Rock salt is approximately 1000 times more soluble than limestone and thus displays high rates of geomorphic evolution. Cave stream channel profiles and downcutting rates were studied in the Mount Sedom salt diapir, Dead Sea rift valley, Israel. Although the area is very arid (mean annual rainfall ≈ 50 mm), the diapir contains extensive karst systems of Holocene age. In the standard cave profile a vertical shaft at the upstream end diverts water from a surface channel in anhydrite or clastic cap rocks into the subsurface route in the salt. Mass balance calculations in a sample cave passage yielded downcutting rates of 0–2 mm s−1 during peak flood conditions, or about eight orders of magnitude higher than reported rates in any limestone cave...
Since the early 80s, a progressively increasing number of sinkholes appeared along the Dead Sea coas...
International audienceSeismic refraction, magnetic resonance sounding (MRS), and the transient elect...
The dry climate of Israel and the karstic nature of its rocks have always imposed human innovation f...
Rock salt is approximately 1000 times more soluble than limestone and thus displays high rates of ge...
Rock salt is approximately 1000 times more soluble than limestone and thus displays high rates of ge...
Abstract: Mount Sedom is a salt diapir, on the southwestern shore of the Dead Sea, which has been ri...
International audienceSince 1990 hundreds of sinkholes have appeared along the coast of the Dead Sea...
Evaporitic‐lagoonal marl and dolomite laminar fill sediments are preserved in relict dry caves of th...
We analyzed maze caves and the associated hydrogeology in the northern Negev–Judean Desert in Israel...
A varied assemblage of algal stromatolites was encountered in caves along the northern section of th...
Southern Iran hosts abundant salt karst phenomena in numerous salt diapirs. This paper provides a ne...
Carbonate minerals, unlike silicates, have the potential to dissolve almost completely and with high...
The Sodmein cliff foot cave is the present-day remnant of an ancient cavity, probably of karstic ori...
Since the early 80s, a progressively increasing number of sinkholes appeared along the Dead Sea coas...
International audienceSeismic refraction, magnetic resonance sounding (MRS), and the transient elect...
The dry climate of Israel and the karstic nature of its rocks have always imposed human innovation f...
Rock salt is approximately 1000 times more soluble than limestone and thus displays high rates of ge...
Rock salt is approximately 1000 times more soluble than limestone and thus displays high rates of ge...
Abstract: Mount Sedom is a salt diapir, on the southwestern shore of the Dead Sea, which has been ri...
International audienceSince 1990 hundreds of sinkholes have appeared along the coast of the Dead Sea...
Evaporitic‐lagoonal marl and dolomite laminar fill sediments are preserved in relict dry caves of th...
We analyzed maze caves and the associated hydrogeology in the northern Negev–Judean Desert in Israel...
A varied assemblage of algal stromatolites was encountered in caves along the northern section of th...
Southern Iran hosts abundant salt karst phenomena in numerous salt diapirs. This paper provides a ne...
Carbonate minerals, unlike silicates, have the potential to dissolve almost completely and with high...
The Sodmein cliff foot cave is the present-day remnant of an ancient cavity, probably of karstic ori...
Since the early 80s, a progressively increasing number of sinkholes appeared along the Dead Sea coas...
International audienceSeismic refraction, magnetic resonance sounding (MRS), and the transient elect...
The dry climate of Israel and the karstic nature of its rocks have always imposed human innovation f...