Dear Friends,

Below is an announcement of an important conference that will be held next 
year. Please share this with anyone who may be interested. For more information 
contact Dr. John Gunn at: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

George

-----------------------------

KG@B 2015
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GROUNDWATER IN KARST
With optional pre- and post-conference field trips
20-26 June 2015, Birmingham, UK
PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT
The word "karst" is a germanization of the place name for a region in the 
northwest Dinaric area that is commonly referred to as "the Classic Karst". The 
word has passed into the scientific vocabulary to describe a special 
environment in which the major groundwater flux is through an integrated 
network of dissolutionally enlarged channels that discharge via discrete 
springs. The channels span a very wide aperture range; the smallest are little 
more than micro-fractures or pathways through the rock matrix but at the other 
end of the spectrum (and commonly n the same rock mass) channels may grow to 
dimensions where they can be explored by humans and are called caves. The 
relationships between matrix, channels and conduits in a carbonate rock mass 
are a product of recharge and rock lithology, stratigraphy and structure and 
exploration of these relationships is a key theme of the conference. Water 
transfer through the smaller channels that are commonly intersected by 
boreholes is very slow and has often been analyzed using equivalent porous 
media models although the limitations of such models are increasingly 
recognized. At the other end of the spectrum (and commonly in the same rock 
mass) the channels may grow to dimensions where they can be explored by humans 
(caves) through which water flow is analogous to 'a surface stream with a roof' 
and may be amenable to analysis by models devised for urban pipe networks. The 
development of holistic and realistic models for water movement and storage in 
karst is a second key theme of the conference. The direct, and often rapid 
connections between surface water and groundwater in karst have given rise to 
distinctive groundwater ecosystems that have only recently been subject to 
detailed study and this forms a third theme for the conference. Finally, of 
course, it is well known that karst groundwater systems are of global 
importance to humans both as direct sources of potable water and as the source 
of many rivers. Hence, a fourth theme will consider human-karst groundwater 
interactions, a wide area that includes water resource assessment, groundwater 
protection, mineral extraction and infrastructure development.

In summary, the CONFERENCE THEMES will be:
1. Lithological, structural & stratigraphical influences on karst groundwaters.
2. Modeling karst groundwater systems.
3. The ecology of karst groundwaters.
4. Human-karst groundwater interactions

The symposium will be the annual meeting of the IAH Karst Commission and of the 
UIS Commission of Karst Hydrogeology and Speleogenesis and is also sponsored by 
the British Cave Research Association, the British Geological Survey, the 
Hydrogeology Group of the Geological Society of London and the IAH GB Chapter.

The symposium will take place shortly after the 80th birthday of Professor 
Derek Ford and will provide an opportunity to celebrate with him and to 
recognize the huge contribution that he has made to the study of karst.

DATES AND PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME
The Conference will take place at the University of Birmingham from 20-26 June 
2015 as follows: Saturday 20th June : Optional special workshop for consultants 
and professionals on "Karst groundwater systems"
Sunday 21st June : Optional field trip - Groundwater in Cretaceous carbonates.
Monday 22nd June : Opening of formal meeting. Paper sessions. Evening meeting 
of karst commissions.
Tuesday 23rd June : Morning paper sessions
Afternoon. Optional field trip to local underground limestone quarry visited by 
canal barge
Or workshops or free time to visit local area
Evening. Conference dinner
Wednesday 24th June Paper sessions. Close of formal meeting
Thursday 25th June Optional field trip - Groundwater in Jurassic carbonates.
Friday 26th June Optional field trip - Groundwater in Carboniferous carbonates

********************
George Veni, Ph.D.
Executive Director
National Cave and Karst Research Institute
400-1 Cascades Avenue
Carlsbad, New Mexico 88220-6215 USA
Office: 575-887-5517
Mobile: 210-863-5919
Fax: 575-887-5523
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.nckri.org<http://www.nckri.org>

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