New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting — Abstracts
Sinkholes as Transportation and Infrastructure Geohazards in Southeastern New Mexico
Lewis Land
https://doi.org/10.56577/SM-2016.450
Sinkholes and other surface karst features are naturally-occurring phenomena in regions underlain by soluble bedrock. The lower Pecos region of southeastern New Mexico and west Texas is particularly prone to karst geohazards because of the widespread occurrence of Permian evaporites at or near the surface. Sinkholes in this region occur over a broad spectrum of scales, ranging from less than one to several hundred meters in diameter, and are often associated with human activity such as solution mining or road construction. Depending on thickness and mechanical properties of the overburden, sinkholes may develop slowly as broad subsidence features or rapidly by catastrophic collapse. Sinkholes receive widespread news coverage when they form in densely populated parts of the country such as south Florida or Kentucky. When these features form in more sparsely populated regions such as the desert southwest, they may go unreported for long periods of time. Sinkholes nevertheless pose a significant geohazard for the transportation and pipeline network in southeastern New Mexico; their occurrence is sometimes difficult to predict and remediation is often challenging and expensive.
Keywords:
sinkholes, Pecos valley, gypsum karst
2016 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting
April 8, 2016, Macey Center, New Mexico Tech campus, Socorro, NM
Online ISSN: 2834-5800