Title of article :
Anthropogenic CO2-flux into cave atmosphere and its environmental
impact: A case study in the Císařská Cave (Moravian Karst,
Czech Republic)
Author/Authors :
Ji?? Faimon a، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , Jind?ich ?telcl a، نويسنده , , Daniel Sas b، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The evolution of CO2 levels was studied in the ventilated and unventilated Nagel Dome chamber (the Císařská Cave) withand
without human presence. Based on a simplified dynamic model and CO2/Rn data (222Rn considered as a conservative
tracer), two types of CO2-fluxes into the chamber were distinguished: (1) the natural input of (2–4)×10−6 m3 s−1,
corresponding to a flux of (8.5–17)×10−10 m3 m−2 s−1 and (2) an anthropogenic input of (0.6–2.5)×10−4 m3 s−1,
corresponding to an average partial flux of (4.8–7.7)×10−6 m3 s−1 person−1. The chamber ventilation rates were calculated in
the range from 0.033 to 0.155 h−1. Comparison of the chamber CO2-levels with chamber dripwater chemistry indicates that the
peak CO2-concentrations during stay of persons (log pCO2 ∼−2.97, −2.89, and −2.83) do not reach the theoretical values at
which dripwater carbonate species and air CO2 are at equilibrium (log pCO2[DW] ∼−2.76 to −2.79). This means that CO2-
degassing of the dripwaters will continue, increasing supersaturation with respect to calcite (dripwater saturation index defined
as SIcalcite=aCa2+aCO3
2−/10−8.4 varied in the range from 0.76 to 0.86). The pCO2[DW] values, however, would easily be exceeded if
the period of person stay in the chamber had been slightly extended (from 2.85 to 4 h under given conditions). In such case, the
dripwater CO2-degassing would be inverted into CO2-dissolution and dripwater supersaturation would decrease. Achieving the
threshold values at which water become aggressive to calcite (log pCO2[EK] ∼−1.99, −2.02, and −1.84) would require extreme
conditions, e.g., simultaneous presence of 100 persons in the cave chamber for 14 h. The study should contribute to a better
preservation of cave environment.
Keywords :
modeling , radon , airflow , Carbon dioxide , Cave chamber , Dripwater
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment