Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions

Karst is a distinctive landform that results from the dissolution of carbonate rocks, and the dissolutional process is considered to be an important geologic phenomenon that may lead to the formation of karst reservoirs. The process of burial, compaction and diagenesis is believed to transform...

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Main Author: Chow , Weng Sum
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Institution: Universiti Teknologi Petronas
Record Id / ISBN-0: utp-eprints.8144 /
Published: 2012
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Online Access: http://eprints.utp.edu.my/8144/1/ICIPEG_Solomon_2012..pdf
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/8144/
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spelling utp-eprints.81442017-03-20T02:06:23Z Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions Chow , Weng Sum QE Geology Karst is a distinctive landform that results from the dissolution of carbonate rocks, and the dissolutional process is considered to be an important geologic phenomenon that may lead to the formation of karst reservoirs. The process of burial, compaction and diagenesis is believed to transform subaerial multiple karst caves into coalesced collapsed paleocave systems, but it is hypothesized that large passage caves of tropical karst regions can be evidence for the existence of large scale collapsed single cavern. In order to comprehend the mechanism of formation and dimensional increment after burial, a tropical karst cave was surveyed and world largest passage caves were considered. It is inferred that, not only deep burial of paleocave systems that result interconnected fractures and coalesced breccias, rather such phenomenon can be manifested if large cave passages are subjected to burial. Moreover, because of the presence of immense speleothem deposits that typify tropical karst areas, we suggest that additional cave facies, i.e. massive to slightly fractured speleothems, to be included in the pre-existing paleocave facies classification 2012-06-12 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf http://eprints.utp.edu.my/8144/1/ICIPEG_Solomon_2012..pdf Chow , Weng Sum (2012) Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions. In: ESTCON - ICIPEG 2012, June 12-14, 2012, KLCC, Kuala Lumpur. http://eprints.utp.edu.my/8144/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
collection UTP Institutional Repository
topic QE Geology
spellingShingle QE Geology
Chow , Weng Sum
Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions
description Karst is a distinctive landform that results from the dissolution of carbonate rocks, and the dissolutional process is considered to be an important geologic phenomenon that may lead to the formation of karst reservoirs. The process of burial, compaction and diagenesis is believed to transform subaerial multiple karst caves into coalesced collapsed paleocave systems, but it is hypothesized that large passage caves of tropical karst regions can be evidence for the existence of large scale collapsed single cavern. In order to comprehend the mechanism of formation and dimensional increment after burial, a tropical karst cave was surveyed and world largest passage caves were considered. It is inferred that, not only deep burial of paleocave systems that result interconnected fractures and coalesced breccias, rather such phenomenon can be manifested if large cave passages are subjected to burial. Moreover, because of the presence of immense speleothem deposits that typify tropical karst areas, we suggest that additional cave facies, i.e. massive to slightly fractured speleothems, to be included in the pre-existing paleocave facies classification
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Chow , Weng Sum
author_sort Chow , Weng Sum
title Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions
title_short Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions
title_full Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions
title_fullStr Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions
title_full_unstemmed Understanding the Nature of Collapsed Subsurface karsts: Analogues from the Tropical Karst Regions
title_sort understanding the nature of collapsed subsurface karsts: analogues from the tropical karst regions
publishDate 2012
url http://eprints.utp.edu.my/8144/1/ICIPEG_Solomon_2012..pdf
http://eprints.utp.edu.my/8144/
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score 11.62408