Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada

First investigated on the ground in June 1972, the Nahanni karst of northern Canada is the most complex karst terrain yet reported from high latitudes. It is centered at 61°28' N, longitude 124°05' W and lies within the zone of discontinuous permafrost. Mean annual temperature is 24°F and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brook, Albert George
Other Authors: Ford, D. C., Geography
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12663
id ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12663
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language unknown
topic Geography
spellingShingle Geography
Brook, Albert George
Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada
topic_facet Geography
description First investigated on the ground in June 1972, the Nahanni karst of northern Canada is the most complex karst terrain yet reported from high latitudes. It is centered at 61°28' N, longitude 124°05' W and lies within the zone of discontinuous permafrost. Mean annual temperature is 24°F and mean total precipitation 22.3 inches. Principal karst forms are fracture-located karst streets and irregularly-shaped closed depression called karst platea which may be up to 600 feet in depth. Platea often contain karst towers which are residuals of wall recession. Vertical-walled pond dolines up to 120 feet deep are common in bare karst areas while subjacent karst collapse, subsidence and suffosion depressions occur on marginal shale- and drift-mantled surfaces. Three small poljes have been identified, two produced entirely by solution, the other a structural form. These are periodically inundated. There are several peripheral fluvial canyons up to 3,000 feet deep that are blocked by glacial drift and which presently drain underground. Similarity in the hydrogeological properties of Nahanni Formation limestones at a variety of scales has led to the development of morphologically-identical karst forms which range in size from inches up to hundreds of feet. Furthermore, many of these landforms are part of a developmental sequence that at one scale links vertical-walled dolines, karst streets, platea and poljes; and at another links solution pits, grikes and joint hollows on limestone pavements. The evidence suggests that poljes form by the coalescence of dolines and uvalas just as Cvijic suggested in 1918. In attempting to explain the almost "tropical" nature of the sub-arctic Nahanni karst landform assemblage, a number of facts are of importance. (a) The Nahanni Formation limestones have been highly warped and intensively fractures during the past one million years. Open fractures have encouraged karstification by allowing easy movement of water underground. Warping has provided the relief necessary for the development of solutional forms with a distinct vertical component. (b) The karst can not be considered relict because it was glaciated during the Pleistocene. In addition the hydrological activity in it today is comparable with that in many humid tropical karst areas. (c) Solutional denudation rates governed by aspects of surficial and bedrock geology may in some localized areas be equivalent to rates in humid tropical carbonate regions. (d) At present rates, the most highly developed forms could have been produced within the last 200,000 years and because there is evidence to indicate that the karst may not have been glaciated for up to 250,000 years, such a period has been available for solutional development. Because the Nahanni region has not been glaciated for an extremely long period, it may be one of only a few high-latitude carbonate terrains that have had time to develop fully. Its very existence questions the validity of the concept that the intensity and direction of karst development is climate-controlled. In the Nahanni at least, the structural and lithological properties of the host limestone appear to have been of greater importance. The labyrinth karst type present in regions of humid-tropical to sub-arctic climate, is an outstanding example of a structurally-controlled karst landscape. It may well be that the same controls also influence the distributions of other karst types. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
author2 Ford, D. C.
Geography
format Thesis
author Brook, Albert George
author_facet Brook, Albert George
author_sort Brook, Albert George
title Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada
title_short Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada
title_full Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada
title_fullStr Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada
title_sort geomorphology of the north karst, south nahanni river region, northwest territories, canada
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12663
long_lat ENVELOPE(160.833,160.833,-77.550,-77.550)
ENVELOPE(-123.353,-123.353,61.050,61.050)
geographic Arctic
Northwest Territories
Canada
Labyrinth
South Nahanni River
geographic_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
Canada
Labyrinth
South Nahanni River
genre Arctic
Northwest Territories
permafrost
South Nahanni River
genre_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
permafrost
South Nahanni River
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spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12663 2023-05-15T15:10:21+02:00 Geomorphology of the North Karst, South Nahanni River Region, Northwest Territories, Canada Brook, Albert George Ford, D. C. Geography 2009-11-04 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12663 unknown opendissertations/753 1846 1055244 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12663 Geography thesis 2009 ftmcmaster 2022-03-22T21:11:34Z First investigated on the ground in June 1972, the Nahanni karst of northern Canada is the most complex karst terrain yet reported from high latitudes. It is centered at 61°28' N, longitude 124°05' W and lies within the zone of discontinuous permafrost. Mean annual temperature is 24°F and mean total precipitation 22.3 inches. Principal karst forms are fracture-located karst streets and irregularly-shaped closed depression called karst platea which may be up to 600 feet in depth. Platea often contain karst towers which are residuals of wall recession. Vertical-walled pond dolines up to 120 feet deep are common in bare karst areas while subjacent karst collapse, subsidence and suffosion depressions occur on marginal shale- and drift-mantled surfaces. Three small poljes have been identified, two produced entirely by solution, the other a structural form. These are periodically inundated. There are several peripheral fluvial canyons up to 3,000 feet deep that are blocked by glacial drift and which presently drain underground. Similarity in the hydrogeological properties of Nahanni Formation limestones at a variety of scales has led to the development of morphologically-identical karst forms which range in size from inches up to hundreds of feet. Furthermore, many of these landforms are part of a developmental sequence that at one scale links vertical-walled dolines, karst streets, platea and poljes; and at another links solution pits, grikes and joint hollows on limestone pavements. The evidence suggests that poljes form by the coalescence of dolines and uvalas just as Cvijic suggested in 1918. In attempting to explain the almost "tropical" nature of the sub-arctic Nahanni karst landform assemblage, a number of facts are of importance. (a) The Nahanni Formation limestones have been highly warped and intensively fractures during the past one million years. Open fractures have encouraged karstification by allowing easy movement of water underground. Warping has provided the relief necessary for the development of solutional forms with a distinct vertical component. (b) The karst can not be considered relict because it was glaciated during the Pleistocene. In addition the hydrological activity in it today is comparable with that in many humid tropical karst areas. (c) Solutional denudation rates governed by aspects of surficial and bedrock geology may in some localized areas be equivalent to rates in humid tropical carbonate regions. (d) At present rates, the most highly developed forms could have been produced within the last 200,000 years and because there is evidence to indicate that the karst may not have been glaciated for up to 250,000 years, such a period has been available for solutional development. Because the Nahanni region has not been glaciated for an extremely long period, it may be one of only a few high-latitude carbonate terrains that have had time to develop fully. Its very existence questions the validity of the concept that the intensity and direction of karst development is climate-controlled. In the Nahanni at least, the structural and lithological properties of the host limestone appear to have been of greater importance. The labyrinth karst type present in regions of humid-tropical to sub-arctic climate, is an outstanding example of a structurally-controlled karst landscape. It may well be that the same controls also influence the distributions of other karst types. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Thesis Arctic Northwest Territories permafrost South Nahanni River MacSphere (McMaster University) Arctic Northwest Territories Canada Labyrinth ENVELOPE(160.833,160.833,-77.550,-77.550) South Nahanni River ENVELOPE(-123.353,-123.353,61.050,61.050)