Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada

Sinkholes developed in the Paleozoic carbonate rocks within the James Bay lowland of Canada consist of pre-glacial sinkholes and post-glacial sinkholes. Most of the pre-glacial sinkholes were identified in the Upper Silurian Attawapiskat limestone at the Process Plant site after the thin peat and un...

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Main Authors: Zhou, Wanfang, Lei, Mingtang, LaMoreaux, James W, Green, Daniel S
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons @ University of South Florida 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/sinkhole_2020/ProceedingswithProgram/Geomorphology_Formation_of_karst_and_sinkholes/3
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=sinkhole_2020
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spelling ftunisfloridatam:oai:digitalcommons.usf.edu:sinkhole_2020-1010 2023-05-15T15:33:16+02:00 Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada Zhou, Wanfang Lei, Mingtang LaMoreaux, James W Green, Daniel S 2020-05-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/sinkhole_2020/ProceedingswithProgram/Geomorphology_Formation_of_karst_and_sinkholes/3 https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=sinkhole_2020 unknown Digital Commons @ University of South Florida https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/sinkhole_2020/ProceedingswithProgram/Geomorphology_Formation_of_karst_and_sinkholes/3 https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=sinkhole_2020 Sinkhole Conference 2020 text 2020 ftunisfloridatam 2021-10-09T07:49:11Z Sinkholes developed in the Paleozoic carbonate rocks within the James Bay lowland of Canada consist of pre-glacial sinkholes and post-glacial sinkholes. Most of the pre-glacial sinkholes were identified in the Upper Silurian Attawapiskat limestone at the Process Plant site after the thin peat and unconsolidated sediment cover were removed and in the Central Quarry site where the vertical profile of the Upper Attawapiskat limestone was exposed. One unique pre-glacial sinkhole was reported in the form of a bedrock trench, which cut through most of the Paleozoic formations to a depth of approximately 200 m below land surface. The pre-glacial sinkholes are filled with and covered by sediments that represent post-glacial depositional environments. The post-glacial sinkholes have developed after the area emerged from the Tyrrell Sea approximately 4,400 years ago. Sinkholes with open drains and intermittent sinking streams are the primary form in the exposed reefal limestone of the Attawapiskat limestone along the Attawapiskat River and Nayshkootayaow River. Between the two major rivers post-glacial sinkholes have developed around perimeters of isolated bioherms, especially in the Bioherm Complex Zone between these two rivers. Although the mildly acidic peat water may have contributed to sinkhole formation at bioherms, the majority of the post-glacial sinkholes are likely linked to the pre-glacial ones, which provided the pre-existing conditions for the post-glacial sinkhole formation. The increases in hydraulic gradient in response to the isostatic uplift and seasonal fluctuations in shallow groundwater level have helped reactivate the pre-glacial sinkholes and have been the primary agents in eroding the overlying materials. Text Attawapiskat James Bay Digital Commons University of South Florida (USF) Attawapiskat ENVELOPE(-82.417,-82.417,52.928,52.928) Attawapiskat River ENVELOPE(-82.300,-82.300,52.950,52.950) Canada Tyrrell ENVELOPE(-69.512,-69.512,-69.634,-69.634)
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Commons University of South Florida (USF)
op_collection_id ftunisfloridatam
language unknown
description Sinkholes developed in the Paleozoic carbonate rocks within the James Bay lowland of Canada consist of pre-glacial sinkholes and post-glacial sinkholes. Most of the pre-glacial sinkholes were identified in the Upper Silurian Attawapiskat limestone at the Process Plant site after the thin peat and unconsolidated sediment cover were removed and in the Central Quarry site where the vertical profile of the Upper Attawapiskat limestone was exposed. One unique pre-glacial sinkhole was reported in the form of a bedrock trench, which cut through most of the Paleozoic formations to a depth of approximately 200 m below land surface. The pre-glacial sinkholes are filled with and covered by sediments that represent post-glacial depositional environments. The post-glacial sinkholes have developed after the area emerged from the Tyrrell Sea approximately 4,400 years ago. Sinkholes with open drains and intermittent sinking streams are the primary form in the exposed reefal limestone of the Attawapiskat limestone along the Attawapiskat River and Nayshkootayaow River. Between the two major rivers post-glacial sinkholes have developed around perimeters of isolated bioherms, especially in the Bioherm Complex Zone between these two rivers. Although the mildly acidic peat water may have contributed to sinkhole formation at bioherms, the majority of the post-glacial sinkholes are likely linked to the pre-glacial ones, which provided the pre-existing conditions for the post-glacial sinkhole formation. The increases in hydraulic gradient in response to the isostatic uplift and seasonal fluctuations in shallow groundwater level have helped reactivate the pre-glacial sinkholes and have been the primary agents in eroding the overlying materials.
format Text
author Zhou, Wanfang
Lei, Mingtang
LaMoreaux, James W
Green, Daniel S
spellingShingle Zhou, Wanfang
Lei, Mingtang
LaMoreaux, James W
Green, Daniel S
Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada
author_facet Zhou, Wanfang
Lei, Mingtang
LaMoreaux, James W
Green, Daniel S
author_sort Zhou, Wanfang
title Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada
title_short Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada
title_full Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada
title_fullStr Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in Silurian carbonate rocks in the James Bay lowland, Canada
title_sort pre-glacial and post-glacial sinkholes in silurian carbonate rocks in the james bay lowland, canada
publisher Digital Commons @ University of South Florida
publishDate 2020
url https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/sinkhole_2020/ProceedingswithProgram/Geomorphology_Formation_of_karst_and_sinkholes/3
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=sinkhole_2020
long_lat ENVELOPE(-82.417,-82.417,52.928,52.928)
ENVELOPE(-82.300,-82.300,52.950,52.950)
ENVELOPE(-69.512,-69.512,-69.634,-69.634)
geographic Attawapiskat
Attawapiskat River
Canada
Tyrrell
geographic_facet Attawapiskat
Attawapiskat River
Canada
Tyrrell
genre Attawapiskat
James Bay
genre_facet Attawapiskat
James Bay
op_source Sinkhole Conference 2020
op_relation https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/sinkhole_2020/ProceedingswithProgram/Geomorphology_Formation_of_karst_and_sinkholes/3
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=sinkhole_2020
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