Full Text

Turn on search term navigation

Copyright University of South Florida Board of Trustees, a public body corporate, having locations in Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Sarasota Sep 2014

Abstract

The Ankarana is a limestone plateau in the northern part of Madagascar, where a cave system, more than 120 km long, has been explored. The plateau is bordered by volcanoes and is cut across by several canyons. An analysis of surface landforms and caves suggests that the karst genesis was probably initiated by volcanism beneath an impervious cover. Volcanic bulging and magma intrusions may have favored a basalt-limestone assimilation process and metamorphism. The ascent of deep volcanic fluids (CO2 and SO^sub 2^) from magma degassing and from limestone metamorphism, may explain the speleogenesis. Once denuded, the karst evolved classically, but the selective erosion of metamorphosed rocks (more likely to be weathered than pure limestone), resulted in the creation of unusual landforms such as canyons and large circular basins.

Details

Title
Volcanism-induced karst landforms and speleogenesis, in the Ankarana Plateau (Madagascar). Hypothesis and preliminary research
Author
Gilli, Eric
Pages
283-293
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Sep 2014
Publisher
University of South Florida Board of Trustees, a public body corporate, having locations in Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Sarasota
ISSN
03926672
e-ISSN
1827806X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1563710968
Copyright
Copyright University of South Florida Board of Trustees, a public body corporate, having locations in Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Sarasota Sep 2014