Impact of Dead Sea Halo-Karst Development on an Earthen Dike Rehabilitation Project

Author:

Closson Damien1ORCID,Patil Akshay2ORCID,Musthafa Mohamed2,Gallagher Megan3,Das Nitin2

Affiliation:

1. Independent Researcher, 1930 Zaventem, Belgium

2. AiDash, Gurugram 122022, Haryana, India

3. L3Harris, Denver, CO 80202, USA

Abstract

From the 1970s, the Dead Sea experienced severe halo-karstification and anthropogenic modifications. Progressively, but at an accelerating rate, subsidence, landslides, and sinkholes have increased in number and magnitude. The hazards’ triggering factors are the terminal lake level lowering at more than one meter per year and the dynamic equilibrium of the hydrogeological system. Over the Lisan peninsula, archived satellite images revealed the extent of the damaged areas. On 22 March 2000, the destruction of dike 19 represented a loss of 38 M USD. This is the most important event recorded since the beginning of the Dead Sea recession some 50 years ago. In 2018, a rehabilitation project of that dike started. This research analyses the viability of the reinstatement works. The advanced space borne radar interferometry technique is applied to map ground deformations before and during the project. This article reveals that the ongoing rehabilitation and reinstatement works of dike 19 are threatened by ongoing halo-karstification processes. Field observations and subsidence/uplift dynamics support this statement. The past experiences are taken into consideration to adapt industrial expansion strategies. However, the permeability of the salt pan floor could trigger a fast development of a karst system able to destroy the rehabilitated dike 19.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Reference29 articles.

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3. Holecz, F., Pasquali, P., Milisavljevic, N., and Closson, D. (2014). Land Applications of Radar Remote Sensing, IntechOpen.

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