MULTIDISCIPLINARY KARST RESEARCH ON A MILITARY RESERVATION: CAMP BULLIS, TEXAS
The upper 39 m of the Glen Rose Formation, regionally the lower confining unit for the Edwards Aquifer, are highly permeable and hydrologically continuous with the Edwards. Groundwater has been traced in the Glen Rose at rates of 300-600 m/day. Detailed surveys, exceeding state standards, have found one to two orders of magnitude more caves and karst features than in geologically identical neighboring properties, prompting review of existing survey requirements. The Dolomitic Member of the Kainer Formation in particular forms topographically subdued features that often appear insignificant, but if excavated, prove hydrologically and biologically important caves. Federally listed endangered karst invertebrates have been found in 23 caves, and their distribution is defined by continuity of lithologic units. Fourteen endangered species caves in the Dolomitic were discovered or their known extents substantially expanded by excavation.