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		<PublisherName>Baywood Publishing Company</PublisherName>
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		<JournalInfo JournalType="Journals">
			<JournalPrintISSN>0047-2433</JournalPrintISSN>
			<JournalElectronicISSN>1541-3802</JournalElectronicISSN>
			<JournalTitle>Journal of Environmental Systems</JournalTitle>
			<JournalCode>BWES</JournalCode>
			<JournalID>300323</JournalID>
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				<VolumeNumber>22</VolumeNumber>
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						<CoverDate Year="1992" Month="1" Day="1"/>
						<CoverDisplay>Number 1 / 1992-93</CoverDisplay>
					</IssuePublicationDate>
					<IssueID>TNC5Y003883L</IssueID>
					<IssueURL>http://baywood.metapress.com/link.asp?target=issue&amp;id=TNC5Y003883L</IssueURL>
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				<Article ArticleType="Original">
					<ArticleInfo Free="No" ESM="No">
						<ArticleDOI>10.2190/X7MV-C93E-66GK-BFH7</ArticleDOI>
						<ArticlePII>X7MVC93E66GKBFH7</ArticlePII>
						<ArticleSequenceNumber>1</ArticleSequenceNumber>
						<ArticleTitle Language="En">Karst Hydrology and Chemical Contamination</ArticleTitle>
						<ArticleFirstPage>1</ArticleFirstPage>
						<ArticleLastPage>26</ArticleLastPage>
						<ArticleHistory>
							<RegistrationDate>20020509</RegistrationDate>
							<ReceivedDate>20020509</ReceivedDate>
							<Accepted>20020509</Accepted>
							<OnlineDate>20020509</OnlineDate>
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						<FullTextFileName>X7MVC93E66GKBFH7.pdf</FullTextFileName>
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						<Composite>1</Composite>
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					<ArticleHeader>
						<AuthorGroup>
							<Author AffiliationID="A1">
								<GivenName>Malcolm</GivenName>
								<Initials>S.</Initials>
								<FamilyName>Field</FamilyName>
								<Degrees/>
								<Roles/>
							</Author>
							<Affiliation AFFID="A1">
								<OrgDivision/>
								<OrgName>U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC</OrgName>
								<OrgAddress/>
							</Affiliation>
						</AuthorGroup>
						<Abstract Language="En">Ground-water flow in karst aquifers is very different from flow in granular or fractured aquifers. Karst ground-water flow is often turbulent within discrete conduits that are convergent in their upper reaches and may be divergent in their very lower reaches, simulating the flow pattern of surface water streams that are dendritic or trellised but with discharge to one or more springs. Significant precipitation events tend to flood karst aquifers quickly, causing a rapid rise in the potentiometric surface that may flood older, higher levels which discharge to a different set of springs. The epikarstic zone in karst terranes stores and directs infiltrating water down discrete percolation points. Chemical contamination may be fed directly to a karst aquifer via overland flow to a sinkhole with little or no attenuation and may contaminate down-gradient wells, springs, and sinkholes within a few hours or a few days. Contaminants may also become temporarily stored in the epikarstic zone for eventual release to the aquifer. Flood pulses may flush the contaminants to cause transiently higher levels of contamination in the aquifer and discharge points. The convergent nature of flow in karst aquifers may result in contaminants becoming concentrated in conduits. Once contaminants have reached the subsurface conduits, they are likely to be rapidly transported to spring outlets. Traditional aquifer remediation techniques for contaminated aquifers are less applicable to karst aquifers.</Abstract>
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						</biblist>
					</ArticleHeader>
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