SPRINGFLOW HYDROGRAPHS: EOGENETIC VS. TELOGENETIC KARST
Thirty-three first-magnitude springs, with mean flow in excess of 100 cfs, discharge from the eogenetic karst of Florida, where the Upper Floridan aquifer is unconfined. Interparticle porosity (20-40%) and matrix permeability (10-12 10-14 m2) of these Eocene and Oligocene limestones, which have not been deeply buried, are in striking contrast to those of telogenetic karst. So too are the spring hydrographs. With the exception of springs that are river-rise (flow-through) systems, springs of Floridas eogenetic karst do not show single storm events, although they do vary according to seasonal or longer-period cycles. It appears that the huge interparticle pore volume of the aquifer mutes, and even eliminates, the spiky responses that have come to be featured in conceptualizations of karst springs.
Modeling efforts that seek to put simulated hydrographs in the context of the multi-continua that characterize karst aquifers will need to recognize the difference between eogenetic and telogenetic karst and pay special attention to the matrix of eogenetic karst.