Skip to main content
Journal cover image

Mass balance implies Holocene development of a low-relief karst patterned landscape

Publication ,  Journal Article
Chamberlin, CA; Bianchi, TS; Brown, AL; Cohen, MJ; Dong, X; Flint, MK; Martin, JB; McLaughlin, DL; Murray, AB; Pain, A; Quintero, CJ; Ward, ND ...
Published in: Chemical Geology
November 20, 2019

We constructed mass balances of both calcium and phosphorus for two watersheds in Big Cypress National Preserve in southwest Florida (USA) to evaluate the time scales over which its striking landscape pattern developed. This low-relief carbonate landscape is dotted with evenly spaced, evenly sized, shallow surface depressions that annually fill with surface water and thus support wetland ecosystems (e.g. cypress domes) embedded in a pine-dominated upland matrix with exposed bedrock. Local and landscape scale feedbacks between hydrology, ecological dynamics and limestone dissolution are hypothesized to explain this karst dissolution patterning. This hypothesis requires the region to be wet enough to initiate surface water storage, which constrains landscape formation to interglacial periods. The time scale therefore would be relatively recent if creation of the observed pattern occurred in the current interglacial period (i.e. Holocene), and older time scales could reflect inherited patterns from previous inter-glacial periods, or from other processes of abiotic karstification. We determined phosphorus stocks across four landscape compartments and estimated the limestone void space (i.e., wetland depression volume) across the landscape to represent cumulative calcium export. We calculated fluxes in (e.g., atmospheric deposition) and out (i.e., solute export) of the landscape to determine landscape denudation rates through mass balance. Comparing stocks and annual fluxes yielded independent estimates of landscape age from the calcium and phosphorus budgets. Our mass balance results indicate that the landscape began to develop in the early-mid Holocene (12,000–5000 ybp). Radiocarbon dating estimates implied similar rates of dissolution (~1 m per 3000–3500 years), and were in agreement with Holocene origin. This supports the hypothesis that ecohydrologic feedbacks between hydrology and vegetation occurring during the present interglacial period are sufficient to shape this landscape into the patterns we see today, and more broadly suggests the potential importance of biota in the development of macro-scale karst features.

Duke Scholars

Altmetric Attention Stats
Dimensions Citation Stats

Published In

Chemical Geology

DOI

ISSN

0009-2541

Publication Date

November 20, 2019

Volume

527

Related Subject Headings

  • Geochemistry & Geophysics
  • 3705 Geology
  • 3703 Geochemistry
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0403 Geology
  • 0402 Geochemistry
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Chamberlin, C. A., Bianchi, T. S., Brown, A. L., Cohen, M. J., Dong, X., Flint, M. K., … Heffernan, J. B. (2019). Mass balance implies Holocene development of a low-relief karst patterned landscape. Chemical Geology, 527. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.05.029
Chamberlin, C. A., T. S. Bianchi, A. L. Brown, M. J. Cohen, X. Dong, M. K. Flint, J. B. Martin, et al. “Mass balance implies Holocene development of a low-relief karst patterned landscape.” Chemical Geology 527 (November 20, 2019). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.05.029.
Chamberlin CA, Bianchi TS, Brown AL, Cohen MJ, Dong X, Flint MK, et al. Mass balance implies Holocene development of a low-relief karst patterned landscape. Chemical Geology. 2019 Nov 20;527.
Chamberlin, C. A., et al. “Mass balance implies Holocene development of a low-relief karst patterned landscape.” Chemical Geology, vol. 527, Nov. 2019. Scopus, doi:10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.05.029.
Chamberlin CA, Bianchi TS, Brown AL, Cohen MJ, Dong X, Flint MK, Martin JB, McLaughlin DL, Murray AB, Pain A, Quintero CJ, Ward ND, Zhang X, Heffernan JB. Mass balance implies Holocene development of a low-relief karst patterned landscape. Chemical Geology. 2019 Nov 20;527.
Journal cover image

Published In

Chemical Geology

DOI

ISSN

0009-2541

Publication Date

November 20, 2019

Volume

527

Related Subject Headings

  • Geochemistry & Geophysics
  • 3705 Geology
  • 3703 Geochemistry
  • 0406 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
  • 0403 Geology
  • 0402 Geochemistry