KARST LANDFORMS AND LAKES
Robert W. Blair, Jr.*
This chapter is concerned with the recognition and origin of karst
topography and certain types of lake basins and is not intended to be a
comprehensive text-style dissertation on either karst or lakes. For
more specific information, see Jennings (1971), Sweeting (1972), or
Hutchinson (1957). The category of lakes, although a separate topic
from karst, has been included because we believe that it does not warrant
a special chapter and because the number of good images displaying karst
is limited. The approach is by necessity a regional one, with little
discussion related to landforms that are not observable from space.
KARST
Introduction
The term "karst" stems from the region Krs in Slovenia,
now in northwestern Yugoslavia, which is typified by stony barren rock
(Figure 7.l). The Indo-
European word "kar" for rock and the Italian word
"carso" evolved to the Germanized term"karst,"
which is now the accepted term for solution-derived landscapes like
those just north and east of the Adriatic Sea.Karstification is the geologic
process of differential chemical and mechanical erosion by water on soluble
bodies of rock, such as limestone, dolomite, gypsum, or salt, at or near the
Earth´s surface. Karstification is exhibited best on thick, fractured,
and pure limestones in a humid environment in which the subsurface and
surface are being modified simultaneously. The resulting karst morphology is
usually characterized by dolines (sinkholes), hums (towers), caves, and a
complex subsurface drainage system.
Factors in Karst Development
The development of karst terrain depends on the interplay of at least
seven important factors in varying degrees. These are: lithology, structure,
relief, hydrology, climate, vegetation, and time.
Lithology. Several lithologies are susceptible to karstification,
but limestones and dolomites, owing to their solubility and nature of resistance
and widespread distribution, are overwhelmingly dominant. According to
Pettijohn (1975), 75 percent of the Earth´s surface is covered with
sedimentary rocks, and of that, 10 to 20 percent consists of limestones or
dolomite. Karst morphology can occur on carbonates with less purity than
80 percent, but generally the purer the limestone, the better the development
of karst morphology (Jennings, 1971). For example, the Cretaceous and Early
Tertiary Dinaric karst limestones of Yugoslavia are 95 to 100 percent pure
(Herak, 1972), and white limestone in Jamaica seldom exhibits less than 98
percent purity. Numerous compositional variations can exist in carbonates,
and many of these are discussed in Sweeting (1972) and Jennings (1971).
Figure 7.1. Part of Landsat image 3009-09094-7, June 8, 1978, showing the type locality region of karst topography in the Slovenian Dinaric Mountains of Yugoslivia. The map, taken from an article by Demek et al. in Geomorphology of Europe (C. Embleton, Ed.) (1984) shows karstic features in approximately the same region. Numbers on the map refer to poljes: (1) Grosupeljsko, (3) Globodol, (13) Losko, (14) Babno, (15) Postojnsko, (17) Crnovrsko, (18) Zadlog. Key to symbols: (1) blind valley, (2) pocket valley, (3) dry valley, (4) dry valley system, (5) border polje, (6) overflow polje, (8) dammed polje, (9) karst doline, (10) uvala, (11) karst plain (Demek et al., 1984).
In addition to the composition of limestone, the thickness of individual
beds, the nature of interbeds, especially shaly beds, and lateral facies variations
affect the style and degree of karstification. In the Dinaric Mountains, the depth
of surface karstification is sometimes limited by impermeable beds which have
aided the development of broad flat-floored valleys called poljes (Herak, 1972).
Structure. Structure is used here in the structural geologic sense
and is concerned with the attitude and deformational effects of bedrock.
Limestones and dolomites at or near the surface tend to deform by brittle fracture.
This tendency to form complex joint sets is directly responsible for the secondary permeability required for the development of subsurface solution drainage and
subsequent three-dimensional cave development. Vertical fractures usually
manifest themselves at the surface and focus the solution processes along them. The influence of fracturing is paramount in southeast China, where thousands of square kilometers are affected by several consistent sets of joints (see Plate KL-1,
karst of south China). Folding, in addition, may have the effect of isolating
watersheds and directing ground-water flow. This has occurred in the
Dinaric karst of Yugoslavia.
Large-scale structures or tectonics not only have led to the
development of specific landforms like poljes but have also influenced
the rates and degree of karstification. Most poljes, for example, are
associated with boundary faults (Roglic, 1972). Uplift and deformation
of a carbonate plateau accelerates the dissolution of the limestone because:
(1) fracture density increases, (2) any elevation rise is usually accompanied
by an increase in precipitation, and (3) increased relief increases piezometric
surface gradients. These conditions can: (1) lead to solution-enlarged
conduits along fracture planes, (2) impart to the limestone a high hydraulic
conductivity, and (3) cause rapid fluctuations in the water table with accompanying accelerated solution (Fetter, 1980) .
Relief. Topographic relief is the elevation difference between
the highest and lowest points on the surface for a given area. The Julian Alps
in the inner region of Yugoslavia have a topographic relief near 2000 m. This
mountainous area is associated with an abundance of potholes and few caves.
Both characteristics are thought to be a consequence of this high relief
(Herak, 1972). Related to relief is the depth of the vadose zone, which is the
vertical distance between the surface and the water table. In Florida, the vadose
depth is small, as is the topographic relief. However, throughout low sea level
stands during the Pleistocene, the increased depth of the vadose zone probably
led to the development of a more extensive and efficient subsurface drainage
system with an increase in dissolution along fractures and fissures. With the
absence of the buoyancy effect of a high water table surface, the formation of
collapse dolines may have been accelerated (see Plate KL-4, Florida karst).
Even today the effects of water table drawdown due to excessive pumping have
rendered some urban areas susceptible to the sudden and unexpected collapse of buried solution cavities. Such a collapse occurred in Winter Park, Florida, in May 1981.
Hydrogeology. Hydrogeology is concerned with the interrelation
ships of geologic materials and processes with water (Fetter, 1980). The karstification process involves not only the solution of limestone but also the sometimes overlooked mechanical erosion of limestone. Because the solution chemistry of carbonates is well known (Jennings, 1971; Sweeting, 1972; Bogli, 1980), only a brief
summary will be presented here.The dissolution of limestone involves three principal components: carbon dioxide, water, and calcium carbonate. Initially,
atmospheric carbon dioxide diffuses into the moisture within the air or soil and simultaneously becomes hydrated to form carbonic acid:
(7-1) CO2 + H2O <-> H2CO3
In the presence of limestone, carbonic acid dissolves the calcite.
The reaction is often presented as:
(7-2)
| CaCO3 + CO2 + H2O |
<-> |
Ca++ + 2HCO3- |
| limestone |
|
dissolved limestone |
The only water that is capable of dissolving limestone is aggressive
water, which is water undersaturated with respect to dissolved carbonate.
The time required for aggressive water in karst regions to be neutralized
or to reach saturation equilibrium varies considerably, depending on a
number of factors such as temperature, turbulence, variations in the partial
pressure of carbon dioxide, dilution, presence of other acids, and surface
area of limestone. To achieve equilibrium may require several days; however,
laboratory studies suggest that most of the limestone dissolution resulting
from an influx of fresh aggressive water may occur within minutes to a few
hours (Sweeting, 1972; Jakucs, 1977; Ritter, 1978). Additional
acids, such as organic acids from soils and most recently sulfuric and
nitric acids from acid rain, will contribute to the dissolution of carbonate rocks.
Once saturation equilibrium is achieved, any change to warmer water
temperatures or decreases in the partial pressure of carbon dioxide can drive
equation 7-2 to the left, resulting in the deposition of calcium carbonate
(see Figure 7.2).
Erosion rates have been calculated for many karst regions around the
world and vary widely even within the same climatic zone (Smith and Atkinson, 1976).
 |
Figure 7.2. Saturation equilibrium curves for solution of calcium carbonate at selected temperatures as a function of carbon dioxide equilibrium in solution (modified after Jennings, 1971, p. 26). |
Table 7-1 lists some of the
calculated erosion rates for karst regions discussed in this chapter. Although
these erosion rates are useful for comparative purposes, they are not indicative
of the duration intensity of the erosion process. The dissolution of the limestone
does not take place at a constant rate, but fluctuates with storm events that flood
the karst surface and subsurface with undersaturated water. In other words, the
actual dissolution occurs episodically with maximum peaks corresponding to
surges in the karst water flow. In Jamaica, intense storm events result in subsurface flooding, and because the existing conduit system is not of sufficient size to handle excessive infiltration rates, backfilling of caves and solution channels occurs with
fresh undersaturated water (Versey, 1972). These flood events can be of the
single-storm variety or may be seasonal, as with the winter flooding of
poljes in Yugoslavia.
Because of the unusually high permeabilities and the periodic flooding
associated with most karst regions, the water table correspondingly exhibits
drastic fluctuations. This has been observed by many spelunkers. The water
table in karst rock is frequently difficult to define, especially in free-
flow carbonate aquifers that display a complex multitude of enlarged open
conduits. The water table can occur at considerable depths below the land surface, especially in mountainous regions like the Dinaric Mountains, Yugoslavia.
Water can also be perched under solution depressions above the water table or
it may be discontinuous if the permeability is principally fracture-controlled
(Fetter, 1980). Zones with few or no fractures yield little or no water, in
contrast to dense fracture zones that can potentially supply abundant water.
Table 7-1
Erosion Rates for Image Areas Discussed
| Location |
Erosion Rate
(m3/km3/yr) |
Climate |
| Florida USA* |
35,5,8 |
Tropical |
| Jamaica* |
69,39,86,96 |
Do |
| Yucatan, Mexico* |
30,16 |
Do |
| Guangxi, S.China+ |
120-300 (surface) |
Do |
| Dinaric karst, Yugoslavia* |
43,63,55,67 |
Temperate |
| S. Nullarbor Plain, Australia± |
5 (surface) |
Semiarid | ,
*Smith and Atlinson, 1976.
+Daoxian, 1981.
±Lowry and Jennings, 1974.
Climate. The best-developed karst regions of the
world are found in tropical (e.g., Jamaica) and temperate (e.g., Yugoslavia)
environments. Considerable discussion has evolved as to whether tropical
or temperate environments are more conducive to karstification (Smith and
Atkinson, 1976). Lehmann (1970), a strong advocate of climatic geomorphology,
asserts that solutional erosion rates are more intense in the tropics because of
greater rainfall and carbon dioxide production in soils at higher temperatures.
In contrast, Corbel (1959) contends that the intensity is greater in cold humid
climates where larger quantities of carbon dioxide can be absorbed by water.
The higher the carbon dioxide absorption in water, the stronger is the
resultant carbonic acid. However, because Corbel overlooked the rates of
reaction, which slow down at lower temperatures, the levels of CO2content
may be irrelevant (Embleton, 1985, personal communication).
The absorption of carbon dioxide is temperature-dependent so that
cooler water for a given volume can absorb larger quantities of carbon
dioxide. If the water temperature rises from 0 to 35°C, the carbon
dioxide saturation level will decrease between one-third to two-thirds
(Jennings, 1971). Therefore, waters in cold climates can hold greater quantities
of carbon dioxide in the ionic state, thus being more effective in dissolving
limestone. However, more important than temperature is the partial pressure
of carbon dioxide, which at sea level is relatively constant at 0.035 percent.
The partial pressure of carbon dioxide in soil air can exceed that of the
atmosphere from ten to several hundred times (Bogli, 1980). As a consequence,
the presence and nature of soil cover can be far more important in karstification
intensity than atmospheric air.
A study by Smith and Atkinson (1976) of comparative karst data from
around the world indicates that mean annual runoff, rather than precipitation,
is the principal parameter directly related to erosion rate. Temperature is
believed to be important only with regard to its influence on supporting a
continuous cover of soil and vegetation.
Vegetation. Arid karst regions, such as the Nullarbor Plain in
Australia, are associated with sparse vegetation, thin soils, and therefore, a
slowed rate of surface karstification. In contrast, if the existing soil and climate
can support a dense vegetation cover, an intensified surface and subsurface
karstification occurs, as observed in Jamaica and south China. Biogenic carbon
dioxide, introduced to the soil by plant root systems and bacterial decay, is
regarded as the most important control of solution erosion of limestones
(Jennings, 1971).
Generally, where vegetation is most lush, the highest concentration
of moisture, the highest biogenic activity, and the highest production rates
of carbon dioxide occur. Under these conditions and free water circulation,
the highest solution erosion rates can be achieved. Such conditions are found
in both Jamaica and south China
(Table 7-1). In Jamaica, the forest canopy has been cited as one of the
prime factors responsible for the overdeepening of cockpits (Versey, 1972).
Time. The early karst studies of Cvijic and Grund at the turn
of the 20th century were strongly influenced by the cyclic evolutionary
teachings of Davis and Penck (Roglic, 1972). Thus, karst topography has
been thought to evolve through stages of development beginning with fluvial
action and the initial formation of dolines. As the surface drainage is slowly
captured by swallow holes and the developing subsurface drainage, dolines
coalesce to form uvalas, which, in turn, expand to poljes. This sequence is
now considered to be antiquated, and according to Roglic, poljes are
structurally controlled and are not related to uvalas.
It is questionable whether any two karst regions anywhere in the
world have evolved sequentially in the same manner or even display
identical morphological forms. Each karst region evolves within its
unique combination of dynamic and static factors. However, this does
not preclude the comparison of areas of similar morphology in an
attempt to evaluate common factors.
From the examples of Landsat imagery in this chapter, it becomes
apparent that each region has developed its own morphologic signature.
To understand the evolution of a given karst terrain, it is necessary to
comprehend the roles of length of time, style, and intensity of the
energy flow through the hydrologic system. Those karst regions with
the largest potential energy, related to the thickness of the vadose zone,
and kinetic energy, or flooding, will also exhibit a higher energy
morphology more rapidly and more fully than regions of lower total
energy. High-energy morphology can be manifested in the form
of larger caves, increased relief, density, and magnitude of dolines, hums,
flood deposits, and a more extensive underground solution network.
KARST FROM SPACE
Within the realm of geomorphology, each geologic process leaves its
own imprint on the Earth´s landscape, and each process will develop
its own characteristic assemblage of landforms (Thornbury, 1969). For
karst landscapes, this imprint is expressed as solution morphology on
the regional scale. Because of the relatively large ground resolution distance
of 79 m, many karst landforms cannot be discerned from Landsat MSS
images; only the larger solution and fracture-controlled dolines
and uvalas can be recognized. Thus, the advantage of the space perspective
is not the identification or the recognition of individual landforms, but the
collective pattern and texture they impart to a region of hundreds or thousands
of square kilometers. This can occur only where given geologic processes
and materials, such as carbonates, dominate a large region for a sufficient
length of time.
The Landsat imagery discussed in this chapter has been chosen from
the known karst regions of the world. Some well-researched regions are
not included either because good imagery has not been available (e.g., New
Guinea) or because man´s overprint (e.g., Indiana, U.S.A.) is so
dominant as to obscure natural topographic patterns.
A cursory examination of all the karst images reveals a number of
features specifically associated with the solution process:
- Lack of drainage patterns (all karst regions)
- Dimpled pock-marked texture (Jamaica, Nullarbor Plain)
- Fracture sets with developed relief (China)
- Uniformly scattered residual karst hills (Yucatan, China)
- Circular basins or lakes (Florida)
- Large flat karst plains and poljes (Yugoslavia, China)
Most important is the absence of a well-developed integrated
surface drainage. Indeed, for the Nullarbor Plain, Australia, and Yucatan,
Mexico, it is difficult to identify any recognizable drainage. Major rivers can
be seen to incise the south China carbonate plateaus, but there is a distinct lack
of well-developed tributaries draining into the river channels.
Most karst areas exhibit a relatively homogeneous pock-marked
or dimpled texture. In south China, this pattern is overprinted with solution-
incised joint sets. In Florida, the pattern is expressed as numerous large
water-filled collapsed basins.
Joint sets are not recognized in all karst areas at Landsat scale. This does
not preclude the presence of joints, but merely points out that they may be
obscured because: (1) joints are too closely spaced, (2) solution relief of
joints is slight, (3) dense vegetation cover is present, or (4) joints may indeed
be absent or sparse.
What accounts for the large differences observed in karst regions is
not variation in the karst process, but variation in lithology, structure, and
the overprint of other processes like fluvial, tectonic, eolian, and glacial,
and variations in the energy flow through the karst system through time.
LAKE BASINS
Introduction
According to the American Heritage Dictionary (Dell Publishing Co.,
Inc., 1983), a lake is defined as "a large inland body of water."
The interpretation of the word "large" is conjectural.
For our purposes, a lake must be large enough to be recognizable on
Landsat imagery, which is limited by the ground resolution distance of
79 m and 30 m for the MSS and TM sensors, respectively. It is because of
the presence of water that we easily recognize and focus our attention on these
geomorphic forms. To develop a lake requires two things: (1) geomorphic
process(es) to form a depression, and (2) the proper hydrologic and climatic
conditions to maintain a confined body of water on the Earth´s surface.
Classification
Virtually every geomorphic process is capable of producing a depression
either singly or in combination. A classification of lakes is, in essence, a
classification of various geomorphic processes. Davis (1882) proposes a
classification of lakes based on constructive, destructive, and obstructive
processes, and Hutchinson (1957) presents a detailed classification system
based on various geologic processes.
The following is a modified Hutchinson classification:
- 1. Tectonic processes
- a. Epeirogeny (Caspian Sea, U.S.S.R.)
- b. Tilting (Lake Kioga, East Africa)
- c. Rifting (Lake Baikal, U.S.S.R.)
- 2. Volcanic processes
- a. Caldera collapse (Lake Rotorua, New Zealand)
- b. Explosion crater (Ruapehu Crater Lake, New Zealand)
- c. Lava flow collapse (Yellowstone Lake, Montana, U.S.A.)
- 3. Colluvial processes
- a. Catastrophic landslide (Earthquake Lake, Montana, U.S.A.)
- b. Noncatastrophic slope failure (Goatswater, English Lake District, Britain)
- 4. Glacial processes
- a. Ice-dammed lakes (ancient Lake Missoula, U.S.A.)
- b. Glacial scour lakes (Lake Michigan, Michigan, U.S.A.)
- c. Moraine-dammed lakes (Jenny Lake, Wyoming, U.S.A.)
- d. Kettle lakes (Nushagak Lowlands, southeast Alaska, U.S.A.)
- 5. Solution processes
- a. Dolines (lakes of north central Florida, U.S.A.)
- b. Polje (Lake Scutari, Yugoslavia)
- 6. Fluvial processes
- a. Plunge pools (Castle Lake, Washington, U.S.A.)
- b. Oxbow lakes (Mississippi River floodplain, U.S.A.)
- 7. Coastal processes-Lagoons (Lake Ellesmere, New Zealand)
- 8. Eolian processes
- a. Dammed lakes (Moses Lake, Washington, U.S.A.)
- b. Interdune lakes (lakes in Nebraska Sandhills, U.S.A.)
- c. Deflation basins (Avenue Pan, Witwatersrand, South Africa)
- 9. Impact processes-Explosion crater (Chubb Lake, Canada)
- 10. Life processes
- a. Beaver dams (generally too small for Landsat)
- b. Manmade dams (Lake Nasser, Egypt)
Origin
One objective of this section is to study various lake basins observable
from space, and from their geometry, geologic, and geomorphic associations,
point out characteristics that could reveal information about their origin. The
study of the origin of lakes can be segmented into two lines of inquiry:
(1) causes of topographic depression, and (2) explanation for the presence of
water. The first line of inquiry listed is more amenable to study through space
imagery than the latter. Note that many depressions exist that do not contain
water, and as a consequence, their presence may be overlooked.
Physical criteria useful in the analysis of lakes from space are shape, size,
density, and nature of the surrounding terrain.
Shape. Lake shape in many instances can narrow the choices
of geologic process responsible for an inland depression. Circular topographic
basins, for instance, can be produced by collapse (dolines, calderas), by explosions (volcanic craters, meteoric impact), or from wind (deflation hollows). Circular lakes, associated with these processes and visible on Landsat imagery, include the
doline lakes in north central Florida, the caldera lakes from Nicaragua, a
volcanic crater lake at Crater Butte, California, an impact lake in Chubb Lake,
Quebec, and the deflation hollow lakes found on the Llano Estacado, Texas.
The best-developed elliptical basin lakes are the Carolina Bays in
North and South Carolina and the oriented lakes of Alaska. Surface wave
erosion, aided by wind at right angles to the long axis, is believed to be the
major controlling factor in their elongation (Kaczorowski, 1976).
| Figure 7.3a.. This Landsat scene (1057-16305-7), September 18, 1972) shows numerous linear lakes produced by glacial scouring along fracture zones in Canadian Shield crystalline rocks in the Lac La Ronge area, central Saskatchewan. |
 |
Dammed drainage basins produce dendritic lake patterns. The dams may be
natural or, more frequently, manmade. In 1959, Earthquake Lake formed as
a result of the Hebgen Lake earthquake, which jolted into motion 20 million m3
of rock and debris that subsequently dammed the Madison River in southwestern
Montana (Costa and Baker, 1981). Lake Kioga in East Africa formed after
epeirogenic tilting reversed the drainage in a large watershed and caused the
eventual flooding of the tributary valleys. Manmade reservoirs are especially
abundant in the southeastern United States, but they may be found in virtually
every country of the world.
Linear lakes, including many on the Canadian Shield (Figure 7.3a and Figure 7.3b), are commonly imposed on fracture- or fault-controlled
zones of weakness that localize streamflow or are gouged out by glacial scour.
Triangular lake basins are found in the stabilized dune fields of Senegal.
Rectangular lake basins have been noted in northwestern Yukon Territory,
Canada; their origin is unknown, but structure and permafrost probably
play a role in their development. Lunate or oxbow lake basins are common along meandering river channels such as the Mississippi River. These lakes are
formed from abandoned meanders, usually during flood cycles. Irregular or
amoebic-shaped lake basins are frequently associated with glacial till and are
caused by the differential melting of buried ice or by water filling the low points
on a hummocky moraine. These lakes are common in north-central North America
and in Scandinavia. Some lake basins are so irregular and abundant that they
resemble ink-splatter patterns and can be found in Canada, in Scandinavia,
and in Siberia where large areas of bedrock have been laid bare by continental
ice sheets. Frozen tundra, bedrock structure, and differential erosion have
contributed to their highly irregular pattern.
 |
Figure 7.3b. Aerial view of glacial scour lakes along fractures in the eastern Canadian Shield (Canadian Department of Energy, Mines, and Resources, A11607-84). |
Size. Of the world´s ten largest lake basins based
on water surface area, six have a tectonic origin and four are glacially
derived (Smith, 1968). At various times during the Pleistocene, glacial
lakes have grown in size and probably out-numbered large tectonic lakes.
Lake Bonneville in the Basin and Range of Utah and Minchin Lake in
Bolivia are examples. These pluvial lakes were large because the cooler
climate during glacial periods favored the storage of surface water. The
largest lake basins have developed in response to a regional stimulus in
contrast to small isolated lakes that may result from local influences.
Density. The density of lake basins per unit area can again
indicate the regionality of a geomorphic process. The tens of thousands of
lakes in central Canada and north-central United States reveal the
ubiquity of the glacial process. The Carolina Bays of the southeastern United
States and the oriented lakes of Alaska exhibit the regional influence of wind
and, in the case of Alaska, further influence by permafrost. With isolated small
lakes, such as Earthquake Lake, Montana, local geomorphic processes must
be examined to determine the lake´s origin.
Associated Terrain. Clues to a lake´s origin, as viewed
on Landsat imagery, are frequently revealed by the regional overprint of a
particular geomorphic process. The presence of dune fields in Senegal and
glacial moraines in Quebec, Canada, and the abundance of volcanoes around
Lake Nicaragua, all suggest to the observer a cause-and-effect
relationship. Many rift lakes display straight-lined shores with angular
bends mirrored on the opposite shore. Inland faults may parallel the lake edge
and indicate a tectonic origin. Lake Tanganyika is an example. Lakes associated
with the dimpled surface texture indicative of karst topography may well be
water-filled dolines. The Dinaric Mountains of Yugoslavia have a few
lakes of this variety. However, the most well-developed karst regions
of the world as in Yugoslavia, south China, and Jamaica do not display
abundant lakes. This is due, in part, to the efficient infiltration of precipitation
and a subterranean piezometric surface.
Time
Within our timeframe, lakes may develop catastrophically from volcanic
eruptions, landslides, and earthquake activity, or they may form from slower
acting processes like wind, glacial, and epeirogenic activity. However, it is
important to emphasize that, geologically, lakes are temporary and form rapidly
and decay quickly (Smith, 1968). Because most of the Earth´s land surface
is dominated by fluvial erosion, lakes that do occur are threatened with either
capture and draining by expanding tributaries or infilling of sediment until the
lake becomes extinct. The mere presence of a lake, then, demonstrates the
dynamic restlessness of the Earth´s surface.
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