavity which
developed beneath a temporary cover. has not collapsed. Such a natural arch
Some naked karsts develop beneath a may occur as a surface topographic
temporary cover of snow (nival karst) or feature, or as a part of a cave system[20].
water[17]. Synonyms: (French.) karst nu; 2. A rock arch or very short natural
(German.) oberflächlicher nackter Karst; tunnel; contrasted with natural bridge,
(Greek.) gymnon karst; (Italian.) carso which spans a ravine or valley[10].
nudo; (Russian.) goly0 karst or otkryty0 Synonyms: (French.) arche naturelle;
karst; (Spanish.) karst desnudo; (German.) natürlisches Gewölbe,
(Turkish.) ç2plak karst; (Yugoslavian.) Naturbrücke, Felsfenster, Felsbrücke;
goli krš. See also exposed karst. (Greek.) physike apsitha; (Italian.) arco
naturale; (Russian.) estestvennij arka;
NAPL. Abbreviation for nonaqueous phase (Spanish.) arco natural; (Turkish.) do™al
liquid. This term is used to describe the kemer; (Yugoslavian.) prirodni svod, luk,
physico- chemical that exist between a naravni obok. See also natural bridge.
bulk hydrocarbon and water which results
in the two liquids being immiscible with natural bridge. 1. A residual portion of the
one another (i.e. little or no mixing of the roof of a subterranean stream which has
two liquids occurs.) The interface is a not collapsed and is found bridging a
physical dividing surface between the valley. Normally a surface feature, but
bulk phases of the two liquids. NAPLs may be used to describe a similar
are divided into two categories; LNAPLs occurrence in a cave system[20]. 2. A rock
and DNAPLs. See also DNAPL; bridge spanning a ravine and not yet
immiscible; LNAPL. eroded away[10]. Synonyms: (French.)
pont naturel; (German.) Naturbrücke,
nari. Term used in the countries bordering Felsbrücke; (Greek.) physiki gefyra;
the Eastern Mediterranean for caliche or (Italian.) ponte naturale; (Russian.)
hardpan[20]. See caliche, sabath. estestvennij most; (Spanish.) puente
natural; (Turkish.) do™al köprü;
narrow. A passage of restricted width (Yugoslavian.) prirodni most, naravni
between two caves or hollows in the karst most. See also natural arch.
underground; often not readily
traversable[20]. Synonyms: (French.) natural levee. A river bank raised by the
étroiture; (German.) Enge; (Greek.) steno river’s own depositions[16].
perasma; (Italian.) strettoia; (Russian.)
laz; (Spanish.) laminador, gatera;

127
natural load. Sediment carried by a stable neptunian deposits. Younger sediment or
stream[16]. sedimentary rock that infills pre-existing
cavities, such as grikes, dolines or cave
natural tunnel. A nearly horizontal cave passages, in older rocks. The most
open at both ends, generally fairly straight common form is a fissure fill, known as a
in direction and fairly uniform in cross neptunian dike. Neptunian deposits
section[10]. occupy voids in non-karstic as well as
karstic rocks, and the combination of void
natural water. Water with a mineral and fill may subsequently be buried by
content occurring under natural still younger rocks. They may thus
conditions. become part of a paleokarst[9].

natural well. (Jamaican.) A vertical shaft nesquehonite. A cave mineral —


in limestone, open to the surface and Mg(HCO3)(OH)"2H2O[11].
having water at the bottom; similar to a
cenote[10]. Synonym: (Italian.) pozzo nested sinkholes. (American.) See uvala.
carsico.
net radiation. The sum of incident and
neck. A volcanic pipe filled with lava[16]. reflected sun and sky shortwave radiation
plus incident and reflected atmospheric
necrophage. A scavenger feeding on long-wave radiation[16].
animal carcasses (not prey)[25].
network cave pattern. A type of maze
neomorphism. A microscopic texture. A cave characterized by a complex pattern
complex of processes whereby a mosaic of repeatedly connected passages in a
of finely crystalline carbonate is replaced cave system. In map view, this type of
by a coarser (sparry) mosaic without the maze cave appears similar to a city street
development of visible porosity. map. It is typically formed by
Dominant reactions are the wet solutionally aggressive water infiltrating
transformation of aragonite to calcite and through fractures in an overlying
recrystallization. The process is insoluble cap-rock thus exhibiting a joint-
‘porphyroid’ where some of the controlled pattern. Synonym: labyrinth.
neomorphic crystals are conspicuously
larger than those which surround them[20]. neutrality point. The separation point
Synonyms: (French.) néomorphisme; between acid and basic solution with a pH
(German.) Neomorphismus ?; (Greek.) of 7.0[16].
neomorphismós; (Spanish.) neomorfismo;
(Turkish.) neomorfizm. neuromast. One of the individual sense
organs that make up the lateral line
neoteny. The condition of retaining larval systems of fishes and amphibians[23]. See
form and behavior even as a mature also cupula.
individual. Certain salamanders in
particular are neotenic[23].

128
nife cell. A rechargeable alkaline battery for nodule. A small, irregularly rounded knot,
use with an electric-cap lamp[25]. mass, or lump of a mineral or mineral
aggregate, normally having a warty or
nip. An undercutting notch in rock, knobby surface and no internal structure,
particularly limestone, along a seacoast and usually exhibiting a contrasting
between high and low tide levels along composition from the enclosing sediment
sea coasts and produced by solution and or rock matrix in which it is embedded
erosion. Most common along coasts with (e.g. a chert nodule in limestone.) Most
limited tidal variation[20]. Synonyms: nodules appear to be secondary structures
(French.) resserrement, étranglement; in sedimentary rocks they are primarily
(German.) Kliff ?, Brandungsmarke; the result of post depositional
(Greek.) káto engopí vráchou; (Italian.) replacement of the rock and are
solco di battigia; (Spanish.) socavación commonly elongated parallel to the
marina; (Turkish.) dalga yar2™2 çenti™i. bedding. Nodules can be separated as
discrete masses from the host material[1].
#a. See aisle.
nis
noethphreatic flow. A type of conduit flow
niter. A white orthorhombic mineral — that is always laminar[9].
KNO3. It is a soluble crystalline salt that
occurs as a product of nitrification in nominal. Used to describe standard sizes
most arable soils in hot, dry regions, and for pipe from 1/8 inch to 12 inches (3.2
in the loose earth forming the floors of mm to 304 mm.) The nominal size is
some natural caves[1]. Synonyms: specified on the basis of the inside
saltpeter; potassium nitrate. diameter. Depending on the wall
thickness, the inside diameter may be less
nitrammite. A cave mineral — NH4NO3[11]. than or greater than the number
indicated[6].
nitrocalcite. A cave mineral —
Ca(NO3)2"4H2O[11]. nongraded. An engineering term pertaining
to a soil or an unconsolidated sediment
nitromagnesite. A cave mineral — consisting of particles of essentially the
Mg(NO3)2"6H2O[11]. same size[6].

nival karst. Alpine karst[1]. non-point source. 1. Any source, other


than a point source, which discharges
nivo-karst. A karst-like topography pollutants into air or water[22]. 2. Source
produced by the differential chemical originating over broad areas, such as areas
weathering beneath snowbanks from of fertilizer and pesticide application and
snowmelt containing carbonic acid. It is leaking sewer systems, rather than from
found mostly in periglacial areas[1]. discrete points[22].

node point. The intersection point on a non-recording gage. A standard rain gage
grid[16]. (8 is standard in U.S.)[16].

129
normal depth. The depth at which uniform
flow occurs in an open channel[16].

normal fault. A fault in which the upper


block appears to have moved downward
relative to the lower block.

Northing. 1. The distance of a point north


of the point of origin of the grid of a map,
or some abbreviation of it. 2. The
south-north component of a survey leg, or
of a series of legs, or of a complete
traverse; north is positive and south is
negative[25].

nothephreatic. Referring to water moving


slowly in cavities in the phreatic zone[25].

numbering. Assigning an alphanumeric


index to a cave entrance[25].

130
O onyx marble. Translucent layers of calcium
carbonate from cave deposits, often called
oasis. A limited area in a desert supplied Mexican onyx or cave onyx; used as an
with water[16]. ornamental stone[10].

obruk. Turkish form for a vertical or oolite. A type of limestone that is composed
steepsided depression or shaft in karst, largely or partly of ooliths. Also known
often formed by collapse of roof of an as oolitic limestone. The best known
underground cave or cavern. When the examples in Britain, within the Jurassic
depression contains a lake of pond, it is limestone sequence of the Cotswolds, are
known as ‘sulu obruk’ or ‘obruk gölü’. of only moderate strength, very porous
When it is dry, it is called ‘kuru obruk’ or and only weakly cavernous. In contrast,
just ‘obruk’. Synonyms: (French.) obruk; oolites of early Carboniferous age have
(German.) Schlot; (Greek.) ‘obruk’ hosted extensive cave development
(káthetos karstikós lákkos); (Italian.) beneath Mymydd Llangattwg and in other
pozzo carsico; (Spanish.) torca; parts of South Wales[9].
(Turkish.) obruk; (Yugoslavian.) jama.
See cenote, dolina, jama, pit, shaft, oolith. A small ovoid to spherical
sinkhole. accretionary particle, usually composed of
concentric layers of calcium carbonate.
obsequent river. A river flowing in a Such ooliths, cemented together by
direction opposite to that of the dip of the calcium carbonate, iron salts or other
underlying strata[16]. minerals, are the major constituent of
oolite or oolitic limestone[9].
observation well. A well drilled for the
purpose of observations such as water oolitic. Of spherical or ovoidal shape[16].
level or pressure recordings[16].
opal. A cave mineral — SiO2"nH2O[11].
oceanic water. Sea water with a total salt
content of about 34,500 ppm[16]. open system. A system where matter and
energy may cross a system boundary[16].
ojo, ojo de agua. (Spanish.) An artesian
spring in limestone regions, especially open traverse. A traverse which does not
one forming a small pond; a vauclusian close onto a survey point of known
spring[10]. coordinates and orientation or onto
itself[25].
olivenite. A cave mineral —
Cu2(AsO4)(OH)[11]. Opferkessel. See solution pan.

omnivore. An animal that habitually eats optical brighteners. Material contained in


both plants and animals[23]. See also laundry detergents to make ‘whites
carnivore; herbivore; insectivore. whiter’ and used in environmental tracing
studies. Common types are, Tinopal

131
CBS-X, Tinopal 5BM GX, and Phorwite the observer. 4. Directional arrangement
BBH Pure. Dye type: Stilbene. See also of nonspherical grains in a sand
fluorescent dyes. aggregate[16].

ore karst. Formation of interstices, caverns original dip. Dip due to deposition of
caves and other karst forms produced by sediments[16].
solution in water from thermal springs
and ore-bearing solutions[20]. Synonyms: original interstice. Interstice formed during
(French.) karst minier; (German.) rock formation stage[16].
Zwischenräume, Kavernen, Höhlen im
Karst, gebildet durch Thermalwässer orographic precipitation. Precipitation
oder erzhaltige Lösungen; (Greek.) due to mechanical lifting of air over a
thermometallikon karst; (Italian.) ground relief[16].
carsismo per dissoluzione idrotermale;
(Russian.) rudnij karst; (Spanish.) karst orthogonal. Perpendicular.
termomineral; (Turkish.) cevher karst2;
(Yugoslavian.) rudni krs# (kras). otkry0 karst. (Russian.) See naked karst.

organic. Pertaining to anything that is or oulopholite. See cave flower.


ever was alive or produced by a living
plant or animal. Organic material brought outcrop. An open exposure of bedrock or
into the cave from outside is virtually the otherwise buried material[16].
only source of food for cave dwellers[23].
outflow cave. Cave from which stream
organic deposit. Deposits of calcareous and flows out or formerly did so[10].
siliceous remains of animals[16]. Synonym: effluent cave.

organic pollution. Contamination outlet cave. A cave developed at the point


originating from organic sources[16]. of re-emergence of an underground karst
watercourse[19].
orientation. 1. The assignment or
imposition of a definite direction in output point. A point where water exists
space; the act of establishing the correct from an underground drainage route or
relationship in direction, usually with aquifer. An obvious output point is a
reference to the points of the compass. surface resurgence or exsurgence, where
Also, the of being in such relationship. 2. drainage emerges from a conduit system.
In describing crystal form and symmetry, Less obvious are points where drainage
the placing of the crystal so that its leaves a carbonate aquifer and enters an
crystallographic axes are in the adjacent non-carbonate bed, such as a
conventional position. 3. The direction sandstone aquifer[9].
in which an aerial photograph is turned
with respect to observer or map. A single outwash. Stratified sand and gravel
photo is best oriented for study when removed or washed out from a glacier by
turned so that the shadows are cast toward

132
meltwater streams and deposited in front oxbow. Abandoned loop of a stream course,
of or beyond the end moraine or the Original usage, applied to surface rivers,
margin of an active glacier. The coarser describes short-circuited meander loops
material is deposited nearer to the ice[6]. but in caves the term is applied to dry
loop passages of any shape and origin[9].
outwash gravel. Glacial drift material
deposited by streams from a glacier[16]. oxidation. The combining of an element
with oxygen[6].
outwash plain. Plain in front of a glacier
that is composed of outwash material[16]. oxygen demand. The ability of substances
A broad, gently sloping sheet of to utilize dissolved oxygen in water.
outwash[6].

ouvala. (French.) See uvala.

oven-dry. The degree of dryness of a


porous sample after drying in an oven at a
specified temperature[16].

overbank area. An area covered by flood


waters overtopping natural or artificial
river banks[16].

overburden. 1. The loose soil, sand, silt, or


clay that overlies bedrock. In some
usages it refers to all material overlying
the point of interest. 2. The total cover of
soil and rock overlying an underground
excavation.

overburden pressure. The pressure exerted


by weight of the overburden column[16].

overflow spring. See spring, overflow.

overland flow. Surface runoff flowing over


the land surface towards a channel[16].

overthrust. Upthrust fault with a very low


angle of dip and a relatively large net
displacement[16].

133
P formed by the effects of karst erosion.
The presence of a paleokarstic surface
packing. The three-dimensional indicates that during the deposition of the
arrangement of particles[16]. full rock sequence the young rocks were
exposed to the effects of surface (sub-
pahoehoe. (Hawaiian.) Lava flows with a aerial) erosion. During such a non-
smooth or billowy surface in which lava depositional and erosional phase a full
tubes are found[13]. See also lava cave; suite of karst features, including caves,
pseudokarst. could develop[9].

paleokarst. 1. A karstified rock or area that paleomagnetism. Natural remanent


has been buried by later sediments; in magnetization preserved in rock
some places, ancient caves have been sequences. During rock deposition
completely filled by the later magnetic minerals are aligned according
sediments[10]. 2. A decoupled to the direction and polarity of the earth’s
contemporary system that has contemporary magnetic field. After
experienced tectonic subsidence and lie movement of the magnetic poles, or
unconformably beneath clastic cover periodic reversals of polarity, the
rocks, occasionally becoming exhumed remanent magnetization is preserved in
and re-integrated into the active the rocks and may be measured to aid
system[17]. 3. A karst formed in the past identification of stratigraphical units and
under an earlier erosion cycle and often in to assess their relative ages[9].
remote geological times. The karst is
preserved by burial or suspension of paleontology. The study of life in past
karstification processes[20]. 4. A karstified geologic time, based fossil plants and
surface and the karst features associated animals and including phylogeny, their
with it, such as caves, that have been relationships to existing plants, animals,
buried by younger rocks. Paleokarstic and environments, and the chronology of
features at various scales may be the Earth’s history[1].
recognized within most carbonate
successions. More rarely they may be re- palette. In a cave, a more or less flat
exposed (exhumed) by the effects of later protruding sheet of crystalline calcium
uplift and erosion[9]. Synonyms: (French.) carbonate spared during solution of the
paléokarst; (German.) Paläokarst, rock on each side of it[10]. See also blade;
foßiler Karst; (Greek.) paleokarst; shield. Synonym: shield.
(Italian.) paleocarsismo, carsismo
fossile; (Russian.) paleokarst; (Spanish.) palygorskite. A cave mineral —
paleokarst; (Turkish.) eski karst; (Mg,Al)2Si4O10(OH)"4H2O[11].
(Yugoslavian.) paleokrÑ, paleokras,
paleokarst. See also buried karst. pan coefficient. Coefficient to correlate a
high rate of evaporation in a pan to an
paleokarstic surface. A surface, preserved evaporation rate from larger water
within a carbonate succession, that was bodies[16].

134
panhole. See solution pan. particle. The smallest individual
constituent of an aggregate[16].
paragenesis. A type of cave passage
development in which erosion of the particulate transport. The movement of
passage floor is inhibited by the presence particles in subsurface water[22].
of an armoring layer of sediment, such
that any dissolutional enlargement is parting. The separation of sedimentary
dominantly upwards[9]. Generally, an rock along bedding planes[16]. Synonyms:
unproven and unsupported theory. bedding-plane; bedding-plane parting.
See also bedding plane.
paragenetic cave. Cave passage, usually of
canyon form, believed to be created by partition. 1. A nearly vertical residual rock
paragenesis. Passage formation by mass in a cave. 2. A continuous rock
paragenesis is normally very difficult to span across a cave[10].
prove, as later sediment removal leaves a
passage that looks very similar to the far partitioning function. A mathematical
more common vadose canyon. It is relation describing the distribution of a
thought that some of the larger canyons in reactive solute between solution and other
the Flint Mammoth Cave System, USA, phases[22].
may have formed in this way[9].
. parts per million. An expression of
parahopeite. A cave mineral — concentration (ppm.) The weight per
Zn3(PO4)2"4H2O[11]. weight of a solution[16].

paraphreatic. A paraphreatic passage has passage. 1. Broadly, a passage is any


an air surface under relatively low flow negotiable part of cave system, though the
conditions, when drainage is within the usage is commonly restricted to those
capacity of its downstream continuation, elements that tend towards the horizontal
but reverts to being water-filled (phreatic) rather than vertical or sub-vertical
under conditions of high flow or when the sections. Cave passages very in size and
downstream drainage is temporarily shape, with the latter relating to the mode
impeded[9]. of origin and providing evidence of the
nature of cave development mechanisms.
parent material. Material from which soil Perhaps the largest passage in the world is
or sediment was formed[16]. Deer Cave, which is up to 170m wide and
120m high, in the Mulu karst of
parietal fauna. Pertaining to the Sarawak[9]. 2. A comparatively small
inhabitants on the walls of the entrance underground opening made along
and twilight zones of a cave[23]. fractures, fissures, and bedding-plane
partings by running water but through
park. (Arizona.) Shallow broad solution which it is possible to pass[20]. 3. In a
depression[10]. cave, the opening between rooms or
chambers[10]. Synonyms: (French.)

135
galerie; (German.) Gallerie, Stollen; pearl. See cave pearl.
(Greek.) ypohios thiothos; (Italian.)
cunicolo, galleria; (Russian.) hod; pediment. An inclined erosion surface
(Spanish.) galeria; (Turkish.) geçit; covered with thin fluvial deposits[16].
(Yugoslavian.) galerija. See also
chamber; room. pendulite. A kind of stalactite which has
been partly submerged[25].
pathogenic bacteria. Disease inducing
bacteria[16]. and the submerged part covered with
dog-tooth spar to give the appearance of a
pavement. See limestone pavement. drumstick.

peat. Decomposed matter, mainly pellicular water. 1. The film of water left
vegetable[16]. around each grain or fracture surface of
water-bearing material after gravity
pebble. A smooth rounded rock drainage[22]. 2. Water of-adhesion[22]. 3.
fragment[16]. Water that can be extracted by root
absorption and evaporation but cannot be
Péclet number. 1. measure of the relative moved by gravity or by the unbalanced
contribution of mechanical dispersion and film forces resulting from localized
diffusion to solute transport. It relates the evaporation and transpiration[22].
effectiveness of mass transport by
advection  − vxD ∂∂Cx = − P ∂∂Cx  to the
e
peloid. A microscopic texture. A
sedimentary grain composed of micrite
effectiveness of mass transport by either carbonate irrespective of origin[20].
 ∂ 2C 
dispersion or diffusion  Pe =
 ∂x2 
 . Péclet Synonyms: (French.) peloïde; (German.)
mikroskopisches, sedimentäres Gefüge;
numbers below .0.4 indicate
(Greek.) piloidís; (Italian.) peloide;
diffusion/dispersion control; 0.4–6.0
(Spanish.) peloide; (Turkish.) peloit.
suggest that diffusion/dispersion and
See micrite, pelsparite.
advection are in transition and thus
approximately equal to each other; and
pelsparite. A microscopic texture. A
>6.0 indicate advection control. Large
limestone composed of pellets (peloids)
Péclet numbers indicate strongly
in a matrix of cement[20]. Synonyms:
advective systems. 2. A relationship
(French.) pelsparite; (German.)
between the advective and diffusive
Pelsarite, Kalkstein gefügt aus
components of solute transport expressed
Kügelchen ?; (Greek.) pelsparítis;
as the ratio of the product of the average
(Italian.) pelsparite; (Spanish.)
interstitial velocity, times the
pelsparita; (Turkish.) pelsparit. See
characteristic length, divided by the
peloids.
coefficient of molecular diffusion. Small
values indicate diffusion dominance,
pendant, rock pendant. One of a group of
large values indicate advection
isolated similarly proportioned
dominance[22].

136
projections surrounded by a complex of rock. It may be either temporary or
connected cavities in the bedrock ceiling permanent.
of a cave[10]. Formed by the rapid,
differential solution of the surrounding percolate. To flow through saturated void
rock[19]. space[16]. The act of water seeping or
filtering through soil or rock without a
pendular regime. A saturation regime definite channel[6].
where a porous medium has the lowest
possible saturation in the form of percolation; percolation water. 1. Ground
pendular rings at grain contacts[16]. water moving slowly through the micro-
fissure network of a limestone, most of
peneplain. A degradation surface without which eventually joins a major cave
relief[16]. conduit and flows more rapidly. In most
environments percolation water enters the
pen trace. Ink, magnetic, or photographic limestone through a soil cover. It is
line traced on the drum of a recording therefore high in carbon dioxide and has a
gage or meter[16]. major influence on limestone dissolution
and later redeposition of calcite
pepino hill. (Puerto Rican.) 1. Rounded or speleothems. Percolation water accounts
conical-shaped hill resulting from tropical for most of the storage in a limestone
humid karst action. Term generally aquifer, responds slowly to flooding in
replaced in Puerto Rico by mogote. 2. comparison to sinkhole water, and is
Elongate hill or ridge capped by normally of high enough quality to
mogotes[10]. See mogote. provide a drinking-water supply[9]. 2. The
movement in laminar flow under
percent saturation. The ratio, expressed as hydrostatic pressure of water through the
a percentage, of (a) the volume of some interconnected, saturated interstices of
fluid (water, gas, or oil) to (b) the total rock or soil, excluding movement through
volume of intergranular space (voids) in a large openings such as caves and solution
given porous medium. Synonymous with channels. 3. The downward movement of
degree of saturation[22]. water through the unsaturated zone[22]. 4.
The downward flow of water in saturated
perched ground water. Ground water or nearly saturated porous medium at
separated from an underlying body of hydraulic gradients of the order of 1.0 or
ground water by an unsaturated zone[6]. less[22]. 5. The movement of water
See also ground water, perched. through saturated interior pore space[16].
Synonym: seepage water.
perched karst spring. See spring, perched
karst. percolation water. Autochthonous karst
water which permeates directly through
perched water table. Unconfined ground karst limestone without using a surface
water separated from an underlying body watercourse[19].
of ground water by unsaturated soil or

137
perennial spring. See spring, perennial. permeability barrier. See barrier,
permeability.
perennial yield. Sustained yield[16].
permeability coefficient. The rate of flow
periodic spring. see spring, periodic. of water through a unit cross-sectional
area under a unit hydraulic gradient at the
perforation. Holes or openings in well prevailing temperature (field permeability
casing to permit water inflow into a coefficient) or adjusted to a temperature
well[16]. of 15NC[22].

permafrost. Ground that is perennially permeability, effective. The observed


below the freezing point of water[16]. permeability of a porous medium to one
fluid phase under conditions of physical
permafrost karst. A nonkarst term. A interaction between this phase and other
pseudokarst developed in areas of fluid phases present[22].
permafrost due to melting of ice and
frozen ground in a manner superficially permeability, intrinsic. 1. A measure of
similar to the solution of carbonate the ability of a medium to transmit a fluid
material in water. A general term through a porous medium. It is a function
embracing intrapermafrost karst, of the medium only and is proportional to
subpermafrost karst, and suprapermafrost the mean grain size diameter. 2. A
karst[20]. (French.) karst de permafrost; measure of the relative ease with which a
(German.) Permafrost Karst ?, porous medium can transmit a fluid under
Pseudokarst; (Greek.) karst monímou a potential gradient and is a property of
paghtoú; (Italian.) pseudo-carsismo di the medium alone[22]. 3. The property of a
permafrost; (Spanish.) karst de porous medium itself that expresses the
permafrost; (Turkish.) aldat2c2 don ease with which gases, liquids, or other
karst2; (Yugoslavian.) permafrost krs# substances can pass through it[22].
(kras, karst).
permeability, relative. 1. The ratio of the
permafrost table. The upper limit of effective permeability for a given flow
permafrost[16]. phase to the intrinsic permeability of the
porous medium[22]. 2. The ratio of the
permanent hardness. Noncarbonate effective and specific permeabilities[22].
hardness[16]. 3. The ratio of permeability of one
immiscible phase to intrinsic permeability
permanent wilting point. Saturation at in multiphase flow[16].
which permanent wilting occurs[16].
permeability, specific. The permeability
permeability. See hydraulic conductivity; measured when the rock contains only
permeability, intrinsic . one fluid[22].

138
permeability tensor. Permeability in an phreas, phreatic water. (From the Greek
anisotropic medium[16]. word meaning well.) 1. The zone of
saturated rock below the water table,
permeability, transverse. Permeability within which all conduits and sub-
measured perpendicular to the axis of a conduits are water filled (sometimes
core sample[16]. referred to as the flooded, phreatic or
saturated zone). Commonly the phreatic
permeameter. A device used to measure zone is considered as being subdivided
the permeability of small samples[16]. into an upper (shallow phreatic) zone and
a lower stagnant phreatic zone[9]. 2.
pervious. Permitting fluids to pass[16]. Water in the zone of saturation; water
below the water table[10]. See also
petrography. The science of describing and bathyphreatic, bathyphreatic zone, ground
identifying rocks[16]. water, phreas.

pH. A measure of the acidity or alkalinity of phreas, dynamic. A phreatic zone or part
a solution, numerically equal to 7 for of a phreatic zone where water moves fast
neutral solutions, increasing with with turbulence under hydrostatic
increasing alkalinity and decreasing with pressure[25].
increasing acidity. Originally stood for
the words, potential of hydrogen[6]. phreatic cave. 1. Cave conceived and
developed by dissolution, usually below
phonolite. A type of volcanic rock, the water table, where all voids are water
common as lava flows in some areas, that filled within the phreas. Phreatic caves
is capable of supporting the formation of may include loops deep below the water
extensive lava caves, including those on table, particularly in dipping limestone
Mount Suswa in Kenya[9]. with widely spaced bedding-related
fissures. Higher fissure densities, sub-
photogeology. The interpretation of aerial horizontal geological guidance, or greater
photographs for geological purposes[16]. karstic maturity encourage shallow
phreatic development just below the
photogrammetry. The preparation of maps water table. Progressive abondonment of
and measurements from stereoscopic phreatic caves is usually in a downward
aerial photographs[16]. sequence, as erosionally lowered valley
floors intersect lower levels of the flooded
photosynthesis. The process by which system. Active phreatic cave segments,
green plants convert carbon dioxide and left perched for geological reasons after a
water into simple sugar. Chlorophyll and general water-table lowering, are
sunlight are essential to the series of relatively common. Characteristics of
complex chemical reactions involved in phreatic caves are blind dissolution
the process[23]. pockets on walls and ceilings, branching
and looping of passages, and overall
switchback gradients as phreatic flow

139
may be uphill under pressure. The most atmospheric[22]. 2. That part of the earth’s
common passage, and overall switchback crust beneath the regional water table in
gradients as phreatic flow may be uphill which all voids, large and small, are
under pressure. The most common ideally filled with water under pressure
passage form is a tube, though cross- greater than atmospheric[22]. When
sectional shape reflects local geological discussing a karst setting, it is preferable
factors. A classic active phreatic cave is to use the term, phreatic zone, so as to
that behind the Fontaine de Vaucluse in avoid confusion regarding chemical
France, while Hölloch, Switzerland, is a saturation. Synonym: saturated zone.
major system consisting mostly of relict See also zone of saturation.
phreatic passages[9]. 2. Cave passage
developed in the phreatic zone and still phreatobia. An animal association found in
actively forming. Passages often appear water separating grains of sand or fine
as tubes. gravel[25].

phreatic decline. The downward phreatobite. An inhabitant of groundwater,


movement of the water table[16]. often exhibiting troglomorphy, but not
limited to karst systems. Many examples
phreatic fluctuation. The fluctuation of the of amphipods and other crustaceans
water table[16]. abound[23].

phreatic lift. An active or abandoned phreatophyte. Desert plants with deeply


phreatic conduit that carries or carried penetrating roots reaching the water table
water upwards in a downstream mainly along stream courses[16].
direction[9].
physiography. The science of the origin
phreatic line. See seepage line. and evolution of land forms[16].

phreatic rise. The upward movement of the phytometer. A device used to measure the
water table[16]. transpiration of plants embedded in
soil[16].
phreatic surface. See water table.
piedmont plain. A plain extending
phreatic water. That part of the outwards from the base of a mountain
underground water in a karst limestone system[16].
which lies within the zone of permanently
saturated rock — the phreatic zone. piezometer. A devise used to measure
Caves formed within this zone are known ground-water pressure head at a point in
as phreatic caves[19]. the subsurface[22].

phreatic zone. 1. Those parts of the earth’s piezometric head. The sum of the pressure
crust in which all voids are filled with and elevation head[16].
water under pressure greater than

140
piezometric limit. The point within a given remaining after solution of the
flow path below which the flow direction surrounding rock. 3. A stalactite--
is influenced by hydrostatic pressure. In stalagmite that reaches from roof to floor
cases where flow is confined to a planar in a cave; more properly termed a
structure, the piezometric limit can be column. 4. A tall thin stalagmite that
identified as a point where the flow path does not reach the roof of a cave[10]. See
changes from a dip-oriented to a strike- column; rock pillar.
oriented trend. The piezometric limit is
determined both by discharge rate and pinnacle karst. 1. Tropical karst
geometry of the openings. Used to characterized by vertical rock blades
describe karst aquifers with a fretted sharped by dissolution. It is
discontinuous piezometric surface[14]. practically indistinguishable from arête
karst and tsingi, and includes the varieties
piezometric surface. 1. The imaginary sur- known as shilin. The Pinnacles in the
face to which water from a given aquifer Mulu karst of Saraway have rock blades
will rise under its full static head[10]. 2. up to 50m high projecting through the
Defined by the elevation to which water rain forest canopy[9]. 2. A tropical
will rise in artesian wells or wells landscape of bare reticulated saw-topped
penetrating confined aquifers[16]. See also ridges having almost vertical slopes and a
potentiometric surface. relief of as much as 120 meters. The
ridges rise above forest-covered
pigment. A chemical substance that imparts depressions and corridors. Found in New
color to an object by reflecting or Guinea at elevations or around 2,000
transmitting only certain light rays and meters[20]. Synonyms: (French.) karst à
absorbing all others. For example, a pinacles; (German.) Pinnacle Karst;
substance that absorbs all but green rays (Greek.) karst koriphón; (Italian.)
appears green. An object that contains no carsismo a pinnacoli; (Turkish.)
pigment, on the other hand, appears white sivritepeli karst. Compare cone, cupola,
because it reflects all light rays and tower karst.
absorbs none. Many troglobites have lost
all their pigment[23]. pinnacles. These are a particularly mature
form of karren. The side walls are grikes
pillar. 1. Remnant of bedrock joining the with Rinnenkarren cutting across one
cave floor and ceiling. Not to be another to form sharp edges and peaks
confused with a column, which is a that can reach several meters in height.
calcite deposit. Pillars are common in Generally, pinnacles need a long period
phreatic caves, formed by complexly time to form. They are common in the
looping ground-water flow, but may also tropics and can attain great sizes[3]. Often,
be left as small oxbow cores of vadose they are covered. See also debris karren.
origin. A spectacular group of pillars
occurs in the ill-named Chamber of pipe. 1. A generally small, sub-cylindrical,
Columns in the Sof Omar cave, vertical hole developed in an
Ethiopia[9]. 2. A column of rock unconsolidated sedimentary deposit by

141
the washing away of all or part of its fines pit. A deep hole, generally circular in
content. Some pipes develop above outline, having vertical or nearly vertical
points on a carbonate-rock surface, such walls[10]. See also jama; pothole
as joint intersections, where ground-water (definition 2); shaft.
seepage is locally concentrated. Pipes in
chalk include cylindrical and conical pitch. Vertical or sub-vertical shaft or cave
masses of clay and sand that are waterfall that normally requires rope,
neptunian fills of dissolutional dolines, ladder or equipment to pass; a term used
shafts and caves; all shapes and sizes are by British cave explorers[9].
commonly referred to as chalk pipes[9]. 2.
Small cylindrical hole in unconsolidated piton. 1. (French.) Limestone hill having
sediments, caused by removal of fine sharply pointed peak[10]. 2. A solid or
material by water[10]. 3. A closed tubular folded metal spike, of steel or other alloy,
conduit for fluid transport[16]. to be driven into a crack in the rock to
form an anchor[25].
piping. 1. A process whereby a cavity or
small conduit is developed in an pitot tube. A device used to measure flow
unconsolidated soil due to progressive velocity via pressure differences[16].
sediment removal by seepage water. The
cavity develops headwards, as the fines pitted plain. Plain having numerous small
are removed first and the coarser material closely spaced closed depressions[10].
is then washed out of the growing
cavity[9]. Definition 1 is often incorrectly plan. A plot of the shape and details of a
applied to the formation of sinkhole cave projected vertically onto a horizontal
development — the migration of smaller plane at a reduced scale[25].
particles through openings created by
larger particles is of no consequence in planarian. A flatworm. A relatively simple
terms of sinkhole development and wormlike animal with a flattened
should not be confused as such. 2. ribbonlike body, a distinct head end, and a
Formation of a passage by water under mouth located more or less centrally on
pressure in the form of conduits through the underside of the body[23].
permeable materials when the hydraulic
head exceeds a certain critical value[10]. 3. plane of weakness. Surface or narrow zone
The mechanical washout of caves in with a shear (or tensile) strength lower
gravels, soils, loess, etc., and shows than that of the surrounding material.
evidence of associated collapse.
planimeter. An instrument that
pisanite. A cave mineral — automatically determines irregular areas
(Fe,Cu)SO4"7H2O[11]. on a map[16].

pisolite, pisolith. See cave pearl. plateau. An elevated level land surface[16].

142
Pleistocene. An epoch of the Quaternary point source. Any discernable, confined, or
period, after the Pliocene of the Tertiary discrete conveyance from which
and before the Holocene; also the pollutants are or may be discharged,
corresponding worldwide series of rocks. including, but not limited to, any pipe,
It began two million years ago and lasted ditch, channel, tunnel, conduit, well,
until the start of the Holocene some 8,000 container, rolling stock, concentrated
years ago[1]. animal feeding operation, or vessel or
other floating craft[22].
plunge pool. A swirlhole, generally of large
size, occurring at the foot of a waterfall or poise. A measure of viscosity.
rapid, on the surface or underground[25].
See also swirlhole. pokryty0 karst. (Russian.) See covered
karst.
pocket. Solution cavity in ceiling, floor, or
walls of a cave, shaped like the interior of polarization. The migration and separation
a round-bottomed kettle; unrelated to of ions to the electrodes in a direct current
joints or bedding[10]. See also electrolyte process giving rise to higher
spongework. overall resistance[16].

pocket valley. 1. The reverse of a blind polje. (Slavic word for field.) 1. A large,
valley, extending headwards into the foot flat floored depression in karst limestone,
of a calcareous massif. The upstream end whose long axis is developed parallel to
is terminated by a cliff, frequently lunate, major structural trends and can reach tens
from whose base emerges a subterranean of kilometers in length. Superficial
karst stream meandering across a flat, deposits tend to accumulate on the floor.
steep-sided valley below the Drainage may be by either surface
resurgence[19]. 2. A valley that begins watercourses (when the polje is said to be
abruptly and has no headwaters, having open) or swallow holes (a ‘closed’ polje.)
formed from and below the site of a Their development is encouraged by any
spring[9]. impedance in the karst drainage[19]. 2.
Polje or karst polje signifies the flat-
pocket storage. Water storage in bottomed lands of closed basins which
depressions on the land surface[16]. may extend over large areas, as much as
1,000 km2. The flat floor of the polje may
podzol. A light colored soil, usually found consist of bare limestone, of a nonsoluble
in forest regions[16]. formation (and so with rolling
topography), or of soil. The polje will
point-bar deposit. Sedimentation on the show complex hydrogeological
inside of a meander loop of a river or characteristics such as exsurgences,
stream channel[16]. swallow holes, estavelles, and lost rivers.
In colloquial use, the term polje is applied
point of inflection. The point where a to flat-bottomed lands which are
curve changes slope[16]. overgrown or are under cultivation[20]. 3.

143
Large flat-floored closed karst depression, contaminants such that the water quality
with sharp slope breaks between the has become severely degraded.
commonly alluviated floor and the
marginal limestone. Streams or springs pollution. 1. Specific impairment of water
drain into poljes and outflow is quality by agricultural, domestic, or
underground through ponors. Commonly industrial wastes (including thermal and
the ponors cannot transmit flood flows, so atomic wastes), to a degree that has an
many poljes turn into wet-season lakes. adverse effect upon any beneficial use of
The form of some poljes is related to the water[22]. 2. The addition to a stored body
geological structure, but others are purely of water of any material which diminishes
the projects of lateral dissolution and the optimal economic use of the water
planation. The Dinaric Karst has many body by the population which it serves,
poljes; the Livansko polje is around 60km and has an adverse effect on the
long and 7km wide. The word is Slovene surrounding environment[22].
(common also to other Slav languages)
for a field, reflecting the agricultural pollution abatement. All measures taken
value of the alluvial polje floor soils[9]. to prevent or to protect against
Synonym: interior valley; (French.) polje; pollution[16].
(German.) Polje; (Greek.) polye;
(Italian.) polje; (Russian.) polje; polygonal karst. 1. A karst area where the
(Spanish.) polje; (Turkish.) gölova, surface is completely pitted with closed
polye; (Yugoslavian.) polje. See also depressions, the divides of which form a
karst polje. crudely polygonal network. Especially
common in humid tropical cone-karst
pollutant or contaminant. Includes, but is terrain, but also found in well-formed
not limited to, any element, substance, temperate doline-karst terrain[10]. 2. A
compound. or mixture including disease type of karst in which numerous closed
causing agents, which after release into depressions are separated by dividing
the environment and upon exposure, ridges that impose a crudely polygonal
ingestion, inhalation or assimilation into appearance upon the landscape[9].
any organism, either directly from the
environment or indirectly by ingesting pond. A small body of surface water[16].
through food chains, will or may
reasonably be anticipated to cause death, ponded water. Water held in a depression
disease, behavioral abnormalities, cancer, by a barrier[16], such as breakdown in a
genetic mutation. Physiological cave system.
malfunctions (including malfunctions in
reproduction or physical deformation in ponor. (Slavic.) 1. Hole or opening in the
such organisms or their offspring[22]. bottom or side of a depression where a
surface stream or lake flows either
polluted water. Water that has become partially or completely underground into
contaminated by sewage or other the karst ground-water system. A sea-
ponor is where sea-water flows or is

144
drawn into an opening by a vacuum in pore space. 1. The total space not occupied
karstified rock[20]. 2. Hole in the bottom by solid soil or rock particles[22]. 2. The
or side of a closed depression through space occupied by voids containing gases
which water passes to or from an or liquids in soil or rock samples[16]. See
underground channel[10]. Synonyms: also interstice; porosity; porosity,
(British.) swallet, swallow hole, stream effective; porosity, primary; porosity,
sink; (French.) ponor, aven, gouffre, secondary.
perte; (German.) Schlund, Saugloch,
Schlinger, Ponor; (Greek.) katavothra; pore velocity. See velocity, average
(Italian.) inghittitoio, capovento; interstitial.
(Russian.) ponor; (Spanish.) sumidero,
ponor, pérdida; (Turkish.) su yutan; porosimeter. A device used to measure
(Yugoslavian.) ponor, utok, poñiralnik, porosity[16].
pivka. See also swallow hole.
porosity. 1. The ratio of the aggregate
ponornica. See lost river. volume of interstices in a rock or soil to
its total volume; generally stated as a
pool deposit. Crystalline material deposited percentage[10]. 2. The ratio, usually
in an isolated pool in a cave[10]. expressed as a percentage, of the total
volume of voids of a given porous
population. Individuals of a species in a medium to the total volume of the porous
given locality which potentially form a medium[22]. 3. The volume percentage of
single interbreeding group separated by the total bulk not occupied by solid
physical barriers from other such particles[22]. See also porosity, effective;
populations (e.g., populations of the same porosity, primary; porosity, secondary;
species in two quite separate caves)[25]. porosity, tertiary.

pore. Small void space in rock or porosity, absolute. Porosity established by


unconsolidated material of soil particles. taking into account all interconnected and
See also interstice[16]. nonconnected or isolated void volumes[16].

pore deposit. Mineral matter deposited on porosity, effective. 1. The ratio, usually
the interior of a cave from water entering expressed as a percentage of the total
the cave so slowly through pores and volume of voids available for fluid
cracks that it does not form drops[10]. transmission to the total volume of the
porous medium[22]. 2. The ratio of the
pore entry radius. The radius of a flow volume of the voids of a soil or rock mass
channel at pore entry, usually smaller than that can be drained by gravity to the total
the average pore radius[16]. volume of the mass[22]. 3. The amount of
interconnected pore space and fracture
pore pressure. The pressure of water in openings available for the transmission of
pores of a saturated medium[16]. fluids, expressed as the ratio of the
volume of interconnected pores and

145
openings to the volume of rock. See also as a function of position or of condition;
porosity; porosity, primary; porosity, e.g., the fluid potential of ground water[22].
secondary; porosity, tertiary.
potential density. 1. The density of a unit
porosity, primary. Porosity of some of water after it is raised by an adiabatic
lithological material that developed while process to the surface, i.e., determined
the rock was forming. See also interstice; from in-situ salinity and potential
pore; pore space; porosity; porosity, temperature[22]. 2. Density that would be
effective; porosity, secondary. reached by a compressible fluid if it were
adiabatically compressed or expanded to a
porosity, secondary. Porosity of some standard pressure[22].
lithologic material that has developed
after the rock was initially formed, such potential drop. The difference in total head
as joints and fractures, and may be between two equipotential lines[22].
capable of enlargement by dissolution
processes. See also pore; pore space; potential evapotranspiration Evapotran-
porosity, effective; porosity, primary; spiration occurring under adequate soil-
porosity, tertiary. moisture supply at all times for given
temperature and humidity conditions[16].
porosity, tertiary. Porosity caused by
solutional enlargement of secondary potential flow. Irrotational flow occurring
porosity. See also pore; pore space; in a conservative force field or potential
porosity; porosity, effective; porosity, field[16].
primary; porosity, secondary.
potentiometer. An instrument used to
porous. Having numerous interstices, measure voltage differences[16].
whether connected or isolated.
potentiometric field. As used in karst
porous medium. Any medium containing hydrology, a discontinuous highly
interdispersed void space[16]. irregular surface representing the static
ground-water head as indicated by the
porthole. A nearly circular natural opening level to which water rises in a selected
in a thin rock wall in a cave[10]. See also piezometer. In some piezometers, the
window. water-level rise will be greatly different
from other piezometers (either higher or
potable water. Water that is suitable for lower) or may be non-existent all
human consumption[22]. together.

potamology. The study of streams. potentiometric surface. An imaginary


surface representing the total static head
potential. Any of several different scalar of ground water and defined by the level
quantities, each of which involves energy to which water will rise in a

146
piezometer[22]. Replaces the term preadapted. Possessing adaptations that
piezometric surface. would contribute to survival in a habitat
other than the immediate one because of
pothole. 1. A single shaft, or an entire cave similarities in living conditions in the two
system that is dominantly vertical. It is habitats. Insects that live in leaf litter on
also used to describe a single erosional the forest floor, for example, may be
bowl or moulin, rounded mainly by the pre-adapted to cave life[23].
swirling current, in a stream bed[9]. 2. A
small rounded hole pipe worn into the precipitation. 1. Water precipitating in
bedrock of a streambed, or on the coast, liquid or solid form from the
or at a waterfall, by sand, gravel, and atmosphere[16]. 2. The growth and
stones spun around by the current in development of crystals from solutions
evorsion or mill action[20]. 3. Term used that are supersaturated with respect to
in England for vertical or steeply inclined various minerals.
shaft in limestone[10]. Synonyms:
(French.) marmite de géant, aven; precipitation excess. That part of
(German.) Kolk, Strudelloch; (Greek.) precipitation that contributes directly to
strongíli opí is petróthi kítin révmatos; runoff[16].
(Italian.) marmitta dei giganti;
(Russian.) karstovaja sahta; (Spanish.) precipitation gage. An instrument used to
marmita de gigante, pilancón; (Turkish.) measure the amount of precipitation per
dev kazan2; (Yugoslavian.) erozioni unit area[16].
kotas. See also pit; shaft.
predator. An animal that lives by capturing
potholer. (British.) Explorer of openings in other animals for food[23]. See also prey.
karst formations with emphasis on
vertical and steep openings; somewhat of pressure. The force exerted across a real or
a slang term[20]. Synonyms: (French.) imaginary surface divided by the area of
spéléologue; (German.) Speläologe, that surface.
Höhlenforscher; (Greek.) erevna
karstikon engelon; (Italian.) speleologo; pressure cell. A pressure measuring and
(Spanish.) espeleólogo, explorador de transducing device[16].
simas; (Turkish.) dev kazanc2;
(Yugoslavian.) speleolog, jamar. See pressure cell. The pressure difference
speleologist, caver. occurring between two points along a
stream line in a flow system[16].
potholing. 1. The process of scouring holes
in rock in stream beds or near the strand pressure flow tube. Gallery with water
line by rapid rotation of trapped pebbles flowing under pressure including
or cobbles; evorsion[10]. 2. (British.) See differential gravity head and artesian
caving. pressure[20]. Synonyms: (French.) galerie
en conduite forcée; (German.)
pozo. (Spanish.) See sima. Druckströmungsröhre, Karstgerinne;

147
(Greek.) ypoghion ytnatagogos, A few types of bacteria also manufacture
ypopiesin; (Italian.) condotta forzata; food from nonliving substances and
(Russian.) karstovij kanal s napornimi therefore serve as producers in some cave
vodami; (Spanish.) galería (o tubo) communities[23]. See also consumer.
saturada; (Turkish.) bas2nçl2 su mecras2;
(Yugoslavian.) kanal s vodom pod projected section. The result of projecting
tlakom. See also conduit; streamtube. a section composed of several parts with
differing directions onto a single plane.
pressure head. Hydrostatic pressure Usually the plane is vertical along the
expressed as the height of a column of general trend of the cave. The horizontal
water that the pressure can support at the distance apart of points is not correct,
point of measurement[22]. See also head, only the vertical, so that slopes are
static; pressure, hydrostatic. distorted[25].

pressure, hydrostatic. The pressure proto-cave. Natural void that links a


exerted by the weight of water at any potential input point and an output point
given point in a body of water at rest[22]. within an aquifer, but which is still too
small to be entered by man[9].
prey. A living animal that is captured for
food by another animal[23]. See also prusik knot. A knot tied by looping a
predator. smaller diameter rope around a larger
standing line (rope) that has the property
prism storage. The storage of water in a of sliding with no load on the knot, but
river channel or reservoir in prism above will hold when it is loaded (e.g. when the
the original water level[16]. weight of a caver is applied)[13]. See also
ascender; mechanical ascender; prusiking;
prismatic compass. A compass with a standing line.
prism attached so that the compass card
can be read at the same time as the prusik sling. A sling fastened by a prusik
compass is directed into the line of sight knot to the rope[25].
to a distance point[25].
prusiking. The art of ascending a standing
probe. A sensing instrument used to take line (rope) by a caver with prusik knots[13]
measurements at the interior of a as opposed to the use of a mechanical
relatively unaccessible system[16]. ascender. See also ascender; knots;
mechanical ascender; prusik knot;
producers. Green plants, the basic link in standing line.
any food chain; by means of
photosynthesis, green plants manufacture pseudokarren. These are karren appearing
the food on which all other living things features that form mostly on insoluble,
ultimately depend. They are available in silicate rocks by means of weathering
the cave community only in the twilight processes. They appear as a rounded type
zone, or as debris that falls or washes in. of Rinnenkarren and less frequently as an

148
atypical form of solution pan[3]. See also minerals followed by break-up and
karren; Rinnenkarren; solution pan. redistribution of the residual carbonate
component[9].
pseudokarst. 1. Terrane with features
similar to karst but formed in nonsoluble psychrometer. 1. An instrument used for
rocks, as by melting of permafrost or measuring relative humidity. The
ground ice, collapse after mining, and by simplest sling psychrometers consist of
outflow of liquid lava from beneath its two thermometers mounted on a rotating
solidified crust[20]. 2. Karst-like terrane frame. One thermometer's bulb is kept
produced by a process other than the moist, the other dry. By comparing the
dissolving of rock, such as the rough "wet bulb" and "dry bulb" readings of the
surface above a lava field, where the two thermometers after they have been
ceilings of lava tubes have collapsed. whirled in the air, one can determine the
Features of pseudokarst include lava relative humidity. An electric fan is used
tunnels, lava tubes, lava stalactites, and to ventilate the wet bulb in many
lava stalagmites[10]. 3. A landscape psychrometers[23]. 2. Apparatus designed
containing karst-like features such as to measure relative humidity indirectly[16].
caves and dolines, but not formed by See also hygrometer.
bedrock dissolution as in true karst.
Pseudokarst embraces volcanic puddle. Water collecting in very small
landscapes with lava caves, cryokarst or surface depressions[16].
thermokarst formed by ground-ice
melting in a permafrost environment, and pumping test. A test designed to determine
situations where mechanical soil piping aquifer characteristics by pumping a well
has occurred, producing depressions and and plotting the drawdown curves of
pipes, as occur commonly in areas of observation wells for comparison with
loess cover[9]. Synonyms: (French.) theoretical curves.
pseudokarst; (German.) Pseudokarst;
(Greek.) psevthokarst; (Italian.) pupa (plural pupae). The inactive stage in
pseudocarsismo; (Russian.) psevdokarst; the life history of certain insects during
(Spanish.) pseudokarst; (Turkish.) which the larva undergoes a gradual
aldat2c2 karst; (Yugoslavian.) pseudoks #, reorganization of its tissues in the process
pseudokras, pseudokarst, navidezni kras. of becoming an adult. See also
See lava cave, lava karst, pahoehoe. metamorphosis.

pseudo-breccia. A type of limestone pycnometer. A bottle with an accurately


resembling a breccia, in which angular determined volume for density
limestone fragments are cemented determinations[16].
together by limestones of different
composition. Pseudo-breccias are pyrite. Iron sulfide mineral (FeS2) also
common in many preserved limestone known as iron pyrites and fool’s gold.
sequences and may owe their origin to the Pyrite occurs in trace amounts in many
dissolutional removal of originally sedimentary rocks. It may be locally
interbedded and interstitial sulfate

149
common in dark carbonaceous limestone
and in thin non-carbonate beds such as
shales, coals and wayboards. Pyrite may
break down spontaneously, with or
without bacterial mediation, to form
sulfates, particularly sulphuric acid, that
may be involved in early speleogensis[9].

pyrrhotite. A cave mineral — FeS[11].

150
Q
quagmire. A wet unstable land area[16].

quartz. A crystal form of silicon dioxide


(SiO2)[16].

quiet reach. The reach of a river with no


features disturbing the flow pattern[16].

151
R ground-water travel time, because of
physical and chemical interactions
rabies. An infectious disease of the central between the radionuclide and the
nervous system in mammals, caused by a geohydrologic unit through which the
lyssavirus. Usually transferred by the bite radionuclide travels[22].
of an infected animal, such as dogs,
skunks, racoons, or rarely bats. radius of influence. The radial distance
Characterized by choking, convulsions, from the center of a well bore to the point
inability to swallow, etc. Different where there is no lowering of the water
genetic strains are now recognized and table or potentiometric surface (the edge
can be identified by tests. Transfer of of its cone of depression)[6].
rabies from bats via aerosols to caged
animals in a cave has been demonstrated, raft. A thin sheet of crystalline calcite
but has not been proven in humans[23]. supported by surface tension on a cave
pool or lake. The calcite is precipitated
radial flow. 1. Radial flow into or out of a mainly in response to evaporation of the
well under ideal circular boundary pool water and rafts are therefore found
conditions[16]. 2. The flow of ground mainly in caves in arid regions or caves
water in all directions in response to with powerful through draughts.
recharge entering the subsurface at or
near the top of a ground-water plateau. rain. Liquid precipitation of atmospheric
This conditions occurs most often water in the form of droplets[16].
through point recharge entering the
subsurface via sinkholes in karst terranes. rainfall excess. That portion of rain fall that
contributes directly to runoff[16].
radioactive tracer. A tracer used in
hydrological direction and velocity rainfall intensity. The volume or depth of
determinations[16]. The two most rainfall per unit time[16].
common types are tritium and deuterium.
rain gage. An instrument used to measure
radioactivity log. A log measuring the height of rainfall[16].
radioactivity in a borehole[16].
rain gage network. An areal distribution of
radioisotope. An unstable isotope of an rain gages[16].
element that decays or disintegrates
spontaneously, emitting radiation[22]. rain intensity. The intensity of rain fall
expressed in depth per time (in/hr)[16].
radionuclide. A radioisotope[22].
randpolje. An enclosed plain at the edge of
radionuclide retardation. The process or a karst area receiving surface water from
processes that cause the time required for the nonkarstic area. The water drains out
a given-radionuclide to move between through underground passages in the karst
two locations to be greater than the area. The plain is thus completely

152
enclosed by higher ground. Compare raw sewage. Untreated sewage.
blind valley; karst margin plain[10].
raw water. Untreated water[16].
rappel. The art of descending a rope using
some sort of friction between the rope and reaction path modeling. A simulation
the rappeller to control the rate of approach to studying the chemical
descent[13]. Synonym: abseil. See also evolution of a (natural) system[22].
abseil; carabiner.
rebelay. The reanchoring of a rope, usually
rappel rack. A long U-shaped steel bar that to avoid rub points or split long pitches.
holds several brake bars and is used for
rappelling[13]. See also rappel. REDIRECTION Syn. deviation

rappel spool. One of the devices used to rebound. An upward movement of soil as a
create friction between a rappeller and the consequence of a decrease in effective
rope that consists of a spool on which the stress. In fine-grained soils, rebound is
rope can be wrapped around several usually much less than the amount of
times[13]. See also rappel. compaction since compaction is mostly
irreversible[21].
rapid. A stream section with a notably
higher flow velocity than in adjoining receiver. That part of a remote measuring
parts[16]. system that receives incoming data or
impulses[16].
rapid flow. Open channel flow with a
Froude number greater than unity[16]. See receiving surface. A surface receiving
also Froude Number. precipitation or radiation[16].

rate of draft. The rate at which water is recessional moraine. A moraine deposited
required for use (demand)[16]. by a retreating glacier[16].

rate of infiltration. The maximum rate at recession curve. The falling limb of a
which soil can absorb water[16]. hydrograph curve[16].

rating curve. The graphic relationship of recession flow. The flow that occurs after
stage to discharge[16]. rainfall has ended[16].

rational formula. An equation relating recession segment. That part of a


runoff intensity and area to a runoff hydrograph that represents the withdrawal
coefficient[16]. of water from storage[16].

ravine. A small erosional depression[16]. recharge. 1. The process of addition of


See chasm. water to the saturated zone[22]. 2. The
artificial replenishment of a depleted

153
aquifer by injection or infiltration of recharge water. Water used for
water from the surface[16]. replenishment of a depleted aquifer[16].

recharge, allogenic. Recharge derived from recharge well, absorbing well, diffusion
runoff of neighboring or overlying non- well, inverted well. A well that is used
karst rocks that drains into a karst aquifer. to recharge water back into an aquifer.
Diffuse allogenic recharge is used to Commonly used when aquifer depletion,
describe the slow percolation of recharge saltwater intrusion, and contaminant
when runoff into direct input points is migration are problems.
reduced in magnitude while concentrated
allogenic recharge is used to describe the recipient. A vessel receiving liquids in
concentrated recharge that occurs by volume measurements[16].
runoff into large fractures, sinkholes, and
sinking streams. reclamation. To reclaim land after abusive
effects such as strip mining.
recharge area. An area in which water
reaches the zone of saturation by surface recorder. An instrument designed to
infiltration[22]. See also intake area. continuously or intermittently record
measurements[16].
recharge, autogenic. Recharge derived
from precipitation directly onto the karst recovery. The water-level rise in a well
landscape. Diffuse autogenic recharge is occurring upon the cessation of discharge
used to describe the slow percolation of from that well or an observation well.
recharge through a myriad of small
openings while concentrated autogenic recovery method. A pumping test analysis
recharge is used to describe the method in which both drawdown and
concentrated recharge that occurs by flow recovery of head after cessation of
into large fractures, sinkholes, and pumping are observed and plotted for the
sinking streams. same observation well[16].

recharge capacity. The ability of the soils recrystallization. A new formation of


and underlying materials to allow crystals from solid rock material[16].
precipitation and runoff to infiltrate and
reach the phreatic zone[22]. reculée. See pocket valley.

recharge line. A series of recharge wells redirection. See deviation.


arranged in linear fashion to approximate
a line source[16]. redox. A chemical reaction in which an
atom or molecule loses electrons to
recharge pit. A large diameter well or shaft another atom or molecule. Also known as
for recharge under gravity[16]. oxidation-reduction. Oxidation is the loss
of electrons; reduction is the gain of
electrons[6].

154
redox potential (Eh.) Oxidation-reduction spirochaetes carried by several species of
potential[16]. tick. Related to Lyme disease, but less
chronic and milder. An occupational
reef. A dissected ridge of rocks totally or disease of some cavers in Texas who
partially submerged in sea water; often of come in contact with the soft tick
organic origin[16]. Ornithodoros turicatae, which carries
Borrelia turicatae and may live in cave
regelation. The melting of ice under entrances[23].
pressure and subsequent freezing[16].
relative humidity of atmosphere. The
rigging. The process of establishing the ratio of absolute humidity to the
belays for SRT or laddering[25]. See also maximum possible saturation at given
single rope technique. conditions[16].

region of dispersed water. The diffuse relative permeability. See permeability,


interface between freshwater and sea relative.
water caused by mixing in a coastal
aquifer[16]. See also transition zone. relict cave. Abandoned, inactive cave
segment, left when the water that formed
regolith. A general term for the layer of it is diverted elsewhere, normally due to
fragmental and unconsolidated rock rejuvenation, continuing cave
material that nearly everywhere forms the development and increasing karstic
surface of the land and overlies or covers maturity. Relict unmodified phreatic
the bedrock[6]. passage segments are abandoned in the
vadose zone, where they may remain dry,
regosol. Dry sandy soil[16]. retaining a typical phreatic morphology,
or be invaded and modified to a keyhole
regression line. A curve fitted to all mean profile by new streams. Ages of relict
values of one variable[16]. caves vary greatly and due to lack of
stream-flow breakdown and speleothem
rejuvenation. A process that interrupts an deposition may become the dominant
active erosional or development cycle and processes. Relict caves are commonly
initiates a new cycle. Rejuvenation is referred to incorrectly as fossil caves[9].
most commonly achieved in the karst and
speleogenesis context by erosional base- relict karst. A karst area that exists within
level changes caused by relative uplift (or the contemporary system, but has been
sea-level fall) or by local water-table removed from the situation in which they
changes caused by downcutting of surface developed, usually as a result of base-
valleys intercepting deeper drainage level changes.
lines[9].
relief. Elevation differences in topography
relapsing fever. One type of Borreliosis, of a land surface[16].
caused by various species of Borrelia

155
relief intensity. The average altitude European literature, the term is reserved
difference between the highest point of a for the re-emergence of a stream that has
basin and the valley bottom[16]. earlier sunk upstream; the term
exsurgence is applied to a stream without
replenishment. The restoration of water in known surface headwaters[10]. Synonyms:
a depleted aquifer[16]. (French.) résurgence; (German.)
Karstquelle; (Greek.) kephalari;
resequent river. A river flowing according (Italian.) risorgenza; (Russian.) vihod
to a consequent drainage pattern but at a karstovih vod; (Spanish.) resurgencia;
lower level than the original slope[16]. (Turkish.) suç2kan; (Yugoslavian.) krs #ki
izvor (vrelo), obrh. See emergence.
reservoir. 1. A recipient for the collection Compare exsurgence.
of small amounts of liquid[16]. 2. A
surface water impoundment[16]. retardation factor. The ratio of the average
linear velocity of ground water to the
reservoir evaporation. Evaporation from velocity of the retarded constituent at
the free surface of impounded water C/Co=0.5[22].
bodies[16].
retention. 1. The detention of water on
reservoir lake. A lake obtained by the surface depressions or in subsurface void
impoundment of water for storage space. 2. the retention of water in pores
purposes[16]. against gravity[16].

residual clay. Clay or sandy clay remaining reverse fault. A fault where relative
on a rock surface after removal of movement of the hanging wall has
calcium carbonate by solution. Compare occurred in the upward direction[16].
terra rossa[10].
Reynolds number. A numerical quantity
residual drawdown. The rise in water level used as an index to characterize the type
in a well in response to cessation of of flow in a hydraulic structure in which
pumping. resistance to motion depends on the
viscosity of the liquid in conjunction with
residual hill. See emergence. the resisting force of inertia. It is the ratio
of inertia forces to viscous forces, and is
residue. Solids remaining after equal to the product of a characteristic
evaporation[16]. velocity of the system (e.g. the mean,
surface, or maximum velocity) and a
resurgence. 1. Re-emergence of karst characteristic linear dimension, such as
ground water a part or all of whose waters diameter or depth, divided by the
are derived from surface inflow into kinematic viscosity of the liquid; all
ponors at higher levels[20]. Point at which expressed in consistent units in order that
an underground stream reaches the the combinations will be dimensionless.
surface and becomes a surface stream. In The number is chiefly applicable to
closed systems of flow, such as pipes or

156
conduits where there is a free water unspent precipitation is active and end
surface, or to bodies fully immersed in the where the water attains too high a content
fluid so the free surface need not be of lime or where water is added. Their
considered[1]. See also Chézy equation; length increases with slope, temperature,
Froude number; Manning equation. and rainfall; eventually reaching 1 m and
more in the tropics, up to 50 cm, and as
rhodamine dye, sulpho rhodamine dye. an exception, 100 cm in the Alps. Their
Orange dyes used in environmental width extends from 1 to 3 cm. They lie
tracing studies that fluoresce red when together in rows with no space between,
held under a black light. See also with sharp intermediary ridges of no more
fluorescent dyes. than 1 cm in height. They increase at all
freely exposed peaks and ridges where
rice paddy. In a cave, a terraced rimstone fresh rainwater alone is at work. The
pool[10]. grooves gradually flatten out to a smooth
surface. Their theory of origin is
ridge. An elongated narrow elevation[16]. unknown.[3]. Synonyms: (German.)
Kannelierungen; solution flutes; and
rift. 1. A cave passage that is relatively high firstkarren.
and narrow. Generally rifts are straight or
nearly so, reflecting that they are Rillenstein. (German.) Microsolution
commonly guided by, and developed grooves and pitting on rock surface[10].
along, vertical or sub-vertical fissures,
joints and faults[9]. 2. A long narrow high rimstone. 1. A wall-shaped deposit around
cave passage controlled by joints or springs and below cascades which
faults[10]. impounds water in pools. Its formation is
due to precipitation from saturated
rift valley. A surface depression due to the bicarbonate waters[20]. 2. Calcareous
formation of graben block faulting[16]. deposits formed around the rims of
overflowing basins, especially in caves[10].
rill. 1. Small solution groove on surface ex- Synonyms: (French.) gour; (German.)
posures of limestone; most common in Sinterbecken; (Greek.) frágma,
arid or semiarid areas[10]. 2. Small epiphliomatos; (Italian.) vasche
channel cut by flowing water in the floor, d’incrostazione; (Russian.) natecnaja
wall, or ceiling of a cave[20]. 3. The plotina; (Spanish.) dique travertínico;
smallest category of stream in any (Turkish.) sedde, kenartaÕ2. See
terrane[20]. Synonyms: (French.) traces de constructive waterfall, rimstone barrage,
ruissellement; (German.) Rinne, Kerbe; rimstone pool.
(Greek.) riákion; (Italian.) solchi di
ruscellamento; (Spanish.) arroyuelo; rimstone barrage, rimstone barrier, rim-
(Turkish.) küçük dere, oluk, ark. stone dam. A wall-shaped deposit that
impounds pools of water in caves, around
Rillenkarren. (German.) Solution flutes springs, and in cascades of streams
that occur only in places where fresh saturated with calcium bicarbonate[10].

157
Synonym: (French.) gour. See also vertical discharge dissipates at the
rimstone; rimstone pool. surface[19].

rimstone pool. A pool sited on a cavern riser. A pipe through which liquid rises in a
floor and enclosed by a rim of carbonate well[16].
reprecipitated from the karst water in the
pool at points locally favoring the release riser pipe. A pipe through which water is
of carbon dioxide[19]. See also rimstone; raised in a production well[16].
rimstone barrage.
rising. 1. The resurgence of an underground
Rinnenkarren. (German.) Solution grooves watercourse, usually at the base margin of
that form where runoff water is collected the calcareous massif, although in the
in streams. If the whole surface is instance of a blind valley the rising has
moistened, the amount of water increases eroded headwards for some distance.
downwards with the result that the Each rising accounts for the collective
grooves are widened and deepened at the discharge of several sinks and in this way
bottom. This distinguishes them from has a relatively high discharge as the sole
other similar forms. When the slope is drainage outlet for a large area. If the
slight they are coiled, but become water issues freely, the rising is said to be
straighter with increasing inclination. free-flowing, but if it issues under
They are sometimes interpreted to be pressure, the terms artesian, forced, or
subcutaneous forms that develop below vauclusian spring are used (after the type-
soil cover, but this is believed to be a rare example of the resurgence of the Sorgue
occurrence. They are found in all river at Vaucluse in France)[19]. 2. An
climates. In arid zones, they exist as issue of water from massive limestone
relics of the past when the climate was which cannot be classed with certainty as
damper[3]. either a resurgence or a spring[20].
Synonyms: (French.) émergence;
ripple mark. A wavelike sculpture on (German.) Ausflußtelle, Karstquelle;
water covered sand surfaces obtained by (Greek.) kephalari; (Italian.) sorgente;
wave action[16]. (Russian.) vihod karstovih vod;
(Spanish.) emergencia; (Turkish.)
rise. (Jamaican.) Spring rising from yüzeye yükseliÕ; (Yugoslavian.) krs#ko
fractures in limestone. Point at which an vrelo, krs#ki izvor, obrh. See also
underground stream comes to the emergence; exsurgence; resurgence.
surface[10].
rising segment. That part of a hydrograph
rise pit. An artesian spring rising up curve that represents a rise in water level
through alluvium accumulated in an as a result of precipitation[16].
earlier surface valley phase and often
fringed, except on the outlet side, by a river. A natural water course through which
minor levee deposited as the force of the runoff reaches the sea[16].

158
river bed. The channel of a river covered rock pinnacle. A tall sharp projection of
by water[16]. bedrock rising from the floor of a cave[10].

river reach. A particular segment of a rock shelter. 1. Shallow cave under an


river[16]. overhanging rock ledge. Many sea caves
are rock shelters. Also found in limestone
river swamp. A swamp in lowlands and other rock types where streams have
adjoining a river[16]. undercut their banks at bends, or where
there has been abrasion by blowing sand.
river system. The system of a main river Common in tropical areas at places where
that includes all its branches and a secondarily hardened layer of limestone
tributaries[16]. forms a ledge that projects over
unindurated limestone[10]. 2. A wide but
river terrace. A level land terrace formed shallow cavity in any rock; in carbonate
in a valley by fluviatile erosion or rock often formed below a noncarbonate
aggradation[16]. layer[20]. Synonyms: (French.) abri sous
roche, balme, baume; (German.)
rivulet. A very small stream[16]. Halbhöhle, weite aber flache Höhle;
(Greek.) kataphyion; (Italian.) riparo
rock. Consolidated mineral matter of sotto roccia, androne; (Spanish.) abrigo,
igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic balma; (Turkish.) kaya si™ina™i;
origin[16]. (Yugoslavian.) potkapina, okapina,
polupeƒina, spodmol, zijalka.
rock fall. See cave breakdown.
rock system. Rocks deposited during a
rock formation. A lithologically or given geological time period[16].
structurally distinct part of the
lithosphere[16]. rock terrace. A terrace formed by erosional
action and denudation[16].
rock-hill. See karren, rill.
rock texture. The geometrical aspects and
rock milk. Less common synonym for arrangement of the component particles of
moonmilk[9]. See moonmilk. a rock[16].

rock pendant. See pendant. rockhole. A shallow, small hole in rock


outcrops, often rounded in form and
rock pillar. A residual isolated mass of holding water after rains. Well known on
bedrock linking the roof or overhanging the Nullarbor Plain, Australia[25].
wall and floor of a cave, in contrast with a
column, which to composed of dripstone rockpile. A heap of blocks in a cave,
or flowstone[10]. See column; pillar. roughly conical or part-conical in
shape[25].

159
rockfall. The falling of bedrock from a cliff roughness. An unevenness of surfaces
or steep slope[16]. giving rise to high flow resistances[16].

romanechite. A cave mineral — roughness coefficient. A coefficient that


BaMn9O16(OH)4[11]. describes roughness of a channel bed[16].

roof crust. Flowstone deposited on ceilings round karren. See Rundkarren.


of caves from thin films of water, which
have crept over the rock from pore or roundness. The degree to which a sand
crack sources[10]. grain approaches spherical shape[16].

roof drainage. Precipitation runoff from rout, to. The action of predicting and
roofs. directing of flood waves through a
channel system[16].
roof pocket. Blind upward extension into
the ceiling of a cave passage, commonly run dry, to. The cessation of flow from a
enlarged by dissolution along a transverse well or spring[16].
fracture, and less extensive than an aven
or chimney[9]. Rundkarren. (German.) 1. Karren forms
with rounded edges; formed by soil water
roof slab. See ceiling slab. than cannot flow freely due to the
tightness of soil pores and thus corrodes
room. A part of a cave system that is wider away all edges and points. The small
than a passage[10]. Synonym: (British.) karren forms disappear, grooves and
chamber. grikes are widened and deepened. One or
two centuries after being laid bare, the
root karren. These are small, relatively flat earlier rounded edge is only just
karren that are formed beneath compact recognizable so round karren and their
soils where roots etch into the remains provide evidence of an earlier
limestone[3]. See also covered karren; soil covering[3]. 2. Karren form
wave karren. comprising rounded channels, commonly
50–500mm deep and wide and separated
root zone. The zone in a soil profile by rounded ridges. Rundkarren are the
penetrated by plant roots[16]. characteristic dissolutional form created
beneath superficial material such as sandy
rope protector. A length of heavy fabric or till, peat or other soil, or beneath a cover
plastic hose placed around a rope where it of plants or lichen[9]. Synonym: round
may rub against rock[25]. karren. See also Karren.

rotating meter. A stream velocity meter runoff. 1. The discharge of water through
that transforms stream momentum into the surface streams of a drainage basin[16].
angular momentum by vanes and rotor[16]. 2. The sum of surface runoff and ground-
water flow that reaches a stream[16].

160
runoff coefficient. A dimensionless
coefficient to estimate runoff as a certain
percentage of storm rainfall[16].

rupture. That stage in the development of a


fracture where instability occurs. It is not
recommended that the term rupture be
used in rock mechanics as a synonym for
fracture.

161
S dissolution of rock salt occurs in buried,
interstratal, situations, and the effects of
sabath. See hardpan, nari. such dissolution at the surface include
subsidence pipes or wider subsidence
safe yield. The amount of water that can be areas, such as those represented by the
safely withdrawn from an aquifer without meres and ‘flashes’ in the Cheshire Plain,
causing undue effects such as aquifer England[9].
depletion.
salt lake. A lake containing high salt
safe yield of stream. The lowest dry concentrations and usually not having any
weather flow of a stream[16]. outflow[16].

safety line. A safety rope attached to a salt tolerance. The resistance of crops to
caver climbing on a ladder or negotiating salt concentration[16].
a difficult situation and held by a man
above[25]. salt weathering. Detachment of particles of
various sizes from a rock surface by the
saline spring. See spring, saline. growth of crystals from salt solutions.
Forms substantial features in Nullarbor
saline water. Water that generally is Plain caves[25].
considered unsuitable for human
consumption or for irrigation because of saltation. Solid matter transported by a
its high content of dissolved solids. stream by the action of leaping movement
Generally expressed as milligrams per over the stream bed. See also saltation
liter (mg/L) of dissolved solids, with load.
35,000 mg/L defined as sea water,
slightly saline is 1,000-3,000 mg/L, saltation load. The solid matter transported
moderately saline is 3,000-10,000 mg/L, by streams[16].
very saline is 10,000-35,000 mg/L, and
brine has more than 35,000 mg/L[22]. saltwater intrusion. The movement of salt
water into fresh water aquifers[22].
salinity stratification. The stratification of
water in estuaries due to salinity-density sampling. The taking of small quantities of
differences[16]. water or porous media for analysis[16].

salt dome. A dome-like intrusion of a sand. Unconsolidated detrital rock


mobile salt core into sedimentary rock[16]. material[16].

salt karst. Areas in which karst landforms sand pipe. See solution pipe.
are developed upon halite or halite-rich
rock, which are generally small and sand stalagmite. A stalagmite formed on
limited to arid regions, are referred to as sand and made of calcite-cemented
salt karst. Except in desert regions, sandstone[10].

162
sandstone caves. Most natural sandstone saturated water. Water which is in
caves are surface river-cut notches at the chemical equilibrium with its enclosing
foot of rock cliffs, or left part way up the media and is thus nonagressive. Water, at
cliff due to later downcutting. This origin about 25"C, in contact with calcite and
accounts for most of the caves once the normal atmosphere, will contain
inhabited by the Pueblo Indians in the approximately 30 to 50 ppm of Ca when
sandstone cliffs of the western USA. True saturated, variations being mainly due to
caves do occur in sandstone and some of differing pH. Determination of the
these appear to be at least partially of saturation point of natural waters is
dissolutional origin. Their existence complex[20]. Synonyms: (French.) eau
probably reflects matrix leaching by saturée; (German.) gesättigtes Waßer;
ground water moving through zones of (Greek.) koresménon ýdor; (Italian.)
especially high primary porosity and acqua satura; (Spanish.) agua saturada;
permeability. Though sandstones with a (Turkish.) doygun su; (Yugoslavian.)
calcite matrix cement are more prone to zasiƒena voda.
such development, even siliceous cement,
which has a very low solubility in water, saturated zone. See phreatic zone and zone
may be removed during a sufficiently of saturation.
long time span. The sandstone caves of
the Sarisarinama Plateau, Venezuela may saturation regime. A flow regime in
be a special case of this type of completely saturated porous medium[16].
development. These include shafts 300m
in diameter and 200m deep, and passages saturation, zone of. See phreatic zone and
up to 500m long. They were probably cut zone of saturation.
in the quartz sandstone by underground
streams, after early leaching of the cement scale. 1. A very thin and flat rock
by hydrothermal solutions, and the shafts fragment[16]. 2. The accumulation of
have been modified by later collapse[9]. precipitated solid material. 3. The ratio of
prototype to model dimensions. 4. The
saprophage. A scavenger feeding on ratio of the length between any two points
decaying organic material[25]. on a map, plan or section to the actual
distance between the same points on the
saturated. 1. Referring to rock with ground or in a cave[25].
water-filled voids. 2. Referring to water
which has dissolved as much limestone or scaling chip. A thin small rather irregular
other karst rock as it can under normal piece of limestone, commonly crumbly,
conditions[25]. which has fallen from the ceiling or wall
of a cave. A form of cave breakdown[10].
saturated flow. Single phase flow when all
voids are filled[16]. Not to be confused scaling factor. The ratio of characteristics
with chemical saturation. of a model to those of the prototype[16].

163
scaling plate. A small flat piece of rock of Klippe; (Greek.) oulí; (Spanish.) ceja (in
rectangular or polygonal shape, that has central Spain); (Turkish.) kireçtaÕ2 dik
fallen to the floor of a cave. A form of yar2.
cave breakdown in thin-bedded impure
limestone cut by closely spaced joints[10]. scats. Animal droppings, an important
source of food in caves[23].
scaling poles. A lightweight metal alloy
pole, in short sections for transport and scavenger. An animal that eats the dead
fastened together where used, to raise a remains and wastes of other animals and
ladder to points inaccessible by plants[23]. See also predator.
climbing[25].
Schichtfugenkarren. (German.) See
scallop. 1. A spoon-shaped hollow carved bedding grike.
in a cave wall, floor or ceiling due to
erosion by eddies in flowing water. scholzite. A cave mineral —
Scallops are commonly closely packed, CaZn2(PO4)2"2H2O[11].
leaving sharp ridges at the intersects.
They range from 10mm to 1m in length scour. The erosive action of running water
and as a general rule the smaller they are in streams[16].
then the faster flowing was the water that
carved them. The scallops are generally screen, screen pipe. Slotted well casing
asymmetrical, with their upstream end that is positioned within the producing
steeper than the downstream end — a horizon to prevent the inflow of detrital
useful indicator of paleo-flow direction in particles into a well while allowing the
abandoned passages[9]. 2. Oval hollow inflow of water. See also well screen.
having an asymmetric cross section along
its main axis. Scallops form patterns on sea cave. 1. A cave cut in any rock type
the walls of caves and in streambeds and where a geological weakness is exploited
may be used to determine direction of by the highly selective erosion power of
flow of turbulent water, since they are wave action. Fingal’s Cave, cut in the
steeper on the upstream side. Commonly basalt of Staffa, Scotland, is a famous
called flutes in America[10]. Synonyms: example. True sea caves should not be
(French.) cannelure, vague d’érosion; confused with dissolutional caves that
(German.) in Fließrichtung des Waßers pre-dated the wave action but were then
ausgezogener Kolk; (Greek.) kílon o- intersected and revealed as a cliff line was
oïthés; (Spanish.) huella de corriente; eroded back such as caves in the Chalk at
(Turkish.) de™irmi, tarak. See also flute. Beachy Head in south-east England. In
some young tropical islands, dissolutional
scar. (Northern England.) Steep rock cliff voids have formed below sea-level in the
in limestone country often indicating mixing zone between fresh and saline
outcrop of relatively bare and massively ground water. Some have subsequently
bedded limestone[20]. Synonyms: been tectonically uplifted into a shoreline
(French.) cicatrice, griffure; (German.) position, to give the misleading

164
impression of having developed due to (German.) Meermühle; (Greek.)
waver action. Caves of this type on the thalassomylos; (Spanish.) molino de
coast of Tongatapu, Tonga, have pools mar; (Turkish.) deniz suyu de™irmeni;
that connect with active dissolutional (Yugoslavian.) morska vodenica. See
cavities below sea-level that might be sea estavelle.
related to the mixing zone[9]. 2. A cave or
cleft in a sea cliff or coastal karst outcrop sea ponor. A submarine opening in karst
eroded by waves or currents or dissolved formations where seawater flows or is
by circulating ground water[20]. drawn by a vacuum into the aquifer[20].
Synonyms: (French.) grotte marine; Synonyms: (French.) perte sous-marine;
(German.) Küstenhöhle, Meereshöhle; (German.) submariner Ponor; (Greek.)
(Greek.) thalassion spelson - paraktion ypothalassia katavothra; (Italian.)
speleon; (Italian.) grotta marina; inghiottitoio sottomarino; (Spanish.)
(Russian.) morskaja pescera; (Spanish.) sumidero marino; (Turkish.) denizalte
cueva marina; (Turkish.) deniz suyutan2; (Yugoslavian.) morska
ma—aras2; (Yugoslavian.) morska vodenica, morski ponor. See ponor.
peƒina (spilja). See cave. Compare nip.
See also littoral zone. sea water intrusion. See saltwater
intrusion.
sea estavelle. Submarine or sea-shore
opening in karst formations which at one sealing-grout, grout. Cement grout
season or period discharges round water injected between a well casing and the
(fresh or brackish) from the aquifer into borehole wall (annular space) to seal off
the sea-bed and at another season or an aquifer from external contamination.
period draws seawater into the aquifer by
a vacuum[20]. Synonyms: (French.) secondary interstices. Voids formed in a
estavelle marine; (German.) submarine rock after the rock had been formed[16].
Estavelle; (Greek.) estavelle thalassia
(estavella); (Italian.) Estavella secondary porosity. Porosity created after
sottomarina, sorgente sottomarina a rock formation due to fracturing,
flusso alterno; (Spanish.) estavela leaching, etc.
marina; (Turkish.) sahil batar ç2kar2.
section. A plot of the shape and details of a
sea level. The average height of the surface cave in a particular intersecting plane,
of the sea used as a datum for called the section plane, which is usually
elevations[16]. vertical[25].

sea-mill. A mill whose motive power is sediment. Material recently deposited by


derived from the flow of water into (or water, ice or wind, or precipitated from
possibly out of) a sea estavelle; the water[25].
classical example is on the Vinaria
Peninsulas, at Argostolion,
Kephallinia[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
moulin de la mer, moulin d’Argostoli;

165
sedimentation. The deposition of solid seepage line. 1. The uppermost level at
disintegrated rock material by water, which flowing water emerges along a
wind, or gravity transport[16]. seepage face[22]. 2. The upper free water
surface of the zone of seepage.
sediment transport. The transport of Synonymous with line of seepage,
eroded rock material by moving water or phreatic line[22].
wind[16].
seepage path. The trajectory of fluid
seep. 1. An area, generally small, where particles in seepage flow[16].
water or oil percolates slowly to the land
surface. See seepage and spring[22]. 2. To seepage rate. The rate of seepage flow[16].
move slowly through small openings of a
porous material[22]. seepage spring; filtration spring. See
spring, seepage.
seepage. 1. The infiltration or percolation of
water through rock or soil to or from the seepage surface. The outflow surface
surface and usually restricted to the very between water level and the intersection
slow movement of ground water. 2. The of the phreatic surface in a well[16].
fluid discharged at a seep[22]. 3. The
amount of fluid discharged at a seep[22]. seepage velocity. See specific discharge.
4. The slow flow of water through a
porous medium. 5. The movement of selenite. Blade-like crystals of gypsum[9].
water in unsaturated soil[16].
self-cleaning capacity. The capacity of a
seepage water. See percolation. river to clean its water of pollutants over a
given length of water course[16].
seepage face. A boundary between the
saturated flow field and the atmosphere selenite needles. A sulfate speleothem
along which ground water discharges, having the shape of a needle that grows
either by evaporation or movement from gypsiferous cave soils[13]. See also
‘downhill’ along the land surface or in a speleothem.
well as a thin film in response to the force
of gravity[22]. semiconfined aquifer. See leaky aquifer.

seepage force. The frictional drag of water sepiolite. A cave mineral —


flowing through voids or interstices in Mg4Si6O15(OH)2"6H2O[11].
rock causing an increase in the
intergranular pressure (i.e. the hydraulic series. A subdivision of rock according to
force per unit volume of rock or soil age at which they were laid down in a
which results from the flow of water and geologic epoch[16].
which acts in the direction of flow).
setting of cement. The process of
hardening of cement[16].

166
settling basin. A basin used for the settling shawl. Simple triangular-shaped curtain[10].
out of solids from suspension[16].
shear plane. A plane along which failure of
settling velocity. The terminal velocity at material occurs by shearing.
which a particle will fall through a
fluid[16]. shear stress. See stress, shear.

sewage. Domestic and municipal wastes[16]. sheet. A thin coating of calcium carbonate
formed on walls, shelves, benches, and
shaft. 1. Vertical, or steeply inclined, terraces by trickling water[10].
sections of a cave passage, of enormously
varied size. The world’s deepest known sheet erosion. Erosion occurring over
shaft is the entrance shaft of Brezno pod widespread tabular sedimentary or
Velbom on the Kanin plateau, Slovenia; it effusive rock[16].
is 501m deep, with no ledges. Much
debate surrounds statistics on the depths sheet jointing. Fracturing of tensile
of fully underground shafts, which may character, mostly in granitoid rocks,
be broken by ledges, but among the parallel to the land surface. Sheet jointing
deepest is a shaft about 430m deep in is developed either by load release or
Italy’s Abisso di Monte Novegno[9]. 2. A temperature differences.
cylindrical tube generally steep sided, that
forms by solution and (or) collapse[10]. 3. shield; cave shield. 1. A thin circular disc
A vertical passage in a cave[10]. 4. A of calcite projecting from a cave wall at
vertical and usually large diameter hole any upward inclination, commonly a
penetrating geologic formations for meter or more in diameter and with the
access of subsurface points[16]. See jama, underside draped with stalactites and
karst shaft. See also pit; pothole curtains. The shield is actually a double
(definition 2.). disc with a thin central crack that acts as
the continuation of a wallrock fracture. It
shake; shakehole. (England; sometimes grows by water moving up the crack
spelled shackhole.) 1. Term used mainly under pressure and depositing calcite on
by cavers to indicate a doline, especially both sides of its outer rim. Shields are
one formed by subsidence. 2. Hole rare, but Lehman Cave, Nevada, has more
formed by solution, subsidence, and than a hundred of them[9]. 2. A
compaction in loose drift or alluvium disk-shaped speleothem standing
overlying beds of limestone[10]. 3. Small edgewise at a high angle[10]. 3. A
subsidence or suffosion doline formed in geologically stable and undisturbed
the glacial till overlying limestones in the continental block[16].
northern Pennies. See jama.
shilin. A type of pinnacle karst formed on
shall sand. Sand containing considerable low plateau of gently dipping limestone;
amounts of clay and shale[16]. it is distinguished by densely packed
pinnacles up to 25m high, fluted by sharp

167
Rillenkarren. Known only in southern sima. (Spanish.) Natural well that has
China, shilin (pronounced sherlin) vertical sides[10].
translates as stone forest[9].
similarity criteria. The conditions
shore. The zone of separation between land indicating under what circumstances a
and moving water[16]. model and prototype are similar[16].

show cave. A cave that has been made simple hydrograph. A single peaked
accessible to the public for guided hydrograph[16].
visits[25].
single outlet. A stream cutting through a
sieve analysis. The determination of the divide (tributary basin) or outflow to the
particle-size distribution of a soil, sea (major basin)[16].
sediment, or rock by measuring the
percentage of the particles that will pass single rope technique. The practice of
through standard sieves of various sizes[6]. climbing up and down ropes with the help
of ascenders and descenders.
sieve opening. The opening between the Abbreviation: SRT.
mesh wires of a sieve[16].
sink; sinkhole. (American.) 1. A point
sieve retention. The material retained on a where a stream or river disappears
sieve[16]. underground. The sinking water may
filter through a choke that excludes
silicate rock. Rock containing silica in cavers, or may flow into an open
predominant proportions[16]. horizontal cave or vertical shaft, and
while active all of these may be termed
silicic acid. H4SiO4 monomeric acid[16]. sinkholes. The flow of water may be very
small, but in full flood many sinkholes
silicon dioxide. Silica (SiO2.) See also swallow flows of tens of cubic meters per
quartz. second. The character of sink water (or
swallet water, as it is commonly termed
Silikatkarren. (German.) Granites and by hydrologists), flowing directly and
related rocks that possess small outcrop rapidly into an open cave, distinguishes it
sculpturing such as rounded runnels. from percolation water[9]. 2. General
They are best developed in the humid terms for closed depressions. They may
tropics such as Malaysia[8]. be basin, funnel, or cylindrical shaped[10].
See also closed depression; doline; ponor;
silt. A grain particle with a diameter that stream sink; sumidero; swallet; swallow
ranges between 0.005 to 0.05 mm[16]. hole.

silting. The deposition of silt in wells, sinkhole plain. (American.) Plain on which
caves, or reservoirs[16]. most of the local relief is due to closed

168
depressions and nearly all drainage is intermittent springs as the Fontestorbes
subterranean[10]. spring in France, and the Ebbing and
Flowing Well at Giggleswick Yorkshire.
sinkhole pond. (American.) Small lake in Both flow in regular pulses when the
closed depression in limestone, due to an siphon is full and working, only to cease
impervious clay floor or to intersection of when the siphon input is broken by air, as
depression with the water table[10]. See the upstream reservoir level drops. Their
doline lake. operation depends on critical flows and
both operate only in favorable weather
sinking river, sinking stream. A small conditions[9]. 2. Gallery in form of an
stream that disappears underground[10]. inverted ‘U’ with water moving only
See also lost river; doline; ponor; sink; under pressure when the siphon has
sinkhole; stream sink; sumidero; swallet; completely filled up; the water head at the
swallow hole. input end being higher than at the
drainage point[20]. 3. In speleology, a cave
sinter. 1. A rock or deposit formed by passage in which the ceiling dips below a
precipitation from natural water, often water surface[10]. Synonyms: (French.)
from a hot or cold spring. Calcareous siphon; (German.) Siphon; (Greek.)
sinter is calcium carbonate and is also siphon; (Italian.) sifone; (Russian.) sifon;
known as tufa, travertine, and onyx (Spanish.) sifon; (Turkish.) sifon;
marble. Siliceous sinter is silica and is (Yugoslavian.) sifon, smrk. See also
also known as geyserite and fiorite[20]. 2. water trap.
A mineral precipitate deposited by a
mineral spring, either hot or cold. site characterization. Means the program
Siliceous sinter, consisting of silica, may of exploration and research, both in the
be called geyserite and fluorite; cal- laboratory and in the field, undertaken to
careous sinter, consisting of calcium establish the geologic conditions and the
carbonate, may be called tufa, travertine, ranges of those parameters relevant to a
and onyx marble[10]. Synonyms: (French.) particular site. Site characterization
concrétion; (German.) Sinter, Kalktuff, includes borings, surface excavations,
Travertin; (Greek.) asvestolithikos excavation of exploratory shafts, limited
toffos; (Italian.) concrezione; (Russian.) subsurface lateral excavations and
otlozenija istocnikov; (Spanish.) borings, and in situ testing at depth
concreción; (Turkish.) kaynak tüfü; needed to determine the suitability of the
(Yugoslavian.) travertin, sedra, bigar, site for a geologic repository, but does not
lehnjak. Related to travertine. include preliminary borings and
geophysical testing needed to decide
siphon. 1. Synonym for a sump, or a section whether site characterization should be
of flooded cave passage, in common undertaken[22].
parlance. True siphons, where water
flows first up and then down are rare in skin effect. The effect of the zone of
caves, as the fractures in limestone tend reduced permeability immediately around
to disrupt the required hydraulics. They
are, however, the origin of such

169
the borehole on transient flow phenomena snow cover; snowpack. The accumulated
in pumping tests[16]. height of snow covering a given area[16].

skryty0 karst, zakryty0 karst. (Russian.) snow line. A line connecting elevations
See closed karst. above which snowpack remains
throughout the year[16].
skylight. A hole in the roof of a cave
passage through to the ground surface. It snow sampler. A tube used for the taking
may be an inlet shaft, a section of of cylindrical snow samples through a
collapse or a breach due to surface snow profile[16].
lowering[9].
snowdrift. Snow accumulation due to wind
slickenside. 1. A polished, commonly transport[16].
striated rock surface within a fault plane,
produced due to friction during fault sod. Root system in a soil[16].
movement. The striae give an indication
of the fault movement direction[9]. 2. A soda straw. 1. Proto-stalactite in which
polished fault plane with grooves due to water flow down through the center of the
relative motion of fault blocks[16]. straw. Upon entering a vadose cave
passage, the change in the partial pressure
sliding. 1. The relative displacement of two of carbon dioxide cause CO2 degassing
bodies along a surface, without loss of and the slow precipitation of CaCO3. The
contact between the bodies. 2. The straw grows downwards as a result; water
downslope movement of rock and earth also flows down the outside of the straw
material[16]. causing the stalactite to grow outwards
around the straw. 2. American name for
sling. A joined loop of rope or tape[25]. straw stalactite[9].

slocker. Local term used in the eastern soddy karst. See subsoil karst.
Mendip Hills, England for a swallet or
stream sink[9]. sodium. A naturally occurring element
(Na).
slope. The inclination of a surface[16].
soil aggregate. Loosely cemented cluster of
slump pit. A hollow in the clay fill of a soil particles[16].
cave floor caused by erosion beneath the
fill[10]. soil air. The air that fills soil and rock
interstices above the zone of saturation[10].
smithsonite. A cave mineral — ZnCO3[11].
soil bulk density. The mass of dry soil per
[16]
snow. Solid crystalline form of water . unit bulk soil[22].

soil-covered karst. See subsoil karst.

170
soil mechanics. The science of dealing with solid matrix. An assembly of
the mechanical properties of soils[16]. interconnected solid mineral grains
surrounded by voids[16].
soil moisture. Subsurface liquid water in
the unsaturated zone expressed as a solid volume. The volume of solid particles
fraction of the total porous medium in a porous sample[16].
volume occupied by water. It is less than
or equal to the porosity[22]. solifluction. The slow flowage of mud
streams in arctic regions.
soil-moisture meter. A device used to
record soil moisture in situ[16]. solubility. The total amount of solute
species that will remain indefinitely in a
soil-moisture suction. The negative pore solution maintained at constant
pressure exerted by capillary forces[16]. temperature and pressure in contact with
the solid crystals from which the solutes
soil profile. A vertical section of the soil were derived[22].
mantle usually with distinguishable soil
horizons[16]. solum. The top layers of a soil profile[16].

soil sample. A sample of soil on which soil solute. The substance present in a solution
properties are to be determined[16]. in the smaller amount. For convenience,
water is generally considered the solvent
soil swelling. The volume increase of soil even in ‘concentrated’ solutions with
due to swelling of unsaturated clay water molecules in the minority[22].
particles when in contact with water[16].
solute transport. The net flux of solute
soil water. See soil moisture. through a hydrogeologic unit controlled
by the flow of subsurface water and
soil-water pressure. The pressure (positive transport mechanisms[22].
or negative), in relation to the external
gas pressure on the soil water, to which a solution. 1. Synonym for dissolution,
solution identical in composition with the except that the product of the solution (or
soil water must be subjected in order to dissolution) process, is also termed a
be in equilibrium through a porous solution, this being a combination of
permeable wall with the soil water[22]. liquid and non-liquid (solid or gaseous)
components that exists as a liquid[9]. 2. A
soilcover. A layer of soil material covering homogeneous mixture of two or more
bedrock[16]. components. In ideal solutions, the
movement of molecules in charged
soilwater zone. The upper portion of the species are independent of each other; in
zone of aeration containing soil water[16]. aqueous solutions charged species interact
even at very low concentrations,
decreasing the activity of the solutes[22].

171
4. The change of matter from a solid or surface expression, filled with debris,
gaseous state to a liquid state by such as sand, clay, rock chips, and
combination with a liquid[10]. 5. The bones[10]. Synonym: sand pipe. See also
result of such change; a liquid geologic organ.
combination of a liquid and a nonliquid
substance[10]. See corrosion. solution runnel. See Rinnenkarren.

solution breccia. A mass of rock composed solution scarp. Escarpment formed by


of angular to rounded fragments of rock more active solution of lower area or by
that have accumulated by solution of corrosional undercutting of the base of the
surrounding or underlying carbonate. See escarpment[10].
also collapse breccia.
solution subsidence. 1. Any subsidence
solution flutes. See rillenkarren. due to solution of underlying rock but
particularly the subsidence of parts of a
solution lake. A lake whose origin is formation into hollows or pockets of an
attributed largely to solution of under- immediately underlying soluble
lying rock. formation[10]. 2. A crater-like doline in
rock other than karst limestone, formed
solution notch. These form wherever by surface subsidence above solutionally
humic soil borders on a very steep or enlarged fissures in a sub-surface karst
vertical limestone surface. The rock limestone stratum[19]. Synonyms:
becomes undercut by water rich in (French.) affaissement par dissolution;
biogenic CO2. In the cone karst of the (German.) Lösungstaschen,
humid tropics, foot caves occur which are Lösungstrichter; (Greek.) katakáthisma
over-sized enlargements of solution thiá thialíseos; (Italian.) subsidenza per
notches[3]. dissoluzione, subsidenza per
suberosione; (Russian.) prosedanie
solution pan. Shallow solution basin or vsledstvie rastvorenija; (Spanish.)
closed depression formed on bare subsidencia por disolucion; (Turkish.)
limestone, generally characterized by flat erime alçal2m2; (Yugoslavian.)
bottom and overhanging sides[10]. The korozivno urus #avanje.
initial form is a closed hollow created by
a humus patch. It may have over-hanging sonar. A system for detecting obstacles by
side walls and a flat floor covered by emitting sound and intercepting and
algae and small pieces or broken rock. interpreting echoes that bounce back. It is
Diameters are rarely greater than 15 cm[3]. used by bats and also by oilbirds and
Synonyms: (German.) Kamenitza or some swiftlets when they fly in the
Kamenica, opferkeßel; (British.) panhole; darkness of caves[23].
(Spanish.) tinajita. See Kamenica.
sorption. 1. A general term used to
solution pipe. A vertical cylindrical hole encompass the process of absorption and
attributable to solution, often without adsorption[22]. 2. All processes which
remove solutes from the fluid phase and

172
concentrate then on the solid phase of the specific retention, water retaining
medium[22]. capacity. The ration of the volume of
water that a given body of rock or soil
sótano. (Spanish for cellar or basement.) will hold against the pull of gravity to the
Term used in Mexico for deep vertical volume of the body itself. It is usually
shafts in limestone, which may or may expressed as a percentage[6].
not lead to a cave[10].
specific storage. The volume of water
spangolite. A cave mineral — released from or taken into storage per
Cu6Al(SO4)(OH)12"3H2O[11]. unit volume of the porous medium per
unit change in head[6].
species (singular or plural). A group of
plants or animals whose members breed specific surface. The ratio of grain particle
naturally only with each other and surface to the volume of grain particles[16].
resemble each other more closely than
they resemble members of any similar specific yield. The ratio of the volume of
group[23]. water that a given mass of saturated rock
or soil will yield by gravity to the volume
specific capacity. The rate of discharge of of that mass. This ratio is stated as a
water from a well per unit of drawdown. percentage[6].
It is commonly expressed as gpm/ft or
m3/day/m and varies with pumping test spelean. Of, pertaining to, or related to
duration[6]. caves[10].

specific conductance. A measure of the speleogen. A secondary cave structure


ability of water to conduct an electrical formed by dissolving, such as a dome pit
current expressed in micromhos per or a scallop[10].
centimeter at 25°C[22].
speleogenesis. Although the term literally
specific discharge. The rate of discharge of means the birth, origin or mode of
ground water per unit area of a porous formation of caves, the full extent of
medium measured at right angle to the speleogenesis includes all the changes
direction of flow. Synonyms: Darcy that take place between the inception and
velocity; seepage velocity. the eventual destruction of an
underground drainage system. It includes
specific drawdown. The amount of development phases during which the
drawdown per unit discharge in a well[16]. active drainage voids are too small to be
considered caves as normally defined, as
specific gravity. The weight of a particular well as phases when the cave no longer
volume of water that a given body of rock functions as a drain, is enlarging only by
or soil will hold against the pull of gravity collapse and, eventually, is being totally
to the volume of the body itself. It is removed[9].
usually expressed as a percentage[6].

173
speleogenetics. The totality of all processes speleothem. 1. General term for all cave
which effect the creation and mineral deposits, embracing all
development of natural underground stalactites, flowstone, flowers, etc. Most
cavities. These comprise corrosion, are formed of calcite whose precipitation
erosion, and incasion, but are also processes, related mainly to carbon
influenced by lithology, tectonics, and dioxide levels in the water, are the direct
climate. reverse of the dissolution of limestone.
Climatic influences on dissolution
speleologist. 1. A scientist engaged in the processes ensure that speleothems are
study and exploration of caves, their generally larger and more abundant in the
environment, and their biota[10]. 2. caves of the wet tropics, which are
Explorer of caves, caverns, and other typified by thick stalactites and massive
underground openings especially in karst. stalagmites, in contrast to the straws and
Caver and potholer are slang terms[20]. flowstones of alpine caves[9]. 2. General
Synonyms: (French.) spéléologue; term for stalactites, stalagmites,
(German.) Höhlenforscher, Speläologe; moonmilk, helictites, and other secondary
(Greek.) speleologos; (Italian.) mineral deposits in caves and caverns[20].
speleologo; (Russian.) speleolog; 3. A secondary mineral deposit formed in
(Spanish.) espeleólogo; (Turkish.) caves, such as stalactite or stalagmite[10].
speleolo, ma™arabilimci; (Yugoslavian.) Synonyms: (French.) concrétions
speleolog, spiljar, jamar. cavernicoles; (German.)
Höhlenformation; (Greek.)
speleology. 1. Scientific study of caves, speleolithoma; (Italian.) concrezione;
including aspects of sciences, such as (Russian.) natecnia obrazovanija;
geomorphology, geology, hydrology, (Spanish.) concreción (estalagmítica o
chemistry and biology, and also the many estalactítica); (Turkish.) magara
techniques of cave exploration[9]. 2. The oluÕu™u; (Yugoslavian.) sige. See also
scientific study, exploration, and cave formation.
description of caves, cave organisms, and
related features[10]. 3. The branch of spelunker. See caver.
knowledge dealing with the study and
exploration of underground caves[20]. 4. spelunking. See caving.
Study, exploration, and description of
caves, caverns, and other underground spencerite. A cave mineral —
cavities in karst and rarely in lavas or Zn4(PO4)2(OH)2"3H2O[11].
ice[20]. Synonyms: (French.) spéléologie;
(German.) Höhlenforschung, sphalerite. A cave mineral — ZnS[11].
Höhlenkunde; (Greek.) speleologhia;
(Italian.) speleologia; (Russian.) spillway. A device that allows for the
speleologija; (Spanish.) espeleología; escape of excess water[16].
(Turkish.) speleoloji, ma™arabilim;
(Yugoslavian.) speleologija, Spitzkarren. (German.) These are isolated
peƒinarstvo, jamarstvo. projections that may be of a beehive form

174
or may be sharply pointed and tend to lie de esporas; (Turkish.) spor izleyici. See
between grikes and the strike ribs of isotope tracer, Lycopodium spores.
bedding grikes[8]. See also grike; bedding
grike; clint. spring. 1. Point where underground water
emerges on to the surface, not exclusive
Spitzkegelkarst. (German.) Tropical karst to limestone, but generally larger in
topography containing sharply pointed cavernous rocks. The image of a trickle
residual limestone hills[10]. of water springing from a hillside hardly
matches that of a vast cave pouring forth
splash cup. The shallow concavity in the a river, but both are called springs.
top of a stalagmite[10]. Among the world’s largest is the Dumanli
spring, Turkey, with a mean flow of over
spongework. 1. Randomly shaped cavities 50 cubic meters per second. Springs may
created by undirected phreatic dissolution be exsurgences or resurgences, depending
in a massive, essentially homogeneous upon the source of their water, and also
limestone. Fine examples occur in may be vauclusian in character[9]. 2. A
Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico[9]. 2. An natural outflow of water (or other liquid
arrangement of partitioned depressions or gas) at the surface of the land or into
found in cave ceilings and walls, and surface water. In some usages. `spring’ is
attributed to the differential solution of restricted to the water which outflows, in
submerged karst limestones. Larger and other usages the word can refer to the
more isolated hollows are known as water, the outlet, or to the locality of the
‘pockets’[19]. outflow[20]. 3. Any natural discharge of
water from rock or soil onto the surface of
spongework cave pattern. A complex the land or into a body of surface water[10].
maze cave pattern consisting of irregular 4. A discrete place where ground water
interconnecting cavities with intricate flows naturally from a rock or the soil
perforation of the rock. The cavities may onto the land surface or into a body of
be large or small. All spongework surface water[22]. Synonyms: (French.)
patterns are non-branching in source; (German.) Quelle; (Greek.) pighi;
development and contain profuse (Italian.) sorgente; (Russian.) istocnik;
travertine. In map view, these caves often (Spanish.) fuente; (Turkish.) kynak. See
appear as an irregular ink blot. also seep.

spontaneous potential. See self-potential. spring, artesian. Water flowing under


artesian pressure with the potentiometric
spore tracer. Dyes spores of the fern, surface above the land surface[16].
Lycopodium clavatum, used to label
ground water in karstic terranes. spring, barrier. A subsurface barrier
Synonyms: (French.) traceur marqueur; forcing water to rise to ground surface
(German.) Sporenmarkierung; (Greek.) and discharge as a spring[16].
lycopodium ichnithetis; (Italian.)
tracciante vegetale; (Spanish.) trazador

175
spring, boiling. 1. An uncommon type of spring, ebb-and-flow; ebbing-and-flowing
vauclusian spring, where the flow is large well. A spring (flowing well or borehole)
enough in a constricted site to form exhibiting periodic variation in volume of
turbulence on the surface of the flow; this variation, which may be regular
resurgence pool[9]. 2. (Jamaican.) A. or irregular, is often attributed in karst
variable-discharge artesian spring in regions to siphonic action. Ebb-and-flow
which hydrostatic pressure is great springs differ from intermittent springs
enough to cause a turbulent or even because the latter can be related to
fountain-like discharge[19]. See also blue seasonal variations in rainfall[20].
hole. Synonyms: (French.) source intermittente;
(German.) intermittierende Quelle;
spring, boundary. A spring located at the (Greek.) pighí ambótidos kai palírrias;
boundary between a permeable formation (Italian.) sorgente carsica intermittente;
overlying an impermeable substratum[16]. (Russian.) sifonnij istocnik; (Spanish.)
manatial intermittente, fuente
spring, cave. A spring rising in a cave[10]. intermittente; (Turkish.) so™ultkan kaynak;
(Yugoslavian.) periodicni ixvor, periodic
spring, contact. A spring formed at the #ni izvir. See also spring, periodic. Related
intersection of the land surface and a to intermittent spring.
permeable water-bearing formation
overlying a less permeable formation[16]. spring, drowned. A spring which continues
to function as a spring after it has been
spring, depression. A spring originating at submerged by rising sea or lake levels or
the intersection of the land surface with by subsidence of the ground[20].
the water table[16]. Synonyms: (French.) source sous-
aquatique, source noyé; (German.)
spring, drowned. A spring which continues submarine Quelle, sublacustre Quelle;
to function as a spring after it has become (Greek.) vethisthesa pigi; (Italian.)
submerged by rising sea or lake levels or sorgente sommersa; (Russian.)
by subsidence of the ground[20]. subakvaljnij istoƒnik; (Spanish.) fuente
Synonyms: (French.) source sous- subacuática; (Turkish.) batik kaynak;
aquatique, source noyé; (German.) (Yugoslavian.) potopljen izvor, potopljeno
submarine Quelle, sublacustre Quelle; vrelo, potopljen izvir (vrelec). Related to
(Greek.) vethisthesa pigi; (Italian.) sublacustrine spring, submarine spring.
sorgente sommersa; (Russian.)
subakvaljnij istoƒnik; (Spanish.) fuente spring, fracture. A spring with its outflow
subacuática; (Turkish.) bat2k kaynak; openings consisting of fractures[16].
(Yugoslavian.) potopljen izvor,
potopljeno vrelo, potopljen izvir (vrelec). spring, fullflow. A spring that is the sole
Related to spring, sublacustrine, spring, drain of an area.
submarine.
spring, gravity. A spring flowing as a
result of gravity[16].

176
spring head alcove. The arcuate cliff spring, overflow. A spring that is part of a
surrounding many risings, formed by distributary but which drains only at the
progressive headward sapping and cavern level above base flow.
collapse. The rapidity of their formation
is increased by the cliff-line which spring, perched karst. The emergence of
frequently exists already at the lower underground water some where above the
margin of the karst area[19]. basement of a calcareous massif caused
by the interbedding of an impermeable or
spring, intermittent. 1. A karst spring with intermittent perched water table by
a pulsating flow, caused by the presence restricting the vertical movement of
within the rock of cavities and siphons water, which instead issues from the
fed by a subterranean watercourse. When contact[19].
the cavity is full, the siphon is complete
and causes a pulse of water to issue from spring, perennial. Stream flowing above
the spring. This diminishes or empties land surface throughout the year[16].
the water supply in the cavity and no
further water is discharged from the spring, periodic. A spring that shows
spring until the system is reactivated. The variation in flow that is either regular or
discharge is said to be a reciprocating irregular. It may be due to siphonic
spring when a reduced level of flow is action[20]. Synonyms: (French.) source
maintained between pulses[19]. 2. A périodique; (German.) Periodische
spring flowing at irregular intervals[16]. Quelle, intermittierende Quelle; (Greek.)
Synonyms: (French.) source temporaire, periodhiki piyi; (Italian.) sorgente
source intermittente; (German.) periodica; (Spanish.) fuente periódica;
intermittierende Quelle, periodische (Turkish.) periyodik kaynak;
Quelle; (Greek.) thialepousa pege; (Yugoslavian.) periodic#ini izvor (izvir).
(Italian.) sorgente temporanea, sorgente See ebb-and-flow spring. Related to
intermittente; (Russian.) intermittent spring.
peremezajuscijsja istoƒnik; (Spanish.)
fuente intermitente, fuente temporal; spring, saline. Spring water having a high
(Turkish.) kesintili kaynak; salt content[16].
(Yugoslavian.) periodicko vrelo,
potajnica, obdobni izvir. Related to spring, seepage. A spring where surface
spring, ebb-and-flow; spring, periodic. discharge occurs from numerous small
openings[16]. Synonym: filtration spring.
spring, karst. A spring emerging from
karstified limestone[10]. See also spring, subaqueous. A spring that
emergence; exsurgence; resurgence; rise. discharges below the surface of a water
body (e.g. ocean, lake, river, or stream)[16].
spring, medicinal. A spring with healing
properties[16]. spring, sublacustrine. A spring emerging
in the bed of a lake predominantly in karst
spring, mineral. A spring having a high areas[20]. Synonyms: (French.) source
mineral content.

177
sous lacustre; (German.) spring, valley. Springs occurring at valley
Unterwaßerquelle, sublacustre Quelle; sides where the water table intersects the
(Greek.) ypovrichios pighi; (Italian.) land surface.
sorgente sublacustre; (Russian.) istocnik
na dne ozera; (Spanish.) fuente spring, vauclusian; rising, vauclusian. 1.
sublacustre; (Turkish.) gölalti kayna™2. A type of rising or spring where direct
See spring, drowned. drainage from the phreas flows up a
flooded cave passage under pressure to
spring, submarine. 1. A spring emerging emerge in daylight. The term is best
in a sea or lagoon predominantly in karst applied where water rises from a vertical
terranes. This is a descriptive term or very steep bedrock passage. Such
generally corresponding to the genetic risings are named after the Fontaine de
term `drowned spring[20].’ 2. Large Vaucluse in southern France. The River
offshore emergence, generally from Sorgue rises from the Fontaine with a
cavernous limestone, but in some areas mean flow of 26 cubic meters per second.
from beds of lava[10]. Synonyms: Its upper part is steeply inclined, but a
(French.) source sous marine; (German.) depth it is vertical. A diver has reached a
Untermeeresquelle, Grundquelle, depth of –200m, and a robot reached
submarine Quelle; (Greek.) ypothalassia –243m, below which the flooded shaft
pighi; (Italian.) sorgente sottomarina; continues[9]. 2. Large karst spring (name
(Russian.) submarinnij istocnik; by Fournet, after la Sorgue en Vaucluse,
(Spanish.) fuente submarina; (Turkish.) France) characterized by a stream surging
denizalti kayna™2; (Yugoslavian.) vrulja. up as from a siphon. Also applied to
See spring, drowned. karst springs with artesian
characteristics[20]. 3. A large spring or
spring, thermal. A spring with temperature exsurgence of an underground river, gen-
of the spring water above the average erally from limestone, that varies greatly
temperature of superficial rock[16]. in output and is impenetrable except with
diving apparatus[10]. Synonym:
spring, tubular. A spring issuing from a (American.) gushing spring; (French.)
round channel such as a tubular source vauclusienne, bouillidou (South
passage[16]. of France); (German.) Vauclusequelle,
(Riesenquelle); (Greek.)
spring, unconformity. A spring issuing at kephalari/vauclusiana pighi; (Italian.)
the contact of an aquifer with an sorgente valchiusana; (Russian.)
unconformity. vokljuz; (Spanish.) fuente vauclusiana,
ojo, heryidero; (Turkish.) bas2nçcl2
spring, underflow. A spring that is part of kaynak; (Yugoslavian.) voklisko vrelo,
a distributary but which is at lower obrh. See also gushing spring.
elevation and preferentially drains base
flow. Between it and an overflow spring squeeze. A narrow passage or opening just
there may be several underflow-overflow passable with effort. Differs from
springs. flattener in that there is little spare space
in any direction[10].

178
staff gage. A fixed graduated scale[16]. common speleothem. Though the single
7m long stalactite in Ireland’s Poll an
stage. Water surface elevation at a point Ionain is not the world’s longest, it is
along a stream, river, lake, etc., above an uniquely spectacular against the dark
arbitrary datum[16]. chamber walls[9]. 2. Conical deposit of
calcite or aragonite often with a hollow
stage-discharge relation. See rating curve. center hanging from the roof of a cave or
cavern formed by precipitation of
stage hydrograph. The elevation of stage carbonate due to escape of CO2 from
plotted against time[16]. hanging water beads and to evaporation
of part of the water[20]. 3. A cylindrical or
stage record. Stage discharge relations conical deposit of minerals, generally
presented in tabulated form[16]. calcite, formed by dripping water,
hanging from the roof of a cave, generally
stagmalite. A general term including sta- having a hollow tube at its center. From
lactite and stalagmite. Superseded by Greek word meaning exude drops[10].
dripstone[10]. Synonyms: (French.) stalactite;
(German.) Tropfstein, Stalaktit; (Greek.)
stagnation point. The foremost point on a stalaktitis; (Italian.) stalattite; (Russian.)
streamline dividing an area of pumping stalaktit; (Spanish.) estalactita;
depression from a zone of influence in a (Turkish.) sark2t (Yugoslavian.) mosur,
tilted aquifer being pumped by a well[16]. viseci kapnik, stalaktit.

stalactite. 1. Speleothem, generally of stalagmite. 1. Speleothem, normally of


calcite, formed by dripping water and calcite, formed by upward growth from a
hanging from a cave roof. Stalactites cave floor, and therefore the complement
embrace an enormous variety of sizes and of a stalactite. Stalagmites form when
shapes. They form where percolation dripwater that is still saturated falls from
water seeps from a cave ceiling and a cave roof or stalactite and, when or after
becomes saturated with respect to calcite it lands, loses more carbon dioxide to the
due to loss of carbon dioxide into the cave air, causing precipitation of calcite.
cave air. Calcite is precipitated round the They vary in size and shape, from tall thin
rim of the water droplet and continued towers to wide domes that grade into
deposition creates a hollow tubular straw flowstone, the main controls being drip
stalactite (soda straw). Additional rate and height, and saturation levels of
deposition of calcite on the outside of the the water. The stalagmites of Aven
initial cylinder creates an ordinary Armand, France, are of the multiple
tapering stalactite. Almost infinite splash-cup variety while being notably
variation in shape may be influenced by slender and up to 30m tall. Spectacularly
changes in water flow, cave air chemistry, massive stalagmites occur in the Carlsbad
evaporation, temperature or dissolved and Cottonwood Caves of New Mexico[9].
impurities, and by crystal growth 2. Columnar or partly irregular deposit of
blocking flow paths. They are the most calcite or aragonite on the floor of a cave
or cavern formed by the precipitation of

179
carbonates due to escape of CO2 from steady flow. Flow where the velocity at a
water dripping from the roof[20]. 3. A point remains constant with respect to
deposit of calcium carbonate rising from time[16].
the floor of a limestone cave, formed by
precipitation from a bicarbonate solution steam hole. An opening from a cavity
through loss of CO2. The water drops on through which a current of air charged
the stalagmite from above. From Greek with vapor blows upwards and condenses
word meaning drip[10]. Synonyms: at the orifice to appear as steam. Such
(French.) stalagmite; (German.) openings are an occasional feature in
Bodenzapfen, Stalagmit; (Greek.) karst terranes[20]. Synonyms: (French.)
stalagmitis; (Italian.) stalagmite; puits à vapeur, puits fumant; (German.)
(Russian.) stalagmit; (Spanish.) Dampfschlot; (Greek.) atmotrypa;
estalagmita; (Turkish.) dikit; (Spanish.) cavidad fumante; (Turkish.)
(Yugoslavian.) óulak, stoje…i kapnik, buhar deli™i.
stalagmit. See also dripstone.
steep. The property of inclination with a
stalagmite, capillary. See capillary very steep gradient[16].
stalagmite.
steephead. A deeply cut valley, generally
standard deviation. A measure of short, terminating at its upslope end in an
variability of the square of individual amphitheater, at the foot of which a
deviations from their mean[16]. stream may emerge[10].

standing line. A rope of approximately stegamite. A speleothem projecting


0.4375 inches or 11 mm in diameter that upwards from a cave floor in the form of
is tied to a solid anchor and is used for a calcite ridge. A medial crack appears
descending and ascending[13]. See also along the top of the ridge where water is
ascender; knot; mechanical ascender; thought to be forced from the speleothem
prusik knot; prusiking. under capillary action[25].

state of solution. The degree to which a stemflow. Rain water flowing down the
mineral or rock has gone into solution[16]. stem of plants[16].

static head. See head, static. stereo aerial photographs. Aerial


photographs shot in sequence over a
static water level. The level of water in a landscape so that when adjoining photos
well that is not being affected by are viewed at the proper interpupillary
withdrawal of ground water[6]. spacing, features may be seen in three-
dimensions.
station. A survey point in a chain of such
points in a survey[25]. stereogram. A block diagram or three-
dimensional diagram[16].

180
stilling well. A well connected to a flowing water a confined hydrogeologic unit
stream or spring through a bottom conduit releases from or takes into storage per
permitting elevation measures to be taken unit subsurface area of the hydrogeologic
in quiescent water[16]. unit per unit change in head.

stomatal transpiration. The transpiration storage gage. A precipitation gage for


by escape of water through pores collecting and storing the total amount of
(stomata) of leaves[16]. inflowing water to be read at long
intervals[16].
stone forest. See shilin.
storage in depressions. Water retention in
stoping. The upward migration of the surface depressions[16].
ceiling in a passage or room by the action
of slabs falling[13]. storativity. See storage coefficient.

storage capacity. 1. The ability of an storm. 1. A disturbance of average


aquifer to store water[16]. 2. The capacity meteorological conditions and usually
of rivers to store water in their own connected with precipitation[16]. 2. A
channel[16]. period of precipitation over a specific
drainage basin[16].
storage coefficient. 1. The volume of water
an aquifer releases from or takes into strath terrace. An erosional remnant of an
storage per unit surface area of the aquifer elevated broad river valley[16].
per unit change in head[22]. In a confined
aquifer, the water is derived from storage stratification. 1. A depositional structure of
with decline in head resulting from an sedimentary rocks in beds and layers[16].
expansion of the water and compression 2. The separation into non-discrete layers
of the aquifer. Similarly, water added to of water as a result of chemical, saline, or
storage with a rise in head is temperature differences which in turn
accommodated partly by compression of create density differences in the water.
the water and partly by expansion of the
aquifer. In an unconfined aquifer, the stratigraphic column. A graphic means of
amount of water so released or accepted representing the various rock types of an
is generally negligible compared to the area in a geologic report[13].
amount involved in gravity drainage or
filling of pores, hence, in an unconfined stratigraphic sequence. The sequence of
aquifer, the storage coefficient is virtually rock types in an area[13].
equal to the specific yield. 2. The volume
of water an aquifer releases from or takes stratum. A sedimentary bed or layer[16].
into storage per unit surface area of the
aquifer per unit change in head (virtually straw stalactite; straw. 1. The simplest
equal to the specific yield in an form of stalactite — a fragile, thin walled
unconfined aquifer.) 3. The volume of tube, normally of calcite, which is the

181
diameter of the drops of water that hang See also doline; ponor; sink; sinkhole;
from its end and continue its growth. sumidero; swallet; swallow hole.
Though only about5mm in diameter,
straw stalactites (or straws) may grow to stream tube. 1. A cave passage completely
great length in clusters of spectacularly filled, now or in the past, with fast-
dense profusion, more commonly in caves moving water and whose ceiling and
of cooler climates. The length record walls normally show scallops[10]. 2. The
may be held by a 6m straw in Easter imaginary space formed between two
Cave, Western Australia. Also known as adjacent streamlines in which flow is
straw stalactite or soda straw[9]. 2. Thin constant (assuming steady flow
tubular stalactite, generally less than a conditions). Synonyms: (French.)
centimeter in diameter and of very great conduite forcée; (German.)
length (examples as long as 4 meters); Druckflußrohr; (Greek.) ypóghios
also called soda straw[10]. See also soda síranx; (Italian.) condotta forzata;
straw; stalactite. (Spanish.) tubo (o conducto) fréatico;
(Turkish.) akarsu mecras2. See conduit,
stream. A body of flowing water[16]. pressure flow tube.

stream bed. The bottom of a stream streamline. A curve that is everywhere


covered by water[16]. tangent to the specific discharge vector
and indicates the direction of flow at
stream development. The ratio of actual every point in a flow domain.
tortuous stream length between two
points on a straight line connecting these streamtube. A cave passage completely
points[16]. filled, or formerly filled, with fast-moving
water and whose ceiling and walls
stream flow. The total runoff confined in a normally possess scallops[10].
stream and its’ channel[16].
strength. The maximum stress which a
stream frequency. Channel frequency; the material can resist without failing for any
number of stream segments per unit given type of loading.
area[16].
stress. The force acting across a given
stream order. The hierarchic order of surface element divided by the area of the
stream segments according to element.
tributaries[16].
stress, applied. The downward stress
stream profile. The elevation of the main imposed at an aquifer boundary. It differs
stream bed as a function of distance from from effective stress in that it defines only
outflow. the external stress tending to compact a
deposit rather than the grain-to-grain
stream sink, streamsink. Point at which a stress at any depth within a compacting
surface stream sinks into the ground[10]. deposit[21].

182
stress, effective. Stress (pressure) that is deposit has been subjected, and which it
borne by and transmitted through the can withstand without undergoing
grain-to-grain contacts of a deposit, and additional permanent deformation. Stress
thus affects its porosity or void ratio and changes in the range less than the
other physical properties. In one- preconsolidation stress produce elastic
dimensional compression, effective stress deformations of small magnitude. In fine-
is the average grain-to-grain load per unit grained materials, stress increases beyond
area in a plane normal to the applied the preconsolidation stress produce much
stress. At any given depth, the effective larger deformations that are principally
stress is the weight (per unit area) of inelastic (nonrecoverable)[21].
sediments and moisture above the water
table, plus the submerged weight (per unit stress, seepage. When water flows through
area) of sediments between the water a porous medium, force is transferred
table and the specified depth, plus or from the water to the medium by viscous
minus the seepage stress (hydrodynamic friction. The force transferred to the
drag) produced by downward or upward medium is equal to the loss of hydraulic
components, respectively, of water head. This force, called seepage force, is
movement through the saturated exerted in the direction of flow[21].
sediments above the specified depth.
Thus, effective stress may be regarded as stress, shear. Stress directed parallel
the algebraic sum of the two body (tangential) to the surface element across
stresses, gravitational stress, and seepage which it acts.
stress. Effective stress mal also be
regarded as the difference between strike. The direction or azimuth of a
geostatic and neutral stress[21]. horizontal line in the plane of an inclined
stratum, joint, cleavage plane or other
stress, geostatic. The total load per unit planar feature within a rock mass.
area of sediments and water above some
plane of reference. It is the sum of (1) the strike valley. A valley following the strike
effective stress, and (2) the neutral of underlying strata[16].
stress[21].
structure. One of the larger features of a
stress, neutral. Fluid pressure exerted rock mass (e.g., bedding, foliation,
equally in all directions at a point in a jointing, cleavage, brecciation, etc.). Also
saturated deposit by the head of water. the sum total of such features as
Neutral pressure is transmitted to the base contrasted with texture. In a broader
of the deposit through the pore water, and sense, it refers to the structural features of
does not have a measurable influence on an area such as anticlines or synclines.
the void ratio or on any other mechanical
property of the deposits[21]. structural factor. Features modifying or
interrupting the continuity of rock
stress, preconsolidation. The maximum types[16].
antecedent effective stress to which a

183
structural geology. That part of geology Sub-conduits are an essential part of a
dealing with structures formed in continuum of void sizes that extends
rocks[16]. between microscopic discontinuities and
the largest tube passages[9].
struga. (Slavic.) A corridor formed along a
bedding plane in karst country[10]. subcutaneous drain. Discrete percolation
drains contained within the epikarst zone
stygobite. An aquatic troglobite[23]. and leading to the transitions zone. See
also epikarst zone; subcutaneous flow;
stygophile. An aquatic troglophile[23]. subcutaneous zone; transition zone.

stygoxene. An aquatic trogloxene[23]. subcutaneous flow. Lateral and vertical


flow that occurs within the epikarst zone
stylolite. An irregular suture-like boundary under saturated conditions. Lateral flow
developed along some bedding planes in distances can exceed hundreds of meters
limestones, probably caused by and several meters per day while vertical
dissolution under pressure and possibly within discrete percolation drains
related in some cases to subsequent (subcutaneous drains) may allow flow
inception of speleogenesis[9[. rates in excess of several hundred meters
per hour. See also epikarst zone;
subaqueous spring. See spring, subcutaneous drain; subcutaneous zone;
subaqueous. transition zone.

subaqueous karst. A karst terrane that is subcutaneous zone. Synonym for epikarst
covered by a discrete body of water[17]. zone. See epikarstic zone.
See also drowned karst; subfluvial karst;
submarine karst. subfluvial karst. Karst topography
developed beneath a river. See also
subartesian well. An artesian well with subaqueous karst.
insufficient head to raise water above the
land surface[16]. subjacent karst. Karst landscape in non-
carbonate rocks due to presence of
sub-conduit. Any void, whether of tectonic karstified rocks beneath the surface
or dissolutional origin, that is smaller formation[10]. Synonyms: (French.) karst
than the accepted defined size of a sous-jacent; (German.) unterirdisches
conduit. Sub-conduits originate under Karstphänomen; (Greek.) ypokímenon
inception conditions and enlarge during karst; (Russian.) pokritij karst; (Spanish.)
gestation, but many fail to achieve larger karst subyacente; (Turkish.) gizli karst;
dimensions when drainage later becomes (Yugoslavian.) pokriven krs # (kras). See
concentrated along preferred routes. In also interstratal karst.
most cases, however, they will continue
to function as part of the micro-fissure, or subkutan karst. See subsoil karst.
percolation, system within the rock mass.

184
sublacustrine spring. See spring, dissolution or local collapse of caves.
sublacustrine. The type of subsidence doline formed by
downwashing of the soil cover is better
sublimation. The direct conversion of described as a suffosion doline[9]. Also
water from its solid state to the vapor known as sinkhole.
phase[16].
subsidence/head-decline ratio. The ratio
submarine karst. Karst topography between land subsidence and hydraulic
developed below the tidal zone. See also head decline in the coarse-grained beds of
subaqueous karst. the compacting aquifer system[21].

submarine spring. See spring, submarine. subsoil karst. Karst covered by soil,
usually residual soil[17]. Synonyms:
subpermafrost karst. Underground karst (British.) soddy karst; (French.) karst vert,
in areas of permafrost. Karstification is karst subcutané; (German.) bedeckter
due to the solvent action of subpermafrost Karst, bodenbedeckter Karst, grükarst,
(or intrapermafrost) water[20]. Synonyms: subkutan karst; (Greek.) ypethaphikon
(French.) karst sous-permafrost; karst; (Russian.) zadernovanny0 karst;
(German.) Pseudokarst; (Greek.) karst (Spanish.) karst subcutáneo; (Turkish.)
ypomonímou paghetoú; (Italian.) toprakalt2 karst2; (Yugoslavian.)
carsismo di subpermafrost; (Russian.) pokriveni krs# (kras). See also covered
podmerzlonij karst, mezmerzlotnij karst; karst.
(Spanish.) karst de subpermafrost, karst
de intrapermafrost; (Turkish.) don alan2 subsurface divide. See underground
yeralt2 karst2. See permafrost karst. See divide.
also intrapermafrost karst.
subsurface flow. See subsurface runoff.
subpermafrost water. Ground water below
the permafrost[16]. subsurface runoff, storm seepage,
subsurface flow, subsurface storm flow.
subsequent river. 1. A river flowing along Runoff due to infiltrated precipitation
the strike of a weak formation[16]. 2. A moving laterally under the surface.
tributary to a consequent river[16].
subsurface water. All water that occurs
subsidence. Lowering of the surface of the below the land surface[22].
ground because of removal of support.
Caused in karst areas by subterranean subterranean. Beneath the land surface[16].
solution or collapse of caves[10].
subterranean cut-off. The diversion
subsidence doline. A closed karst underground of a surface watercourse
depression formed due to local beneath a surface meander neck, marked
subsidence of the surface rocks and/or by a swallow hole on the upstream side
soil into cavities formed by widespread

185
and a spring on the downstream side[19]. high solubility they may not survive
See also stream piracy. subsequent dissolution by ground water.
Even if they survive subsequent
subterranean river, subterranean stream. dissolution by ground water. Even if they
Underground stream of flowing water in survive at depth, they tend to dissolve as
caves and caverns, but not necessarily they are raised nearer to the surface
large[10]. See also underground stream. following uplift and erosion of
overburden. Removal of sulfates by
suction. See moisture tension. dissolution may contribute to the early
establishment of secondary permeability
suffosion. Undermining through removal of in limestone sequences. Sulfate solutions
sediment by mechanical and corrosional have a limited corrosional effect upon
action of underground water[20]. calcium carbonate, but may also be
Synonyms: (French.) soutirage karstique; oxidized to produce sulphuric acid, which
(German.) Anzapfung; (Greek.) is highly corrosive of limestone.
ypoghion thiavrosis; (Russian.)
suffozija; (Spanish.) sufosión; (Turkish.) sulfate-reduction karst. Karst topography
karstik yeralt2suyu kaz2mas2; developed in the subsurface where
(Yugoslavian.) sufozija. solution of bedrock is chiefly a result of
sulfate reduction by petroleum
suffosion doline. More accurate synonym hydrocarbons aided by bacterial processes
for a type of subsidence doline, indicating that oxidize hydrocarbons to yield carbon
formation by the suffosion, or dioxide. Little, if any of the water that
downwashing, of the soil into an dissolves the rock is meteoric[17].
underlying fissure[9]. Also known as
shakehole. sulfide. A mineral compound characterized
by the linkage of sulfur with a metal or
sulfate. A mineral compound characterized semimetal, such as galena, PbS, or pyrite,
by the sulfate radical SO42–. Anhydrous FeS2[1]. See also gypsum and pyrite.
sulfates, such as barite, BaSO4, have
divalent cations linked to the sulfate sulfide minerals. Minerals that are
radical; hydrous and basic sulfates, such composed of one or more metals
as gypsum, CaSO4.2H2O, contain water combined with sulphur. The most
molecules[1]. common is pyrite. They are believed to
be produced by the metabolic action of
sulfate minerals. Minerals containing the micro-organisms, and are found in many
SO42– radical, formed by precipitation sedimentary rocks, usually in trace
from water. The most common are the amounts.
anhydrous and hydrated calcium sulfates,
anhydrite (CaSO4) and gypsum sumidero. (Spanish.) 1. A swallow hole. 2.
(CaSO4.2H2O). Sulfates are deposited as In Latin America, any closed depression
a generally minor component of most caused by solution[10].
carbonate successions, but due to their

186
summation curve. A curve of cumulated superimposed valley. A valley established
values[16]. on the land surface with a pattern that is
independent of the underlying rock
summit. The highest point of a structure.
physiographic feature[16].
supersaturated. Referring to water that has
sump. 1. In caves a sump is a section of more limestone or other karst rock in
flooded passage. This may be a perched solution than the maximum
sump, probably quite short, within a corresponding to normal conditions[25].
vadose cave and created by a local reverse
passage gradient. Alternatively it may be supersaturation. A liquid that is over
a major feature, where a cave passage saturated with respect to whatever
descends below the regional water table particles may be contained in the fluid.
into the phreas, as is common at the lower
end of many cave systems. Some short suprapermafrost karst. Surface karst in
sumps can be dived without the use of areas or permafrost. Karstification is due
breathing apparatus, but most are to the solvent action of suprapermafrost
restricted to exploration by cave divers. water[20]. Synonyms: (French.) karst
Logistics are a barrier to endless sump suprapermafrost; (German.)
penetrations, but some have now been Pseudokarst; (Greek.) karst epi
explored for many kilometers in length, monímou paghetoú; (Italian.) carsismo
notable in Cocklebiddy Cave, Australia, superficiale di permafrost; (Russian.)
the Nohoch Nah Chich and other great nadmerzlotnij karst; (Spanish.) karst de
flooded systems in Mexico’s Yucatan, suprapermafrost; (Turkish.) don alan2
and behind Keld Head in Yorkshire[9]. 2. yüzey karst2. See also permafrost karst.
A pool of underground water or point on
an underground stream that has a suprapermafrost water. Ground water
submerged extension, the nature of which above permafrost[16].
has not been determined[10]. 3. A place
where the ceiling of a passage drops to surf karren. Surf karren form along marine
and below water level in a cave, leaving limestone and dolomite coasts where the
no air space with the cave passage surf sprays water onto abrasion surfaces
continuing underwater[13]. 4. A water that lie slightly above normal sea level.
trap. They are a result of corrosion caused by
the mixing of sea- and rainwater, but do
sulfuric acid. An acid (H2SO4). not exist under the sea surface as seawater
is not limestone-corrosive. Beyond the
splashwater zone the karren are much less
sunken pan. An evaporation pan buried in sharp[3].
the ground for equal elevation of the
water surface with the ground surface[16]. surfactant. A substance capable of
reducing the surface tension of a liquid in
which it is dissolved. Used in air-based

187
drilling fluids to produce foam, and surface water. Water obtained from surface
during well development to disaggregate supplies[16].
clays[6]. Surfactants are now being
considered for the purpose of aquifer survey. In caving, the measurement of
remediation by helping disperse directions and distances between survey
immiscible contaminants. points and of cave details from them, and
the plotting of cave plans and sections
surface detention. Sheet flow of water in from these measurements either
overland flow before a channel is graphically or after computation of
reached[16]. coordinates[25].

surface entry. An opening immediately at susica. Yugoslavian term for intermittent


the land surface that permits infiltration to stream or river in a karst terrane in which
take place[16]. the water diverts and soaks gradually into
the karst ground-water system[20]. See
surface film. A monomolecular film of also intermittent river.
organic compounds forming on water or
grain surfaces[16]. suspended load. Detrital matter being
transported in suspension by a moving
surface mapping. The topographic and stream[16].
geodetic mapping of an area[16].
suspended matter. Solid matter small
[16]
surface mine. Strip mine . enough to be held in suspension by
moving or stagnant water[16].
surface retention. Water held on land
surface[16]. suspended water. See vadose water.

surface runoff. That part of runoff sustained yield. The rate at which water
traveling over the ground surface and can be withdrawn from an aquifer without
through channels[16]. depleting the supply[16].

surface seepage. Surface discharge of suunto clinometer®. A small, handheld


ground water not important enough to pendulum clinometer commonly used in
form a rivulet[16]. cave survey[25].

surface spreading. A method of artificial suunto compass®. A small, handheld


recharge of water to an aquifer by sighting compass commonly used in cave
spreading on a surface[16]. survey[25].

surface tension. The free specific surface swale. A marshy depression or depression
energy occurring at the interface between in a ground moraine[16].
a liquid and its own vapor phase[16].

188
swallet, swallow hole. (British.) A place syngenite. A cave mineral —
where water disappears underground in a K2Ca(SO4)2"H2O[11].
limestone region. A swallow hole
generally implies water loss in a closed synoptic network. A network of first order
depression or blind valley, whereas a stations permitting the regular observation
swallet may refer to water loss into of weather for all points at the same
alluvium at a streambed, even though time[16].
there is no depression[10]. See also doline;
ponor; sink; sinkhole; stream sink; synthetic unit hydrograph. A unit
sumidero. hydrograph constructed by assuming the
reaction of a drainage basin will be based
swelling. The volume increase due to intake on its physical characteristics[16].
and absorption of water, especially
clays[16].

swelling rate. The time rate of volume


increase[16].

swirlhole. A hole in rock in a streambed


eroded by eddying water, with or without
sand or pebble tools[25].

synclinal valley. A valley following the


axis of a syncline[16].

syncline. Downfolded stratum[16].

syngenetic karst. 1. Karst developed


contemporaneously with the lithification
of the formation, as in eolian calcarenite
where lithification and karstification of
dune sands may proceed
simultaneously[10]. 2. Karst landforms
that developed upon young, porous
carbonate rocks, such as aeolianites, as
they underwent lithification[9].
Synonyms: (French.) karst syngénétique;
(German.) Syngenetischer Karst;
(Greek.) synegeticon karst; (Italian.)
carsismo singenetico; (Spanish.) karst
singenético; (Turkish.) eÕtürümlü karst;
(Yugoslavian.) singenetski krs# (kras).

189
T (Turkish.) tektonik karst; (Yugoslavian.)
#, tektokras, tektokarst.
tektokrs
table mountain. A flat topped mountain
(mesa)[16]. tectonic. Pertaining to structural features
due to the deformation of the crust[16].
tafoni. Roughly hemispherical hollows
weathered in rock either at the surface or tectonic cave. A cave formed by some form
in caves[25]. of ground movement. The most common
is due to landsliding in a jointed rock,
tagging. Affixing a metal tag bearing a cave leaving an open fissure cave parallel to
number near its entrance, normally by means the line of the hillside along the back of
of rock drill and a small nail[25]. the slipped block. Tectonic caves can
form in any rock, as they do not depend
tailwater. The lower course of a river with on dissolution. Well known examples are
respect to a given point of structure[16]. the windypit fissures of north-east
Yorkshire, England some of which are
talus cone. A cone-like collection of hundreds of meters long and up to 60m
disintegrated rock material originating deep[9].
from and adjacent to a steeper slope[16].
tectonic valley. A valley formed by tectonic
tape. 1. In survey, a graduated tape of steel, forces[16].
plastic, wire-reinforced cloth, or
fibreglass, used for measuring distance. temperature efficiency. An efficiency
2. Strips of woven synthetic fibre used for factor defined by Thornthwaite for
slings and waist bands[25]. different climates. See also
Thornthwaite.
taranakite. A cave mineral —
KAl3(PO4)3(OH)"9H2O[11]. temperature log. A recording curve of
ground-water temperature in a well[16].
tarbuttite. A cave mineral —
Zn2(PO4)(OH)[11]. temporary hardness. See carbonate
hardness.
taylorite. A cave mineral —
(K,NH4)2SO4[11]. tenorite. A cave mineral — CuO[11].

tectokarst. Karst formed under the strong tensiometer. A device used to measure the
influence of tectonic disturbances. The moisture tension in the unsaturated
term is indefinite and its use is not zone[22].
generally recommended[20]. Synonyms:
(French.) tectokarst; (German.) terminal moraine. A glacial deposit
Tektonischer Karst; (Greek.) tektonikon accumulated in front of a glacier[16].
karst; (Russian.) karst zon tektoniceskih
razlomov; (Spanish.) tectokarst;

190
terra rossa. 1. Reddish-brown soil texture. The arrangement in space of the
mantling limestone bedrock; may be components of a rock body and of the
residual in some places[10]. 2. Insoluble boundaries between these components[16].
residuum of a reddish-brown color left
behind when carbonate rocks weather thalweg. A line of maximum depth of
under Mediterranean or allied climatical stream cross section[16].
conditions[20]. Synonyms: (French.) terra
rossa; (German.) Kalksteinroterde; Theis equation. The nonequilibrium
(Greek.) erythroghi; (Italian.) terra equation of radial flow towards a well[16].
rossa; (Russian.) terra-rossa; (Spanish.)
terra rossa; (Turkish.) k2z2l toprak, thenardite. A cave mineral — Na2SO4[11].
terrarosa; (Yugoslavian.) crvenica,
jerina, jerovica. thermal spring. See spring, thermal.

terrace. A flat surface bounded by steplike thermal stratification. The stratification of


steep slopes[16]. water in reservoirs due to thermal-density
differences[16].
terraced flowstone. Shallow rimstone
pools on outward-sloping walls[10]. See thermocline. An intermediate layer in
also rimstone barrage; rimstone barrier; stratified water[16].
rimstone dam; constructive waterfall.
thermocouple. A temperature measuring
terrain. An area with some specific device based on the proportionality
characteristics. Reserved for surficial between thermoelectric current and
features only. Contrast with terrane. temperature difference between
thermojunctions[16].
terrane. An area with some specific
characteristics[16]. Includes both surface thermokarst. 1. A pitted periglacial or
and subsurface features. Contrast with former periglacial surface in superficial
terrain. deposits, produced by settling or caving
of the ground after melting of ground
terrestrial. Living on land. Not to be ice[10]. 2. A term applied to topographic
confused with "epigean." Terrestrial cave depressions in karstic terranes resulting
animals include blind beetles, rnillipedes, from the thawing of ice. See cryokarst.
spiders, and crickets[23]. See also aquatic.
thermokarst pit. Steep-walled depression
tertiary porosity. See porosity, tertiary. formed by thermokarst processes[10].

test hole. A hole to test the depth of ground thickness. The perpendicular distance
water, water quality, or geological between bounding surfaces such as
conditions[16]. bedding or foliation planes of a rock.

191
thief zone. The zone through which drilling tidal river. A river strongly influenced and
fluid is lost into a formation through the subject to tidal currents[16].
borehole wall[16].
tidewell. See spring, ebb-and-flow.
Thiem equation. The equation that
describes steady-state equilibrium radial tightest packing. An arrangement of
flow into a well[16]. particles allowing only minimum void
space a unit cell of a sample[16].
thixotropy. The property of a gel to
become fluid under application of shear till. Predominantly unsorted and unstratified
stresses[16]. drift, generally unconsolidated, deposited
directly by and underneath a glacier
thread. A natural hole through a rope, tape without subsequent reworking by
or wire can be passed to create an meltwater, and consisting of a
anchor[25]. heterogeneous mixture of clay, silt, sand,
gravel, and boulders ranging widely in
threshold. That part of a cave system to size and shape[6].
which light penetrates in some degree[10].
tilted aquifer. A dipping aquifer[16].
threshold saturation. Saturation below
which no flow occurs[16]. time base. The sum of storm duration time
and concentration time in a
through cave. Cave through which a hydrograph[16].
stream runs from entrance to exit or
formerly did so[10]. Synonym: (German). time-drawdown curve. A plot of
Durchgangshöhle. drawdown variation with time[16].

throughfall. A part of precipitation that time lag. The time elapsed between the
reaches ground by falling through onset of a certain event and the reaction to
vegetative cover[16]. this event[16].

throw. The vertical displacement of stratum time of concentration. The time required
along a fault plane[16]. for surface runoff produced in the farthest
part of a basin to reach a concentration
thrust; thrust fault. A generally gently point under consideration[16].
dipping or subhorizontal fault plane
where the relative movement has been time of rise. The time between the first
essentially horizontal, with one rock arrival of runoff and arrival of the peak
sequence being pushed across and above flow[16].
another. Some cave development in the
Traligill area of north-west Scotland has tinajita. (Spanish.) See solution pan.
been guided by thrust planes[9].

192
tinticite. A cave mineral — total dissolved solids, TDS. 1. The total
Fe6(PO4)4(OH)6"7H2O[11]. concentration of dissolved constituents in
solution, usually expressed in milligrams
toadstone. Local term in the Peak District, per liter[22]. 2. The total concentration of
England for lavas, tuffs and igneous dissolved material in water [as] ordinarily
intrusions within the local Carboniferous determined from the weight of the dry
carbonate sequence. residue remaining after evaporation of the
volatile portion of an aliquot of the water
topofil. A mechanical cave survey device sample[22].
that uses a roll of thread and a distance
counter, a protractor to measure total hydraulic head. See head, total.
inclination and a compass to measure the
bearing[25]. total pore space. The sum of
interconnected and noninterconnected
topographic divide. A crest line dividing pore space[16].
one drainage basin from another[16]. See
also divide. total runoff. The sum of all components of
runoff into a stream[16].
topographic map. A map representing the
land surface via the use of contour lines total soil-water potential. The sum of the
which are lines of equal elevation on the energy-related components of a soil-water
earth’s surface. Synonym: topo map. system; i.e., the sum of the gravitational,
matric, and osmotic components[22].
topography. The physical features of a
geographical area[16]. tourelle. (French.) A little tower; applied to
small flat-topped buttes of limestone in
topsoil. The topmost portion of a soil karst areas. Contrasted with pitons,
profile[16]. which have pointed tops, and with
coupoles, which have rounded tops[10].
torca. (Spanish.) Large closed depression,
more or less circular; a doline[10]. tower karst, towerkarst, turmkarst. 1. A
spectacular variety of karst landscape
torricellian chamber. A submerged air-- dominated by steep or vertical sided
filled chamber of a cave at a pressure limestone towers each 30–300m high. By
below atmospheric pressure, sealed by far the most extensive and best developed
water, having an air-water surface above tower karst is the Guangxi province of
that of adjacent free air-water surfaces[10]. southern China. Towers originate as
residual cones and are then steepened by
tortuosity. The ratio of actual length of water table undercutting from surround
pore channel to over all length of sample. alluviated plains. Tectonic uplift matched
The sinuosity of actual flow path in a by karst erosion then increases tower
porous medium[16]. heights, but if uplift exceeds surface
lowering the towers are raised to hillside

193
locations and the landscape is rejuvenated of dye and measuring its concentration
to form a new generation of dolines and after mixing[25]. Consists of either the
cone karst. Many towers are riddled with tracer-dilution method or the tracer-
relict caves at high levels, and with active velocity method (salt-velocity method).
caves through their bases[9]. 2. Karst Synonym: dye gaging.
topography characterized by isolated
residual limestone hills displaying traction load. See bed load.
numerous shapes (e.g., cone shaped,
steep-sided) separated by areas of allu- tranquil flow. Open channel flow with
vium or other detrital sand; towers are Froude number smaller than unity[16].
generally forest-covered hills, and many
have flat tops. They may form as isolated transgression. The spreading of the sea
hills or in groups. 3. A type of karst over level areas[16].
topography, common in the tropics, in
which the residual hills rise in steep-sided transient. A pulse dampened oscillation or
but flat-topped mounds (resembling other temporary phenomena occurring in
towers) from intervening depressions or a system prior to reaching a steady-state
dolinas (sinkholes)[20]. Synonyms: condition[22]. See flow, unsteady.
(French.) karst à tourelles, karst à tours;
(German.) Turmkarst, Kegelkarst; transition zone. 1. Portion of bedrock in
(Italian.) carsismo con forme residuali a the vadose zone that is between the
torre; (Spanish.) karst de torres; epikarst zone and the phreatic zone, is
(Turkish.) kuleli karst. See also cone relatively waterless and unfractured, but
karst; cupola karst; pinnacle karst; is locally breached by discrete percolation
fengcong; fenglin. points (vadose shafts.) 2. The zone in
which the properties of two adjacent units
trace. A short length of wire with fasteners change gradually (freshwater/saltwater).
used for attaching ladders and ropes to an See also epikarst zone; subcutaneous
anchor[25]. drain; subcutaneous flow; subcutaneous
zone; vadose caves; vadose shafts.
tracers. Materials, such as chemicals, dyes,
radioactive salts, and light insoluble transit time; travel time. The travel time
solids introduced into underground waters of a sonic impulse through a given length
to determine points of egress of the water of rock[16].
and its velocity[10].
transmission capacity. The property of a
tracer-flow method. A method of porous medium to conduct fluid[16].
determining flow velocities and directions
by introducing tracers or indicators into transmissibility coefficient. The use of the
ground water[16]. term transmissibility has been replaced by
transmissivity[22]. See transmissivity.
tracer gaging. Determining stream
discharge by inserting a known quantity

194
transmissivity. The rate at which water of traverse. 1. The commonest form of cave
the prevailing kinematic viscosity is survey in which direction, distance and
transmitted through a unit width of an vertical angle between successive points
aquifer under a unit hydraulic gradient[6]. are measured. 2. A way along ledges
Though spoken of as a property of the above the floor of a cave. 3. To move
aquifer, it embodies the saturated along such a way[25].
thickness and the properties of the
contained liquid as well. It is equal to an travertine. 1. Hard calcareous mineral
integration of the hydraulic conductivities deposited by flowing water, that is the
across the saturated part of the aquifer same as the calcareous variety of sinter
perpendicular to the flow paths[22]. and comparable to the softer tufa. The
term is normally used only for deposits
transpiration. The process by which water formed outside caves, where plants and
absorbed by plants, usually through the algae cause the precipitation by extracting
roots, is evaporated into the atmosphere carbon dioxide from the water and give
from the plant surface[6]. travertine its porous structure. Travertine
forms most commonly on waterfalls that
transpiration depth. The depth of water build up like gour dams. Famous
consumed annually by plants[16]. examples include those at Plitvice in
Croatia, Dunn’s River Falls in Jamaica,
transpiration ratio. The ratio of water and, largest of all, Band-I-Amir in
weight transpired to weight of dry matter Afghanistan[9]. 2. Calcium carbonate,
produced[16]. CaCO3, light in color and generally
concretionary and compact, deposited
transport. Conveyance of solutes and from solution in ground and surface
particulates in flow systems. See also waters. Extremely porous or cellular
solute transport; particulate transport[22]. varieties are known as calcareous tufa,
calcareous sinter, or spring deposit.
transportational process. All processes Compact banded varieties, capable of
contributing to the transport of eroded taking a polish, are called onyx marble or
material[16]. cave onyx[10]. 3. Generally compact
calcium carbonate rock formed by
transverse permeability. See permeability, precipitation of soluble bicarbonates
transverse. when equilibrium is lost due to changes in
temperature and chemical characteristics.
transverse wave. A wave generated by Soft, porous variety is called calcareous
shearing displacement where wave tufa[20]. Synonyms: (French.) travertin;
motion is perpendicular to direction of (German.) Kalktuff, Sinter, Travertin;
propagation[16]. (Greek.) travertinis/asvestolithikos
toffos; (Italian.) travertino; (Russian.)
trap. See siphon; sump; water trap. travertin; (Spanish.) travertino, toba;
(Turkish.) traverten, sutaÕ2;
(Yugoslavian.) sedra, travertin, bigar,
lehnjak. Related to sinter and tufa.

195
travertine terraces. Terraces and related tritium. A short-lived isotope of hydrogen
forms covered or composed of carbonates (8 = 12.43 y) that is directly incorporated
precipitated from water. Such into the water molecule as 1H3HO or
1
precipitation is usually from saturated HTO [24]. Commonly used for tracing
bicarbonate waters (as from karst) when ground water and for age dating of ground
they enter a zone of turbulent flow[20]. water[16]. See also radioisotope;
Synonyms: (French.) terrasse de radioactive tracer; tracers.
travertin; (German.) Travertin-Terraße;
(Greek.) anavathmos travertinou; Trittkarren. (German.) These are best
(Italian.) spianata di travertino; described as heel-print karren because
(Spanish.) terrazas travertínicas; they resemble the imprint of a heel. They
(Turkish.) sutaÕ2 traçalar2; are nearly connected with subhorizontal,
(Yugoslavian.) slapovi. See also adjacent, flat plains and migrate upslope
constructive waterfall. by cutting ‘steps’ through the process of
retrogressive corrosion. The semi-
trellis. A geometrical arrangement of an circular form is preserved by the
interwoven pattern[16]. ‘horseshoe falls effect’ which
concentrates the main amount of water on
trellis drainage pattern. A arrangement of the innermost part of the heel-print. At
stream and tributaries in a rectangular the upper rim the water gain speed. The
fashion[16]. thickness of the film of water is indirectly
proportional to the speed of the flow. A
tributary. A stream contributing its waters higher rate of flow results in a greater
to another stream of higher order[16]. effectiveness of fresh precipitation added
to the flow on the ground, but it also
tributary river. A smaller stream entering causes the diffusion of atmospheric CO2
and contributing to the flow of a larger and more extensive corrosion. Most
river[16]. Trittkarren originate at the rim of a grike
lying below and have moved upward to
tributary valley. A less important valley the surface through retrogressive
joining a larger valley[16]. corrosion. At the base of steep slopes
where snow collects, nearly funnel-
tri-cam. A metalic devise placed in holes or shaped Trittkarren appear and are of
cracks for use as an anchor[25]. Compare subnival origin. They are common in the
chock Alps[3]. Synonym: heel-print karren.

triple point. A point at which the solid, trough. A depression usually on the land
liquid, and vapor phases are in surface, but can be found to occur in
equilibrium[16]. ground water.

tripoly. A very fine grained silica sand[16]. troglobite. 1. An animal living permanently
underground in the dark zone of caves
and only accidentally leaving it[10]. 2. A

196
creature that is fully adapted to life in true velocity. Ground-water flow velocity
total darkness and can only complete its in porous interstice or cavernous
life cycle underground[13]. 3. A creature opening[16].
that lives permanently underground
beyond the daylight zone of a cave. True North. The direction of the
Many troglobitic species are adapted in geographical north pole at a place[25].
some way to living in a totally dark
environment. Synonyms: (French.) truncation. A horizontal or vertical clean
troglobie; (German.) Troglobiont; cut through a topographic feature[16].
(Greek.) troglothitis; (Italian.) troglobio;
(Russian.) troglobiont; (Spanish.) tsingi. Type of pinnacle karst found on
troglobio; (Turkish.) troglobit, kör bal2k. limestone in Madagascar[9].

troglodyte. A human cave-dweller[10]. tube, lava. See lava cave.


Examples would be early ‘cave man’.
tubular passage; tube; tube passage. 1.
troglomorphy. The physical characteristics Cave passage formed by approximately
of a troglobite or stygobite; e.g., reduced equal dissolution all round when full of
eyes and pigment, elongated appendages, flowing water within the phreas. Relict
well-developed tactile and olfactory tubes, abandoned as the water table was
organs, etc[23]. lowered, are common in old caves, and
may be partially filled by sediment,
troglophile. 1. "Cave lover." An animal breakdown or stalagmite, or entrenched to
that can complete its life cycle in caves, form keyhole passages. Tube sizes range
but may also do so in suitable habitats to over 15m in diameter, but the larger
outside caves[23]. ones are rarely of uniform section. Peak
Cavern in Derbyshire is well known for
troglophobe. An animal or person unable its fine circular phreatic tubes. Some of
physically or psychologically to enter the the trunk passages of Mammoth Cave,
dark zone of a cave or other underground Kentucky, are spectacular tubes of
area[10]. elliptical section, formed by dissolution
rates that were higher along the bedding
trogloxene. 1. "Cave visitor." An animal than across[9]. 2. These are nearly
that habitually enters caves, but must horizontal cave passages (tunnels) with
return periodically to the surface for round or elliptical cross sections and are
certain of its living requirements, usually either straight or winding. At Mammoth
food[23]. Cave they vary in size up to 30 feet high
and nearly 100 feet wide. They are
trophic levels. Feeding levels in a food formed while completely filled with
chain, such as producers, herbivores, and flowing water. Whereas they are typically
so on. Most food chains include a wider than high as a result of dissolution
maximum of four or five trophic levels[23]. along horizontal cracks and bedding-
plane partings, they may also form as

197
high, narrow, straight fissures along appropriate. See also laminar flow;
major vertical or near vertical fractures[15]. Reynolds Number; turbulent threshold.
See also canyon passage; keyhole
passage; passage; vertical shaft. turbulent threshold. The limiting value of
sub-conduit size, below which water flow
tubular spring. See spring, tubular. is essentially laminar and above which
water flow includes a significant turbulent
tufa. Soft, porous concretions of carbonate component. Sub-conduit diameters
reprecipitated from saturated karst water, between 5mm and 15mm have been
often around plants[22]. See also sinter; suggested as the minimum for turbulent
travertine. flow, but the value depends upon a
variety of factors, including the flow
tunnel. See natural tunnel. velocity; at low flow velocities laminar
flow conditions may persist in tubes up to
turanite. A cave mineral — 500mm in diameter[9]. See also laminar
Cu5(VO4)2(OH)4[11]. flow; Reynolds Number; turbulent flow.

turbidity. A diminishing of light turlough. (Irish.) 1. A karst depression that


penetration through a water sample due to may be dry or flooded according to season
suspended and colloidal materials. or prevailing weather conditions; derived
from the Irish term for ‘dry lake’.
turbulence. An irregular motion of fluid Oscillations in the general ground-water
particles in an inertia dominated flow level, including variations in response to
regimen[16]. local or more distant tidal effects are the
probable mechanism for water level
turbulent flow. 1. Type of flow that begins changes in the true turloughs. Effects that
to develop in a dissolutional sub-conduit appear similar can be produced by high
as its diameter increases to the point surface runoff into a closed depression
where differences between flow velocity with only restricted capacity for the
at the bounding wall (slowed due to drainage to sink underground[9]. 2. A
friction and adhesion) and the maximum depression in limestone or in glacial drift
velocity in the tube’s center are sufficient over limestone that is liable to flood
to cause development of eddies within the either from excess surface runoff or from
flowing water[9]. 2. The flow condition in rising ground water. From the Irish
which inertial forces predominate over words tuar loch, meaning dry lake[10].
viscous forces and in which head loss is
not linearly related to velocity[22]. It is Turmkarst. (German.) See tower karst.
typical of flow in surface-water bodies
and subsurface conduits in karst terranes twilight zone. The area of a cave where
provided that the conduits have a light penetrating through the entrance is
minimum diameter of approximately sufficient to permit human vision[23]. See
2–5mm although some research has also zonation.
suggested that 5–15 mm may be more

198
type curve. A plot of the theoretical well
function verses the lower limit of the
integral in Theis’ graphical solution
method[16]. Numerous variations of
Theis’ original work have been developed
for which type curves readily exist.

tyuyamunite. A cave mineral —


Ca(UO2)2(VO4)2"nH2O[11].

199
U underdrainage. The drainage from under a
hydrologic feature such as a river, barrier,
unaltered rock. Rock that has not lake, etc.
experienced physical or chemical
erosion[16]. underfit stream. A small stream that flows
along a cave passage that was enlarged to
unconfined. A condition in which the its current size by an earlier, larger
upper surface of the zone of saturation stream. Commonly underfit streams are
forms a water table under atmospheric found flowing under vadose conditions
pressure[22]. along the floors of drained phreatic tubes,
long abandoned by the phreatic flow that
unconfined aquifer. An aquifer where the enlarged them. Underfit streams may also
water table is exposed to the atmosphere occur if the major flow in a vadose
through openings in the overlying streamway is captured to lower levels by
materials. the opening of a new shaft. The main
flow no longer uses the downstream
unconfined flow. Ground-water flow passages, leaving any tributaries to
displaying a free surface[16]. amalgamate as an underfit stream[9].

unconfined water. Ground water vertically underflow. Deep phreatic flow within an
in direct contact with the atmosphere[16]. aquifer, along flow lines that are largely
unrelated to the more obvious flow at
unconformity. A fossil land surface higher levels. Underflow drainage may
representing the absence of a sequence of be slower than that in shallower systems,
sediments[16]. and may travel towards more distant
and/or unrelated springs[9].
unconformity spring. See spring,
unconformity. underground divide. Subsurface
watershed between two catchment areas
uncontaminated zone. In electrical logging in karst; often with incongruent with the
practice, the zone around a borehole that surface topography of the area[20].
has not become contaminated by mud Synonyms: (French.) ligne de partage des
filtrate[16]. eaux souterraines, limit souterrainne;
(German.) unterirdische Waßerscheide;
undercut karren. These are Rinnenkarren (Greek.) ypoghios ythroketis; (Italian.)
(solution grooves) that have been spartiacque sotterraneo; (Russian.)
transformed by humus filling and by their vodorazdel podzemnih vod; (Spanish.)
side walls having been hollowed under by divisoria subterránea; (Turkish.) yeralt2
su bölümü; (Yugoslavian.) podzemna
biogenic CO2[3].
razvodnica, podzemna vododelnica. See
also subsurface divide.
underflow spring. See spring, underflow.

200
underground river, underground stream. unsaturated coefficient of permeability.
Water flowing in channels through caves, The apparent coefficient of permeability
caverns, and larger galleries in karst in flow through an unsaturated
terranes[20]. Synonyms: (French.) rivière medium[16].
souterraine; (German.) Höhlenfluß,
unterirdischer Fluß; (Greek.) ypoghios unsaturated flow. 1. The movement of
roe, potamos; (Italian.) fiume water in a porous medium in which the
sotterraneo; (Russian.) podzemnaja pore spaces are not filled to capacity with
reka; (Spanish.) río subterráneo; water[22]. 2. Two phase flow through
(Turkish.) yeralt2 nehri, deresi; pores only partially filled with water and
(Yugoslavian.) podzemni tok, podzemna air[16].
rijka, podzemna reka. See subterranean
river. unsaturated zone. See vadose zone and
zone of aeration.
underground waters. All subsurface
waters[16]. Not to be confused with unsteady flow. Flow with a finite local
ground water which specifically refers to acceleration term and streamlines that
water within the phreatic zone. vary with time[16].

uniaxial (unconfined) compression. unterirdische karst. See interstratal karst.


Compression caused by the application of
normal stress in a single direction. upconing. Process by which saline water
underlying freshwater in an aquifer rises
uniaxial state of stress. The state of stress upward into the freshwater zone as a
in which two of the three principles result of pumping water from the
stresses are zero. freshwater zone[22].

uniform flow. Flow with constant velocity uplift. 1. The hydrostatic force of water
at all points and at all times[16]. exerted on or underneath a structure
tending to cause a displacement of the
uniformity coefficient. A numerical structure. 2. The relative upward
expression of the variety in particle sizes movement of a part of the earth’s crust[16].
in mixed natural soils, defined as the ratio
of the sieve size on which 40% (by upper confining bed. An impermeable bed
weight) of the material is retained to the overlying an aquifer[16].
sieve size on which 90% of the material is
retained[6]. upside-down channel. See ceiling channel.

unit-hydrograph. A hypothetical discharge urkarst. See buried karst.


hydrograph for a given point resulting
from unit rainfall which produces unit uvala. 1. A multi-coned closed depression;
runoff[16]. now little-used term of Croat, Serb or
Bulgarian origin. The term was

201
introduced to describe features assumed
to be the second step in a 3-stage process
of polje development, in which dolines
were supposed to coalesce into uvalas.
This mechanism is no longer accepted
and the term uvala has fallen into
disuse[9]. 2. Large closed depression
formed by the coalescence of several
dolines which have enlarged towards each
other. Typically, the floor is irregular,
being a combination of doline floors and
degraded slopes of the individual
hollows[19]. 3. A Yugoslavian term for an
elongated closed depression in karst that
is commonly dry or with periodical small
sinking streams or inundations. They are
generally a few hundred meters long and
may be considered as a small polje[20].
Synonyms: (American.) compound
doline; (French.) cuvala; (German.)
Uvala; (Greek.) ouvala; (Italian.)
avvalamento carsico, uvala; (Russian.)
uvala; (Spanish.) uvala; (Turkish.)
koyak; kokurdan; (Yugoslavian.) draga.
See also canyon; karst valley; valley sink.
Related to polje.

202
V deep to hundreds and over a thousand of
feet deep. They commonly occur as
vadose cave. 1. A cave that underwent most complexes. A drain hole is usually
of its development above the water table. evident at their base. See also vertical
Within the vadose zone, drainage is free- shaft.
flowing under gravity, and cave passages
therefore have air above any water vadose water. 1. That part of the
surface. The gravitational control of underground water in a karst limestone
vadose flow means that all vadose cave which circulates freely under gravity
passages drain downslope, they exist in above the level of saturation - the vadose
the upper part of a karst aquifer, and they zone. Caves formed by flowing water are
ultimately drain into the phreatic zone or said to be vadose caves[19]. 2. Water in the
out to the surface. Active stream caves, zone of aeration; water above the zone of
explorable by non-diving cavers, are by saturation[10].
definition vadose (though they generally
have phreatic origins). Characteristics of vadose zone. 1. The zone between the land
vadose caves are uneroded ceilings surface and the water table[22]. 2. The
(except for immature phreatic features zone between the land surface and the
pre-dating the vadose conditions) and deepest water table which includes the
continuous downhill gradients (unless capillary fringe. Generally, water in this
interrupted by short perched sumps). The zone is under less than atmospheric
main passage forms are canyons, with pressure, and some of the voids may con-
meanders and potholes, broken by sub- tain air or other gases at atmospheric
cylindrical, spray-corroded shafts that pressure. Beneath flooded areas or in
may demonstrate waterfall retreat. Some perched water bodies the water pressure
of the caves of Monte Canin, Italy, are locally may be greater than
spectacularly long and deep vadose atmospheric[22]. When discussing a karst
systems[9]. 2. Older, higher cave passages setting, it is preferable to use the term,
found in the vadose zone; usually vadose vadose zone, so as to avoid confusion
caves have been abandoned by the ground regarding chemical saturation. Synonym:
water except in times of extreme aquifer unsaturated zone. See also zone of
recharge. Passages are usually appear as aeration.
canyons and keyholes.
valley fill. Unconsolidated debris
vadose flow. Water flowing in free-surface accumulated on a valley bottom[16].
streams in caves[25].
valley sink. (American.) An elongated
vadose seepage. See percolation, closed depression or series of
percolation water. interconnecting depressions forming a
valley-like depression. Compare karst
vadose shaft. A vertical tube in the vadose valley; uvala[10].
zone that may be a few inches to several
feet in diameter and may be a few feet valley spring. See spring, valley.

203
vanadinite. A cave mineral — velocity, average interstitial. The average
Pb5(VO4)3Cl[11]. rate of ground-water flow in interstices
expressed as the product of hydraulic
vaporization. The process by which liquid conductivity and hydraulic gradient
or solid water changes into the gaseous divided by the effective porosity.
state[16]. Synonymous with average linear
ground-water velocity or effective
variable-temperature zone. The area of a velocity.
cave where air temperature fluctuates
with the seasons. See also zonation. vermiculation. Pattern of thin,
worm-shaped coatings of clay or silt on
variance. The square of the standard cave surfaces[25].
deviation[16].
vertebrate. An animal with a backbone.
variscite. A cave mineral — The group includes fishes, amphibians,
AlPO4"2H2O[11]. reptiles, birds, and mammals. Some
amphibians and fishes live permanently in
varve. The alternating of coarse and fine caves. See also invertebrate.
grained layers in glacial lake
sediments[16].
vertical angle. The angle in a vertical plane
vasque. A large, shallow solution pan between a line of sight and the horizontal,
formed in the intertidal zone of warm seas positive above the horizontal and negative
by the action of brine and marine below[25].
organisms[19].
vertical cave. A vertical passage within a
vauclusian spring; vauclusian rising. See cave system, formed along joints by
spring, vauclusian. which underground watercourses are
transferred from a higher to a lower
vegetation cover. The cover living bedding plane[19]. They may become
vegetation on top of the upper soil transformed into vertical shafts by
horizon[16]. sufficiently uniform dissolution as to
create a rounded vertical passage. See
vein. A mineral filled fracture cutting also fissure cave; vertical shaft.
through a host rock. The mineral filling
may be derived from the host rock, as is vertical shaft. These are formed by
the case with many calcite veins in underground water dripping of flowing
limestone (e.g. at Marble Showers in straight downward through the limestone
Ogof Ffynnon Ddu) or derived from along vertical cracks. Uniformly
other, generally deeper, sources, such as distributed dissolution of the rock results
the many veins containing lead and zinc in a silo- or well-shaped passage so that
ore minerals in the Derbyshire Peak most of them appear roughly circular in
District, England[9]. cross section when viewed straight up and

204
down. They form above active tubular viscosity. 1. The resistance of liquid to
passages although they may intersect a flow[16]. 2. The property of a real fluid
limited number of passages along their creating shear forces between two fluid
length. At Mammoth Cave, they range in elements and giving rise to fluid
size from 30 feet across to 200 feet from friction[16]. Specifically, it is the ratio of
top to bottom[15]. Synonym: dome-pit. the shear stress to the rate of shear
See also canyon passage; fissure cave; strain[6].
keyhole passage; passage; tubular
passage; vadose shaft; vertical cave. void. See interstice.

vertical caver. A caver who enjoys and is void ratio. The ratio of (a) the volume of
competent doing vertical caving[13]. See void space to (b) the volume of solid
also vertical caving. particles in a given soil mass[22].

vertical caving. Caving that includes a lot volatiles. Substances with relatively large
of ascending and descending[13]. See also vapor pressures. Many organic
vertical caver. substances are almost insoluble in water
so that they occur primarily in a gas phase
very fine sand. Grain particles with in contact with water, even though their
diameters ranging from 0.05 to 0.1 vapor pressure may be very small[22].
mm[16].
volumetric flowmeter. Apparatus designed
vesicular. Containing small circular to measure a volume flow rate[16].
cavities[16].
volumetric moisture content. The
victor tube. The single phreatic sub-conduit concentration of water in soil by
among the many that potentially exist on volume[16].
a given bedding plane (or fracture plane)
that is the first to reach a diameter vrulje. (Yugoslavian.) See submarine
capable of establishing turbulent-flow spring.
conditions. Following this breakthrough
the victor tube tends to enlarge more vug. A small cavity in rock usually lined
rapidly than other branching or sub- with crystals. Adjective, vuggy[10]. See
parallel alternatives and eventually also geode.
captures much of the drainage within its
field of influence[9]. vugular pore space. Void space due to
solution cavities of small size[16].
virgin flow. Flow unaffected by artificial
diversions, impoundments, or channels[16]. vulcanokarst. An area comprised of tubular
caves within lava flows and shows
virgin passage. A cave passage that has not evidence of mechanical collapse of the
previously been entered; a new roof into them. See also lava cave;
discovery[13]. pseudokarst.

205
W waste water. Water containing sewage and
waste products[16].
wading measurement. Discharge
measurement during which a water-balance. An instrument designed to
hydrographer takes readings while measure evaporation by gravimetry[16].
standing in a river[16].
water-bearing. Containing water[16].
wall block. A roughly cubical joint-con-
trolled large block of limestone or dolo- water-borne disease. Disease spread by
mite, which has rotated outward from a organic contaminants contained in the
cave wall[10]. See also cave breakdown; water supply[16].
wall slab.
water budget. The quantitative accounting
wall karren. These are found on vertical of water volumes involved in the
walls as a result of water flowing down hydrologic cycle[16].
the walls without any area-wide
moistening although area-wide sprinkling water catchment. The intake of water from
occasionally influences their an aquifer or a surface reservoir[16].
development[3]. See also meandering
karren; humus-water grooves. water conservation. All measures to
reduce the quantitative of qualitative
wall pocket. See pocket. spoilage of water[16].

wall slab. A thin but large block of rock, water content. The amount of water lost
which has fallen outward from the wall of from the soil after drying it to constant
a cave in limestone in which the dip is weight at 105NC, expressed either as the
nearly vertical[10]. See also cave weight of water per unit weight of dry soil
breakdown. or as the volume of water per unit bulk
volume of soil[22]. See moisture content.
wang. (Malaysian.) Polje[10].
water course. Any channel conveying
wash. A small ravine due to outwash by water[16].
flow in desert regions[16].
water equivalent. The depth of water
wash load. The incoming load of resulting from the melting of snow[16].
suspended sediment passing through a
river network without deposition[16]. water hammer. An abnormally high
pressure rise in a pipe when sudden
waste load. The content of wastes by changes in flow occur[16].
weight of volume transported by or
discharged into a river[16]. water-holding capacity. See specific
retention.

206
water invasion. The sudden invasion of sandstone, the water table is a smoothly
water into a well or borehole[16]. contoured surface intersecting the ground
at rivers and lakes, but in limestone it is
water level. The level of free surface of a more complex. Individual cave conduits
water body or water column[16]. may be above or below the water table,
and therefore either vadose or phreatic,
water logged. Water saturated[16]. and the water table cannot normally be
related to them. The water table concept
water logging. Water accumulation on top does, however, apply to the diffuse
of soil where the water table and ground drainage of percolation water in the
surface coincide[16]. micro-fissure network of limestone, but
its detailed structure may be complicated
water of constitution. Chemically bound by the presence of conduits. The water-
water[16]. table slope (hydraulic gradient) is low in
limestone due to the high permeability,
water of crystallization. Water embodied and the level is controlled by outlet
in crystal structure[16]. springs or local geological features. High
flows create steeper hydraulic gradients
water of dehydration. Water freed from and hence rises in the water level away
hydrous minerals by chemical changes[16]. from the spring. In France’s Grotte de la
Luire, the water level in the cave (and
water pot. See kamenica, solution pan. therefore the local water table) fluctuates
by 450m[9]. 2. The upper surface of a
water quality. The physical, chemical, and zone of saturation except where that
biological characteristics of water[16]. surface is formed by a confining unit[22].
3. The upper surface of the zone of
water requirement. The quantity of water saturation on which the water pressure in
needed for crops regardless of the the porous medium equals atmospheric
source[16]. pressure[22]. 4. The upper boundary of an
unconfined zone of saturation, along
water resources. The total supply of which the hydrostatic pressure is equal to
surface, ground, and reclaimed water that the atmospheric pressure[10]. See also
can be used[16]. potentiometric surface.

water stage. The height of the water water-table aquifer. See unconfined
level[16]. aquifer.

water table. 1. The top surface of a body of water-table cave. In theory the water table
slowly moving ground water that fills the offers the prime environment for cave
pore spaces within a rock mass. Above it development as it provides the shortest
lies the freely draining vadose zone, and route through the phreas and is potentially
below it lies the permanently saturated more active chemically due to the
phreas. In uniform aquifers, such as presence of the air/water interface.

207
However, geological factors determine (although water samples are more
the details of cave inception and desirable and beneficial). Lycopodium
enlargement, and passages most spores are usually collected in fine nets,
commonly form just below the water along with other stream-borne sediment,
table as a shallow phreatic variety of cave and must then be identified under the
development. Development of this type microscope. If chemical tracers are used,
is believed to be responsible for the regular water samples must be collected
‘levels’ of cave passage found in some for subsequent analysis, or the resurgent
areas, as in the flint Mammoth Cave waters must be monitored with suitable
System, Kentucky. True water-table electronic detectors and recorders.
caves are rare except on a limited scale as Flowpaths can also be confirmed by
extensions to cliff foot notches margined transmission of artificial or natural flood
to tropical swamps. Also under these pulses, which provide additional data on
conditions, the water table may adjust the nature of conduits, as a pulse is
down to the level of a mature phreatic transmitted instantaneously through
cave and then modify the passage with flooded passages. The longest successful
horizontal dissolution notches — as is water trace was from Beysehir Golu to the
common in the caves of Mulu and Niah, Manavgat springs, in Turkey, over a
Sarawak[9]. distance of 130km; 390kg of fluorescein
was used and the dye reappeared after 366
water-table divide. See divide. days[9].

water-table map. A map showing the


upper surface of the phreatic zone of a water trap, watertrap. A place where the
water-table aquifer by means of contour roof of a chamber or passage of a cave
lines[1]. See also phreatic zone; dips under water but lifts again farther
potentiometric-surface map; water-table on[10]. Synonym: trap.
aquifer.
water works. A plant where water is
water tracing. Underground drainage links treated and prepared for municipal
through unexplored caves confirmed by consumption[16].
labeling input water and identifying it at
points downstream. The common water year. A 12 month period for
labeling techniques involve the use of streamflow computation[16].
fluorescent dyes (fluorescein, rhodamine,
leucophor, pyranine etc.), lycopodium waterlogged. Water saturated.
spores, or chemicals such as common
salt. Detection of dye downstream may waterlogging. Water accumulation on top
be purely visual, but if the dye is used at a of soil where the water table and ground
subvisible (environmentally acceptable) surface coincide.
dilution, suitable detectors must be placed
in all potential risings and collected for
subsequent fluorometric examination

208
watershed. 1. A drainage basin[16]. 2. A well. 1. A shaft or hole sunk into the earth
divide separating one drainage basin from to obtain water, oil, gas, or minerals[10]. 2.
another[16]. A deep vertical rounded hole or shaft in
the floor of a cave or at the bottom of a
waterway. An artificial or natural closed depression[10]. 3. A bored, drilled
watercourse fit for navigation. or driven shaft, or a dug hole, whose
depth is greater than the largest surface
wave karren. Wavy karren surfaces that dimension[22].
appear similar to corrugated tin. When
denuded they are a disposition for the well function. An exponential integral as
formation of Rinnenkarren[3]. See also used in Theis’ nonequilibrium
covered karren; Rinnenkarren; root equation[16].
karren.
well hydrograph. A graph of water level
wayboard. One of many thin beds of fluctuations in a well[16].
volcanic clay that occur at intervals
within the Carboniferous carbonate well loss. Head loss caused by flow through
succession of the Peak District, England; a screen and inside a well[16].
a term formerly used by lead miners (see
toadstone). Wayboards have potential well-sorted grains. An assortment of grains
significance during speleogenesis when having the same diameter[16].
they may act as local aquicludes,
inception horizons or providers of strong well yield. The volume of water discharged
acid formed by oxidation of sulfide from a well in gallons per minute or cubic
minerals[9]. meters per day.

weathering. The process of disintegration wet line. That portion of line of submerged
and decomposition as a consequence of under water in stream measurements[16].
exposure to the atmosphere, to chemical
action and to the action of frost, water and wet suit. A diving garment of foam
heat. neoprene designed to insulate the diver
from the cold but which allows a thin film
wedge storage. 1. Water storage in the of water to penetrate between the suit and
form of a wedge overlying a prism[16]. 2. the body[25].
storage in a flooded river segment[16].
wetland. A general term used for a group of
weir. A dam across a water course to wet habitats, in common use by
control, raise, or measure water flow[16]. specialists in wildlife management. It
includes areas that are permanently wet
weir coefficient. A coefficient used in and/or intermittently water-covered,
transforming water depths into discharge especially coastal marshes, tidal swamps
volumes in weir measurements[16]. and flats, and associated pools, sloughs,
and bayous[1].

209
wettability. The property of a solid window. 1. In speleology, a natural opening
substance to be wetted by a liquid such as above the floor of a passage or a room,
water[16]. giving access to an adjoining cavity or to
the surface; larger and less symmetrical
wetted area. The cross sectional area of than a porthole. 2. The opening under the
that portion of a channel that is filled with arch of a small natural bridge[10]. See
water[16]. karst window.

wetted perimeter. The perimeter over windypit. Open fissure, widened by


which flowing water is in actual contact landslip, common in valley side situations
with the channel walls and bottom[16]. where limestone overlies weaker rocks
such as clays or shales. The term is
wetting period. The period of contact commonly used to describe gulls and
between a liquid and a solid surface tectonic caves in the Jurassic limestones
during which wetting occurs[16]. of north-east Yorkshire, England[9].

whaletail. A descender consisting of an withdraw, to. To draw water from an


aluminium block with slots, knobs and a aquifer or reservoir[16].
safety gate[25].
workover. The reworking of a well that has
whitlockite. A cave mineral — declined in yield[16].
Ca9(Mg,Fe)H(PO4)7[11].

width of contribution. The width of the


contributing region between the ground-
water divide from which water enters a
well. This usually occurs with an
inclined piezometric surface[16].

wilt, to. The shrinking of cell walls due to


loss in turgor as a result of water
deficiency in the plant[16].

wilting coefficient, wilting point. The soil


moisture content at which plants wilt[16].

wind factor. The factor containing a


monthly mean wind velocity in
evaporation[16].

wind field. The air velocity field above


ground due to wind action[16].

210
Y
yield. The quantity of water discharged
from an aquifer[16] (e.g spring or well.)
See also well yield.

211
Z zone of investigation. The zone over which
a given measuring device is able to obtain
zadernovanny0 karst. (Russian.) See information[16].
subsoil karst.
zone of leaching. The top horizon of a soil
zakryty0 karst, skryty0 karst. (Russian.) profile (A) that is most intensely
See closed karst. weathered[16].

zanjón. (Spanish.) In Puerto Rico, solution zone of saturation. The zone in permeable
trench in limestone. Zanjónes range from soil or rock that is saturated with water;
a few centimeters to about 8 meters in the phreatic zone[10]. See also phreatic
width and from about 1 to 4 meters in zone.
depth. Apparently they form by the
widening and deepening of joints by zones of karstification. Cviji… (1926, 1960)
solution[10]. See also bogaz; corridor; distinguishes three zones of karstification:
struga. (1) dry zone in the upper part of the karst
with caves almost completely dry; (2)
zero adjustment. The adjustment of a scale transition zone where water flows
or a measuring circuit to an original point downstream almost permanently; and (3)
of departure[16]. deep zone with slow downstream flow
and local siphons[20]. Synonyms:
zonal soil profile. The normal horizontal (French.) zones de karstification;
distribution of soil zone[16]. (German.) Zone der Verkarstung;
(Greek.) zoni karstikopiiseos; (Italian.)
zonation. The organization of a habitat into zone idrogeologiche; (Spanish.) zona de
a more or less orderly series of distinctive karstificación; (Turkish.) karstlaÕma
plant and animal associations as a result kuÕa™2; (Yugoslavian.) zone
of variations in environmental conditions. karstifikacije.
Zones in a cave are the twilight zone, the
variable-temperature zone, and the Zwischenhöhle. (German.) Cave in which
constant-temperature zone[23]. a river passage, or former river passage, is
entered from above or laterally and which
zone of accumulation. The second horizon can be followed upstream and
of a soil profile (B), usually the zone of downstream some distance but not to
clay accumulation subjacent to zone daylight[10].
(A)[16].

zone of aeration. The zone in permeable


soil or rock that is above the zone
saturated with water; the zone of vadose
water[10]. See also vadose zone.

212
REFERENCES Series Number 6. British Cave Research
Association. London, Britain. 41 pp.

1. Bates, R. L. and J. A. Jackson. 1980. 10. Monroe, W. H. (Compiler). 1970. A


Glossary of Geology. American Glossary of Karst Terminology.
Geological Institute. Falls Church, Va. Geological Survey Water-Supply Paper
751 pp. 1899-K. U.S. Geological Survey. U.S.
Government Printing Office. Washington,
2. Bear, J. 1979. Hydraulics of Groundwater. D.C. 26 pp.
McGraw-Hill Inc. New York, NY. 569
pp. 11. Moore, G. W. and G. N. Sullivan. 1978.
Speleology: The Study of Caves. Cave
3. Bögli, A. 1980. Karst Hydrology and Books. 2nd Edition. St. Louis, Missouri.
Physical Speleology. Springer-Verlag. 150 pp.
Berlin, West Germany. 284 pp.
12. Mylroie, J. E. 1984. Hydrologic
4. Daoxian, Y. 1985. New Observations on classification of caves and karst.
Tower Karst. Paper presented at the 1st Groundwater as a Geomorphic Agent. R.
International Conference on G. LaFleur, Editor. Allen & Unwin. Inc.
Geomorphology (Manchester, England). Boston, Mass. pp. 157–172.
14 pp.
13. NSS. 1982. Glossary of caving terms
5. Dreybrodt, W. 1988. Processes in Karst used in this manual. Caving Basics. J.
Systems: Physics, Chemistry, and Hassemer, Editor. National Speleological
Geology. Springer-Verlag. New York, Society. Huntsville, Ala. pp. 124–125.
N.Y. 288 pp.
14. Palmer, A. N. 1972. Dynamics of a
6. Driscoll, F. G. 1986. Groundwater and sinking stream system: Onesquethaw
Wells. Johnson Division. St. Paul, Minn. Cave, New York. National Speleological
1089 pp. Society Bulletin. 34. pp. 89–110.

7. Ford, D. C. and P. W. Williams. 1989. 15. Palmer, A. N. 1981. A Geological Guide


Karst Geomorphology and Hydrology. to Mammoth Cave National Park.
Unwin Hyman Inc. Lakeland, Fla. 601 pp. Zephyrus Press. Teaneck, N.J. 196 pp.

8. Jennings, J. N. 1985. Karst 16. Pfannkuch, H. O. 1971. Elsevier’s


Geomorphology. Basil Blackwell Inc. Dictionary of Hydrogeology. American
New York, N.Y. 293 pp. Elsevier Publishing Company. Inc. New
York, N.Y. 168 pp.
9. Lowe, D. and T. Waltham. 1995. A
Dictionary of Karst and Caves: A Brief 17. Quinlan, J. F. 1978. Types of Karst with
Guide to the Terminology and Concepts Emphasis on Cover Beds in their
of Cave and Karst Science. Cave Studies Classification and Development.

213
Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation. The Group. Ground-Water Subcommittee.
University of Texas at Austin. 323 pp. Interagency Advisory Committee on
Water Data. Dept. of the Interior. U.S.
18. Quinlan, J. F., P. L. Smart, G. M. Geological Survey. Office of Water Data
Schindel, E. C. Alexander, A. J. Edwards, Coordination. 38 pp.
and A. Richard Smith. 1991.
Recommended administrative/regulatory 23. William R. Elliott, Ph.D. of the Natural
definition of karst aquifer, principles for History Division of the Missouri
classification of carbonate aquifers, Department of Conservation. The list of
practical evaluation of vulnerability of definitions were obtained directly from
karst aquifers, and determination of the Biospeleology web site:
optimum sampling frequency at springs.
Hydrology. Ecology. Monitoring. and www.utexas.edu/depts/tnhc/.www/biospel
Management of Ground Water in Karst eology
Terranes Conference (3rd. Nashville.
Tenn. 1991). J. F. Quinlan and A. which is based on The Life of the Cave by
Stanley, Editors. National Ground Water Charles E. Mohr and Thomas L. Poulson
Association. Dublin, Ohio. pp. 573–635. (1966, McGraw-Hill) with additions from
Dr. Elliott.
19. Sweeting, M. M. 1973. Karst
Landforms. Selected Glossary. Compiled 24. Clark, I. and P. Fritz. 1997.
by K. Addison. Columbia University Environmental Isotopes in Hydrology.
Press. New York, N.Y. 362 pp. Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, Fla. p.
174.
20. UNESCO. 1972. Glossary and
Multilingual Equivalents of Karst Terms. 25. Australian Speleological Federation.
United Nations Educational. Scientific. 1996. Cave and Karst Terminology. The
and Cultural Organization. Paris, France. list of definitions were obtained directly
72 pp. from the Western Australia Speleology
web site:
21. UNESCO. 1984. Guidebook to Studies
of Land Subsidence due to Ground-Water http://wasg.iinet.net.au/terminol.html
withdrawal. Prepared for the International
Hydrological Programme. Working which contains a listing of terminology
Group 8.4. J. F. Poland, Editor. United commonly used in Australia.
Nations Education. Scientific and
Cultural Organization. Paris, France. 305
pp. (plus appendices).

22. USGS. (date ?). Federal Glossary of


Selected Terms: Subsurface-Water Flow
and Solute Transport. Prepared by the
Subsurface-Water Glossary Working

214

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