Search results for " Karst"
showing 10 items of 45 documents
New Knowledge on the Monte Conca gypsum karst system (Central-Western Sicily).
2009
New knowledge on the Monte Conca gypsum karst system (Central-western Sicily, Italy)
2011
The Monte Conca karst system is located in Central-Western Sicily, where Messinian evaporites are widespread. Here, the evaporites lie on lower Messinian-middle Serravallian clayey-marly-sandy deposits and are overlain locally by Pliocene marly limestones. These successions are affected by E-W, and to a lesser degree N-S and NW-SE, high-angle faults that have also produced lateral contacts between the gypsum units and the clayey-marly deposits. The cave passages reachaltogether about 2.4 km in lengthand 130 m in depth, and the system consists of a sink cave, a resurgence and a relict resurgence. At large scale it is characterized by superimposed levels of sub-horizontal galleries connected …
Acqua Fitusa cave: An example of inactive water-table sulphuric acid cave in Central Sicily
2012
Description of the sulphuric acid cave in Sicily (see pdf attached)
KARST OF SICILY AND ITS CONSERVATION
2012
Zvaigžņotā Debess: 2008, Rudens
2008
Latvijas Zinātņu akadēmija, Latvijas Universitāte
New, Rare and Constant Habitats for Endangered Aquatic Plant Communities: The Importance of Microhabitats for Global biodiversity
2019
Natural water reservoirs are very valuable floristic sites, with springs particularly important for the preservation of floral biodiversity. This paper presents, as a case study, a community of water plants that is new to limnocrene karst springs in Europe: Potametum alpini (Potametea), found in Poland. The paper provides the floristic composition and ecological requirements of this plant association, which is rare and endangered in Europe. According to our knowledge, the habitat data presented here are unique as they are published for the first time for this plant community, and thus it is currently not possible to compare them with data from other authors. Our study confirms the importanc…
Karstologie et remplissage sédimentaire du gisement pléistocène de Romain-la-Roche (Doubs, France).
2010
19 pages; International audience; Le gisement pléistocène du site de Romain-la-Roche (commune de Romain dans le Doubs) correspond au remplissage épikarstique d'un aven affectant les calcaires du Jurassique moyen d'un plateau situé au nord du massif jurassien. Cette cavité, située en dehors de l'extension de la calotte du dernier maximum glaciaire, a été façonnée par un flux hydrologique en liaison avec un drainage de surface qui a vraisemblablement disparu au cours du Pliocène lors d'une phase d'inversion du relief de part et d'autre de la faille normale qui délimite la partie ouest du plateau. Avant son colmatage au cours du Pléistocène la cavité était reliée à un réseau dense de conduits …
Studies on the genus Capparis L. (Capparaceae) in Lao PDR. IV: A new species from the Khammouan Province
2020
A new species of Capparis, C. florida, is described and illustrated from the Hin Nam No National Protected Area, Khammouan Province in central Lao PDR. The new species, collected in forest habitats of the Khammouan karst, belongs to sect. Monostichocalyx. It is an erect shrub characterized by the widely ovate or elliptical leaf-blade, by the flowers serial in supra-axillary rows, and by the slender ovary with evident style. Its affinities with related taxa, such as the widespread C. micracantha, are discussed and its conservation status assessed.
The influence of light attenuation on the biogeomorphology of a marine karst cave: A case study of Puerto Princesa Underground River, Palawan, the Ph…
2015
Karst caves are unique biogeomorphological systems. Cave walls offer habitat for microorganisms which in-turn have a geomorphological role via their involvement in rock weathering, erosion and mineralisation. The attenuation of light with distance into caves is known to affect ecology, but the implications of this for biogeomorphological processes and forms have seldom been examined. Here we describe a semi-quantitative microscopy study comparing the extent, structure, and thickness of biocover and depth of endolithic penetration for samples of rock from the Puerto Princesa Underground River system in Palawan, the Philippines, which is a natural UNESCO World Heritage Site.\ud \ud Organic gr…