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Insights into the speleogenesis of Ejulve cave (Iberian Range, NE Spain): quaternary hydrothermal karstification?

Authors :
Carlos Sancho
Hai Cheng
Carlos Pérez-Mejías
Ana Moreno
Miguel Bartolomé
Fernando Gázquez
M. Cinta Osácar
Gobierno de Aragón
Universidad de Almería
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

We provide first insights into the speleogenesis of Ejulve cave (Teruel province, Iberian Range, NE Spain) by studying cave morphologies and cave deposits, combined with regional geomorphological and hydrothermal observations. Three main hydrogeomorphic evolutionary stages can be distinguised to explain the origin and evolution of the Ejulve endokarstic system. Cave pattern and cave solutional features (calcite vein fillings, tubes with rising ceiling cupolas, pendants and cusps, spongework and micro-corrosion features) suggest that the cave generated in a phreatic environment by ascending water. Cave morphologies and regional hydrothermal springs in this region suggest, but not prove, the involvement of thermal waters and related convection and condensation-corrosion mechanisms in the origin of the cave. Subsequently, the cave underwent a change to epigenic conditions driven by denudation, as a result of regional uplift. Once the karstic system was exhumated, carbonate speleothems formed in a vadose environment. Mineralogical, petrographic, isotopic and chronological (U-series dating) analyses of carbonate speleothems (i.e. stalagmites, flowstones, botryoids, spars, acicular crystals and farmed carbonate) are provided. Calcite, high-Mg calcite and aragonite are the most common minerals, whereas columnar, dendritic, micrite, mosaics and fans are the main fabrics. Mean δO values of − 7.3‰ and δC values of − 9.1‰ indicate carbonate precipitation from meteoric waters without a hydrothermal origin. Carbonate deposits formed at least since 650 ka BP. Our study suggests that hydrothermal fluid flow may explain, although the evidences are not fully conclusive, the speleogenesis of this cave.<br />We acknowledge the predoctoral research Grant from the Government of Aragón (B158/13) and CTM2013-48639-C2-2-R (OPERA) and CGL2016-77479-R (SPYRIT) projects for funding. Fernando Gázquez was financially supported by the “HIPATIA” research program of the University of Almeria.

Details

ISSN :
18867995 and 16986180
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Iberian Geology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fda5c47133477c0472cd309fcf0ba858
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s41513-019-00107-x