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  4. Improving understanding of groundwater flow in an alpine karst system by reconstructing its geologic history using conduit network model ensembles

Improving understanding of groundwater flow in an alpine karst system by reconstructing its geologic history using conduit network model ensembles

Author(s)
Chloé Fandel
Ty Ferré
Miville, François  
Poste d'hydrogéologie stochastique et géostatistique  
Renard, Philippe  
Poste d'hydrogéologie stochastique et géostatistique  
Nico Goldscheider
Date issued
2023
In
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Vol
27
No
22
From page
420
To page
4215
Abstract
<jats:p>Abstract. Reconstructing the geologic history of a karst area can advance understanding of the system's present-day hydrogeologic functioning and help predict the location of unexplored conduits. This study tests competing hypotheses describing past conditions controlling cave formation in an alpine karst catchment, by comparing an ensemble of modeled networks to the observed network map. The catchment, the Gottesacker karst system (Germany and Austria), is drained by three major springs and a paleo-spring and includes the partially explored Hölloch cave, which consists of an active section whose formation is well-understood and an inactive section whose formation is the subject of debate. Two hypotheses for the formation of the inactive section are the following: (1) glaciation obscured the three present-day springs, leaving only the paleo-spring, or (2) the lowest of the three major springs (Sägebach) is comparatively young, so its subcatchment previously drained to the paleo-spring. These hypotheses were tested using the pyKasso Python library (built on anisotropic fast-marching methods) to generate two ensembles of networks, one representing each scenario. Each ensemble was then compared to the known cave map. The simulated networks generated under hypothesis 2 match the observed cave map more closely than those generated under hypothesis 1. This supports the conclusion that the Sägebach spring is young, and it suggests that the cave likely continues southwards. Finally, this study extends the applicability of model ensemble methods from situations where the geologic setting is known but the network is unknown to situations where the network is known but the geologic evolution is not.
</jats:p>
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/62303
DOI
10.5194/hess-27-4205-2023
-
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/32952
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