Journal
of Cave and Karst Studies
- ISSN 1090-6924
Volume 67 Number 1: 14-27- April 2005
A publication of the National Speleological Society
Karst
development on Tinian, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands: Controlls
on dissolution in relation to the carbonate island karst model
Kevin Stafford, John Mylroie, Danko Taboroši, John Jenson, and Joan
Mylroie
Abstract
Tinian, located in the western Pacific
Ocean, is an Eocene volcanic edifice mantled by younger algal and coralline
limestones. Carbonate rocks are eogenetic, producing an island karst terrane
as predicted by the Carbonate Island Karst Model. Surface karst features include
epikarst, closed depressions, and freshwater discharge sites. Subsurface karst
features include three morphologically distinct cave types: mixing zone, fissure,
and contact. Controls on cave development inferred from morphology are supported
by non-parametric statistical analyses. Mixing zone cave development is controlled
by freshwater lens position, fissure cave development is controlled by structural
deformation, and contact cave development is controlled by lithologic boundaries.
Horizons of mixing zone caves preserve at least three previous sea level positions,
but differential rates of uplift between fault blocks prevent correlation of
horizons across the entire island. Tinian karst development demonstrates the
functionality of the Carbonate Island Karst Model and illustrates how portions
of individual islands may exhibit each of the ideal island categories to some
extent.
This page last updated:
28 November, 2005 15:38
Web Author: Jim Pisarowicz