Exposure of tourism development to salt karst hazards along the Jordanian Dead Sea shore
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Published:2019-04-26
Issue:4
Volume:23
Page:2111-2127
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Abou Karaki NajibORCID, Fiaschi Simone, Paenen Killian, Al-Awabdeh Mohammad, Closson Damien
Abstract
Abstract. The Dead Sea shore is a unique, young and dynamic salt karst
system. Development of the area began in the 1960s, when the main water
resources that used to feed the Dead Sea were diverted towards deserts,
cities and industries. During the last decade, the water level has fallen by
more than 1 m per year, causing a hydrostatic disequilibrium between
the underground fresh waters and the base level. Thousands of underground
cavities have developed as well as hectometre-sized landslides. Despite these
unfavourable environmental conditions, large tourism development projects
have flourished along the northern coast of the Jordanian Dead Sea. In this
work, which is based on a multi-method approach (analyses of radar and
optical satellite data, in situ observations, and public science), we show
that a 10 km long strip of coast that encompass several resorts is
exposed to subsidence, sinkholes, landslides and flash floods. Geological
discontinuities are the weakest points where the system can re-balance and
where most of the energy is dissipated through erosional processes.
Groundwater is moving rapidly along fractures to reach the dropping base
level. The salt that fills the sediments matrix is dissolved along the water
flow paths favouring the development of enlarged conduits, cavities and
then the proliferation of sinkholes. The front beaches of the hotels, the
roads and the bridges are the most affected infrastructure. We point out
the importance for the land planners to include in the Dead Sea development
schemes the historical records and present knowledge of geological hazards
in the area.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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