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The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico

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The Sac Actun system, located in northeast Quintana Roo, Mexico, is among the most extensive underwater cave systems located along the Caribbean coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. The cave is composed of linear phreatic conduits that have two forms. The coastal sections of the Sac Actun system are characterized by low horizontal tunnels that form mazes paralleling the coast and rudimentary conduits broken by fracture-controlled rooms. Inland passages are fault/fracture controlled, have a linear, anastomotic configuration, and align perpendicular to the coast. Access to the cave system is gained through cenotes which are the portals into the Yucatan underwater cave systems. The occurrence of drowned speleothems in many parts of the cave system, and sections of air-filled upper level passages are indicative of major fluctuations in sea level. The Sac Actun system is part of one of the most extensive and significant eogenetic karst aquifers in the world. The development of the Sac Actun system, as well as the many other caves systems along the Yucatan Caribbean Coast is controlled by the coastal hydrologic regime, driven by glacio-eustatics, and influenced by stratigraphic and structural controls. The karstic permeability of the aquifer makes it and the Sac Actun system vulnerable to the anthropogenic impacts of increased population growth, quarries, and infrastructure development associated with the burgeoning tourist industry that dominates land use in the region. © 2016, Instituto Geologico y Minero de Espana. All rights reserved.
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Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
ISSN: 0366-0176
The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico
P. N. Kambesis(1) and J.G. Coke IV(2)
(1) Dept. of Geosciences, Mississippi State University Mississippi State, MS 39759 USA.
pk249@msstate.edu
(2) 7353 Myrna Blvd, Kent, OH 44240 USA.
chac@consolidated.net
ABSTRACT
The Sac Actun system, located in nor theast Quintana Roo, Mexico, is among the most extensive underwa-
ter cave systems located along the Caribbean coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. The cave is composed of li-
near phreatic conduits that have two forms. The coastal sections of the Sac Actun system are characterized
by low horizontal tunnels that form mazes paralleling the coast and rudimentar y conduits broken by frac-
ture-controlled rooms. Inland passages are fault /fracture controlled, have a linear, anastomotic configura-
tion, and align perpendicular to the coast. Access to the cave system is gained through cenotes which are
the portals into the Yucatan underwater cave systems. The occurrence of drowned speleothems in many
parts of the cave system, and sections of air-filled upper level passages are indicative of major fluctuations
in sea level. The Sac Actun system is part of one of the most extensive and significant eogenetic karst aqui-
fers in the world. The development of the Sac Actun system, as well as the many other caves systems along
the Yucatan Caribbean Coast is controlled by the coastal hydrologic regime, driven by glacio-eustatics, and
influenced by stratigraphic and struc tural controls. The karstic permeabilit y of the aquifer makes it and the
Sac Actun system vulnerable to the anthropogenic impacts of increased population grow th, quarries, and
infrastructure development associated with the burgeoning tourist industry that dominates land use in the
region.
Keywords: anchialine cave, caleta, cenote, eogenetic karst, mixing-zone corrosion
Sistema Sac Actun, Quintana Roo, México
RESUMEN
El sistema Sac Actun, situado en el noreste de Quintana Roo, México, es uno de los más extensos siste-
mas de cuevas submarinas ubicadas a lo largo de la costa caribeña de la Península de Yucatán. La cueva
se compone de conductos freáticos lineales que tienen dos formas. Las secciones costeras del Sistema
Sac Actun se caracterizan por túneles bajos horizontales que forman laberintos paralelos a la costa y
conductos rudimentarios rotos por salas controladas por la fracturación. Los pasajes tierra adentro están
controlados por fallas/fracturas y tienen una configuración lineal y anastomosada y se alinean perpendi-
culares a la costa. El acceso al sistema de cuevas se hace a través de cenotes que son los portales hacia
el sistema de cuevas subacuáticas de Yucatán. La presencia de espeleotemas sumergidos en muchas
partes del sistema de cuevas, y las secciones de pasajes del nivel superior llenos de aire son indicativos
de grandes fluctuaciones en el nivel del mar. El sistema de Sac Actun es parte de uno de los más exten-
sos e importantes acuíferos kársticos eogenéticos en el mundo. El desarrollo del Sistema Sac Actun, así
como los muchos otros sistemas de cuevas a lo largo de la costa caribeña de Yucatán está controlado por
el régimen hidrológico costero, controlado por procesos galcio-eustáticos, e influenciado por los contro-
les estratigráficos y estructurales. La permeabilidad kárstica del acuífero hace del Sistema Sac Actun un
medio vulnerable a los impactos antropogénicos por mayor crecimiento de la población, canteras, y el
desarrollo de infraestructura asociados con la industria de un turismo floreciente que domina el uso del
suelo en la región.
Palabras clave: caleta, cueva, cueva anquihalina, cenote, karst eogenetico, corrosión, zona de mezcla.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
178
VERSIÓN ABREVIADA EN CASTELLANO
Introducción
El Sistema de Sac Actun es un extenso sistema de cuevas anquihalinas situado en el municipio de Tulum en
la costa del Caribe, Quintana Roo en la península de Yucatán, México (Figura 1). Las secciones submarinas
(312.6 km) del sistema de cuevas y los pasajes de la zona vadosa (5.8 km) tienen actualmente una longitud
total de 318.5 km y una extensión vertical de 127 metros (diciembre de 2013, QRSS). El Sistema de Sac Actun
se divide geográficamente en distintas secciones que incluyen la región de Sac Actun, la región de Nohoch
Nah Chich, la región de Aktun Hu y la región de Dos Ojos (Figure 2).
Exploración del sistema de Sac Actun
La exploración sistemática submarina de cuevas costeras de Quintana Roo comenzó alrededor de la zona
de Tulum a mediados de los años ochenta. Diferentes equipos de buzos comenzaron a explorar y cartogra-
fiar los numerosos cenotes en la región y encontraron en la cueva extensos pasajes asociados entre ellos.
Conforme continuaban las exploraciones independientes, la longitud de cada sistema de cuevas creció a
medida que los exploradores unían diversas cuevas. Las cuatro regiones del Sistema Sac Actun fueron ex-
ploradas como secciones separadas y eventualmente conectadas para formar la red actual.
Hidrogeología
El Sistema Sac Actun es parte de uno de los más extensos e importante acuíferos kársticos eogenéticos, y
estratificados por densidad, del mundo. La capa superior de aguas subterráneas en el acuífero es una lente
delgada de agua dulce que se recarga por agua de lluvia y fluye hacia la costa. La capa más baja se compone
de agua salada y se origina por la entrada de agua de mar desde la costa. Intercalada entre el agua dulce y el
agua salada se ubica la haloclina que es una capa salobre que se ha formado como resultado de la mezcla y
arrastre por flujo de agua dulce por encima de la interfaz de la haloclina (Beddows, 2004b). La haloclina está
disociada de la capa salina que está por debajo y sirve como una zona de mezcla dinámica. La profundidad
de la haloclina aumenta con la distancia de la costa. Las bahías costeras, llamadas calas, son entradas estre-
chas que se extienden hacia el interior varios cientos de metros y se asocian con grandes aberturas costeras
(Back et al., 1979). Asociado a las calas están las playas en forma de media luna que aparecen cuando la
abertura de la cala se ensancha por la acción litoral y eventualmente es erosionada para formar la estructura
de la playa (Back et al., 1979).
Distribución de la cueva y morfología
La morfología general del Sistema Sac Actun tiene dos formas distintas que son característicos de todos
los extensos sistemas de cuevas a lo largo de la costa caribeña de Quintana Roo. Las secciones más cerca-
nas a la costa muestran una alta densidad de laberintos rectilíneos paralelos a la costa, con una tendencia
noreste-suroeste. Los laberintos están asociados con los conductos que transportan agua dulce a la costa
(Coke, 2009). Las secciones de la cueva situada a más de un kilómetro desde la costa presentan una forma
controlada por fallas. Estas secciones de la cueva son anastomosadas y perpendiculares a la costa en una
dirección noroeste-sureste. Los pasajes de la cueva tienen forma elíptica, son más estables que muchos de
los segmentos de pasajes costeros y vadosos, y los espeleotemas son comunes.
Desarrollo vertical del Sistema de Sac Actun
La profundidad del sistema de Sac Actun, que se mide con respecto a la superficie, oscila de menos de 2
metros a 20 metros; la profundidad en la región de Nohoch Nah Chich abarcan desde 2-6 m, 8-15 m y 16-20
m; en la región de Actun Hu de 5-10 m; y la región de Dos Ojos de 5-10 m y de 14-20 m. Sin embargo, exis-
ten tres excepciones notables que no ocurren dentro de la región Nohoch Nah Chich , Aktun Hu y Dos Ojos
del Sistema Sac Actun. El Blue Abyss (Figura 7) es un pozo submarino vertical con una profundidad de 71
metros y ha sido explorado un laberinto en la base del pozo. “The Pit” en Dos Ojos (Figura 8) es un pasaje
descendente escarpado de suelos en descomposición que comienza en la entrada de un cenote y conduce
a una serie de grandes cámaras con un suelo desglosado, alcanzando esa sección de la cueva 119 metros
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
179
de profundidad. El Hoyo Negro (Figura 9) es un pozo dentro de la región de Actun Hu con una profundidad
de 60 metros. Se han encontrado importantes restos arqueológicos y paleontológicos en este área (Nava
Blank, 2011) (Figura 10).
Factores de control en el desarrollo del sistema de Sac Actun
1. Control hidrogeológico. El Sistema Sac Actun se compone de conductos freáticos lineales que se forma-
ron como resultado de la interacción de agua meteórica, roca y agua salina subterránea. La corrosión de la
zona de mezcla es aceptada como el principal mecanismo para el desarrollo de los conductos en el acuífero
del Caribe Yucatán (Beddows 2004a, Smart et al. 2006). Aunque para la génesis del Sistema Sac Actun, así
como para muchos de los otros sistemas de cuevas submarinas extensas de la región, se cree que es pre-
dominante la corrosión por la mezcla de aguas (Beddows 2004b), las reacciones de microbios asociadas
a procesos redox de sulfatos y reoxidación de sulfuro para producir ácido sulfúrico que también pueden
provocar la disolución (Stoessel et al., 1993).
2. Control sedimentario. El sistema de Sac Actun está formado por sedimentos costeros que consisten en
una secuencia marina y continental que se acumularon en el margen de plataforma, arrecife y “lagoon”. Las
unidades están separadas por discordancias, indicativos de la exposición y la erosión de la superficie de la
plataforma cuando el nivel del mar descendió (Perry et al., 1995).
3. Control estructural. El sistema Sac Actun está situado en el distrito de Eastern Block-Fault de la pe-
nínsula de Yucatán que se extiende desde la punta de la costa noreste, hasta la frontera de la península de
Yucatán con Belice. Las dos principales fallas/lineamientos en Quintana Roo son la zona de lineamiento
de Holbox y la zona de la falla del Rio Hondo (Kambesis y Coke 2013). Las orientaciones direccionales del
Sistema Sac Actun, así como otras cuevas a lo largo de la costa parecen, estar controladas por estas es-
tructuras regionales dominantes. Las características costeras incluyendo calas y playas en forma de media
luna que parecen estar influenciadas por una fractura con dirección noroeste bien definida que controla su
desarrollo interior, y un conjunto de orientaciones noreste paralelas a la costa que influye en la extensión
lateral de estas características (Gondwe et al., 2010). Wedie (1978) basándose en los cambios en las orienta-
ciones de fractura a lo largo de la costa, especuló sobre la existencia de un sistema conjugado. Esto puede
explicar las tendencias paralelas y perpendiculares del desarrollo de la cueva y la alta densidad de pasajes
de la cueva en el área de Tulum.
Desarrollo polifásico de la cueva
El marcado bajo gradiente hidráulico de la península de Yucatán significa que los niveles de agua en las
cueva de Quintana Roo son el nivel del mar (Mosley et al 2013). La ubicación actual de la haloclina y la dis-
tribución vertical de los pasajes de la cueva indican que el Sistema Sac Actun ha sufrido múltiples fases de
desarrollo. Los espeleotemas aparecen en todas las secciones interiores de la cueva como balsas de calcita.
Estas formas características se suelen formar en condiciones vadosas donde los pasajes de la cueva esta-
rían llenos de aire, lo que permite la desgasificación del CO2 tras infiltrarse las aguas y depositarse la calcita.
Las balsas de calcita, que son comunes en todo el sistema de cuevas, especialmente cerca de los cenotes,
precipitan en agua estancada que permite la desgasificación del CO2. Cuando el nivel del mar sube, estas ca-
racterísticas típicamente vadosas son inundadas. Prístinos espeleotemas son característicos de los pasajes
interiores en la región de Sac Actun e indican al menos una fase de desarrollo. Sin embargo las áreas cerca
de la costa muestran espeleotemas corroídos, un indicador de la inundación que pudo existir en los pasajes
de la cueva; así se sucedieron múltiples fases de desarrollo de la cueva (Smart et al. 2006).
Impactos ambientales del desarrollo humano
El Sistema Sac Actun es parte de uno de los más extensos e importantes acuíferos kársticos en el mundo.
La hidrodinámica del acuífero expone el sistema de cuevas a la extensa intrusión salina que restringe el
espesor de la lente de agua dulce. La permeabilidad del acuífero kárstico lo hace vulnerable a los impactos
antropogénicos de la agricultura, las minas y el desarrollo turístico (Kambesis y CoKe 2013). La protección
del Sistema Sac Actun de los impactos del desarrollo humano requerirá la regulación integral de tratamien-
to de aguas residuales, la continuada investigación científica de los acuíferos y sus características afines,
programas espacio-temporales de monitoreo hidrológico y elaboración de políticas regionales eficientes
(Gotwein et al., 2011).
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
180
Introduction
The Sac Actun system is an extensive anchialine cave
system located in the municipality of Tulum on the
Caribbean coast of Quintana Roo on Mexico’s Yucatan
peninsula (Fig. 1). The name translated from the Maya
language means White Cave. The vadose-zone pas-
sages (5.8 km) and underwater sections (312.6 km)
of the cave system currently have a total surveyed
length of 331 km and vertical extent of 127 metres (as
of January 2016 QRSS 2016) making the Sac Actun
system the longest cave in Mexico, and the second
longest cave in the world. The Sac Actun system is
geographically divided into distinct sections that in-
clude the Sac Actun region, Nohoch Nah Chich re-
gion, Aktun Hu region, and Dos Ojos region (Fig. 2).
The lateral extent of the Sac Actun system, from
the extremes of its southwestern to northeastern
reaches, spans more than 12 kilometres in a straight-
line distance along the east coast of Quintana Roo
from Tulum to just south of Xel Ha. The maximum
inland extent of the cave system is 9.2 km to the coast
from the Aktun Hu region. The currently-known en-
tirety of the Sac Actun system underlies a land sur-
face of 96 km2, though the full extent of the area that
it actually drains is currently unknown. Three of the
deepest sections of the underwater cave in the area
occur between the Aktun Hu, Nohoch Nah Chich and
Dos Ojos regions of the cave.
From the coast inland, the cave extends under
dense coastal mangrove that transitions to scrub jun-
gle (Coke 2009). Numerous collapse cenotes serve
as portals to the cave system and 170 cenotes have
been documented so far. Collapse cenotes are ex-
tremely common in Quintana Roo and are formed by
mechanical failure of the ceilings of shallow phreat-
ic cave systems when buoyant support is lost as a
result of a drop in sea level (Beddows et al., 2007).
The cave system is drained by coastal springs that
resurge into the Caribbean Sea.
Though there appears to be a zone of no cave de-
velopment between the inland areas of the Sac Actun
and Nohoch Nah Chich regions (Fig. 2), this is just an
artifact of the map which shows only the passages of
the Sac Actun system. Other cave systems are cur-
rently being explored within this region (and are not
shown on the map), and have the potential to con-
nect to the main system.
Exploration of the Sac Actun system
Systematic underwater exploration of caves in coast-
al Quintana Roo began around the Tulum area in the
mid 1980s. Different teams of cave divers began ex-
ploring and mapping the many cenotes in the region
and found extensive cave passages associated with
them. As independent explorations continued, the
length of individual cave systems grew as explorers
linked together different caves. The four regions of the
Sac Actun system were explored as separate sections
and eventually connected into the current network.
The exploration of the Sac Actun Region of the
system began in 1987 via Grande Cenote located 4
Figure 1: Location map for the Sac Actun system.
Figura 1. Mapa de localización del Sistema de Sac Actun.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
181
km west of Tulum (Coke 2007). Upstream explora-
tions found an extensive cave that was beautifully
decorated and filled with crystal clear blue waters.
Passages were typically up to five metres wide with a
depth of 10 metres or less. Downstream explorations
beyond a major paleo-beach ridge were complicated
by size-restrictive, low visibility passages that were
at times unstable.
The Nohoch Nah Chich (Big Bird House) region,
in the central par t of the system was initially discov-
ered in 1986 and explored from the Nohoch Nah Chich
cenote located 4 km inland (Fig. 3). Explorers were able
to traverse downstream to the coastal spring at Cenote
Manati and through to the Caribbean Sea. In 1993, a
71-metre deep cylindrical shaf t floored with large
breakdown blocks was discovered in the Nohoch Nah
Chich region and named Blue Abyss (Gerrard 1993).
Exploration and documentation of a significant
air-filled section of the Nohoch Nah Chich region be-
gan in 2006 at Yax Muul and several kilometres of
air-filled cave are now part of the system (Coke 2007).
The Nohoch Nah Chich region was connected to the
Sac Actun in 2007 (QRSS 2013).
The northwestern-most region of the cave is the
Aktun Hu (Iguana Cave) which was discovered in
1992. During explorations in 2007 a 60-metre deep
pit named Hoyo Negro was discovered within that
section of cave (Attolini 2010), as were significant ar-
cheological and paleontological remains (Nava Blank
2011). A connection to the Sac Actun system was ac-
complished in 2011.
Exploration of the Dos Ojos (Two Eyes) region,
the northeastern-most extent of the system began in
1987. In 1994 the discovery was made of a cenote that
led to what is now the deepest cave segment in the
system called “The Pit” and gives this section of cave
a depth of 119 metres (Barton 2001). “The Pit” is also
the deepest section of cave passage of all of the cave
systems in the coastal zone of Quintana Roo. The Dos
Ojo was linked via dry connection to the Sac Actun
system in 2012 making it the longest cave in Mexico
and second longest cave in the world (Heyer and
Sprouse 2012) (Fig. 4). Cave divers still consider the
Sac Actun system to be the second longest underwa-
ter cave, behind the Ox Bel Ha system, because the
connection to the Dos Ojos was in an air-filled pas-
sage. Exploration continues in all sections of the Sac
Actun system and it is likely that more connections
will be made with satellite cave systems.
Hydrogeology
Groundwater movement through the cave systems
of the Yucatan has been portrayed as flowing in un-
derground rivers. It is more accurate to describe it as
Nmag
2013
Sistema Sac Actun
Municipio de Tulum
Tulum, Quintana Roo
México
Length: 318540 Meters
Depth: -127.6 Meters
Cenote
Sac Actun
Cenote Calavera
(Temple of Doom)
Cenote
Naval
Cenote
Abejas
Cenote
Nohoch Kin
Cenote
Manati
Sac Actun
Region
Dos Ojos
Region
Hoyo
Negro
Pet Cemetery
Connection
Cenote
Dos Ojos
2 Kilometers
December 2013
Quintana Roo Speleological Survey
Nohoch Nah Chich
Region
The
Pit
Aktun Hu
Region
Sistema
Yax Muul
Blue
Abyss
Figure 2: Map of the Sac Actun system showing geographic re-
gions. Cartography by the Quintana Roo Cave Survey.
Figura 2 Mapa del Sistema de Sac Actun mostrando las regiones
geográficas. Cartografía de Quintana Roo Cave Survey.
Figure 3: Mapping in Nohoch Nah Chich region of the the Sac Actun
system. Photo by Simon Richards.
Figura 3. Cartografía de la región Nohoch Nah Chich del Sistema
Sac Actun. Foto por Simon Richards.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
182
a combination of turbulent and laminar flow through
underground estuaries because the groundwater
chemistry contains a mix of fresh and saline water.
Some cave passages display turbulent water flow but
many others do not.
The Sac Actun system is part of one of the most
extensive and significant eogenetic, density-strati-
fied karst aquifers in the world. The upper-most lay-
er of groundwater within the aquifer is a thin lens of
fresh water that is meteorically recharged and flows
toward the coast. The lowest layer consists of saline
water and originates from the influx of sea water
from the coast. Sandwiched between the fresh and
saline water is the halocline which is a brackish layer
that has formed as a result of mixing and entrainment
by freshwater outflow above the halocline interface
(Beddows 2004b). This zone is also a thermocline as
evidenced by cooler temperatures in the freshwater
lens and warmer temperatures in the underlying sa-
line water (Beddows 2004b). The halocline is decou-
pled from the saline layer below it and serves as a
dynamic mixing zone. Halocline depth increases with
distance from the coast. Fluctuations in the halocline
result from periods of sustained precipitation, ocean
tides, and the pervasiveness of exposed mixing
zones in cave passages (Coke 2012).
Though there is an absence of flow indicators (scal-
lops) in the underwater portions of the Sac Actun sys-
tem, cave divers report strong water flow within many
of the passages in all regions of the cave system and
Figure 4: Map of the connection area between Nohoch Nah Chich and Dos Ojos regions. Cartography by Peter Sprouse.
Figura 4. Mapa de la zona de conexión entre las regiones de Nohoch Nah Chich y Dos Ojos. Cartografía de Peter Sprouse.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
183
Figure 5. Map of historic Sac Actun showing the water flow as observed by divers. Cartography by Coke, Phillips, Jasper, Lins and Matthes,
modified by P. Kambesis.
Figura 5. Mapa histórico del flujo de agua de Sac Actun según lo observado por los buceadores. Cartografía por Coke, Phillips, Jasper, Lins
and Matthes, modified by P. Kambesis.
the observed occurrence of dunes of white silt along
the perimeter of cave passages, indicating turbulent
flow (Fig. 5). Hydrologically active passages are in-
fluenced by proximal Pleistocene ridges or through
young Holocene deposits that are located between
the coastline and the Pleistocene ridge (Coke 2009).
Dye tracing conducted in the Nohoch Nah Chich
region indicated that significant fresh water flow
does occur in many cave passages (Worthington et
al., 2000). Because of the inherent cavern porosity of
the aquifer it is highly transmissive and the tidal sig-
nal has been documented in cenotes up to five km
inland from the coast (Beddows 2004b).
The water makes it way to the coast where it drains
through coastal discharge vents to the Caribbean
Sea. Coastal embayments called “caletas” are nar-
row inlets that extend inland for several hundred me-
ters or more and are associated with large coastal
vents (Back et al. 1979). “Caletas” form where dis-
charging freshwater from submerged cave passages
mix with saltwater at their seaward margins causing
an increase in local dissolution and inducing cave
passage collapse that migrates inland to form a cove
(Beddows 2004a). Cenote Manati is one of the ma-
jor discharge points of the Nohoch Nah Chich region
and is located at the downstream end of a “caleta”.
The upstream end of the caleta is where spring vents
debouche and flow almost 200 meters before sinking
underground at a large cave entrance at the down-
stream end of the “caleta”. The water resurges again
in a series of vents located within 50 meters from
the coast. In the Dos Ojos region of the system, dye
tracing demonstrated that large volumes of water
flow to the northeast toward Caleta Xel-Ha (Beddows
2004b). This “caleta” is the largest in the region with
an inland extent of 600 metres.
Associated with the “caletas” are crescent-shaped
beaches that occur when the “caleta” openings are
widened by littoral action and eventually eroded to
form the beach structure (Back et al., 1979). There are
many crescent-shaped beaches, more “caletas” and
many discharge vents with a frequency of every 2-3
km along the coastal stretch that is hydrologically as-
sociated with the Sac Actun system.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
184
Cave distribution and morphology
The overall morphology of the Sac Actun system has
two distinct forms that are characteristic of all of the
extensive cave systems along the Caribbean coast of
Quintana Roo. Sections that are closest to the coast
display high-density rectilinear mazes that parallel
the coast on a northeast-southwest trend. The mazes
are associated with conduits that carry fresh water to
the coast (Coke 2009). The cave passages that make
up these mazes are low and horizontal and are inter-
spersed with fracture-controlled chambers. They are
characteristically devoid of speleothems, and coated
with clay-like silt (Coke 2012). The limestone in this
section is very friable and in places can be unstable.
Passages in the Cenote Abejas section of the Sac
Actun region exemplify this morphology.
Sections of the cave located greater than a kilometre
from the coast display a distinct fracture and fault mor-
phology. These sections of cave are anastomotic in
configuration and run perpendicular to the coast on a
northwest-southeast trend. Cave passages have an el-
liptical shape, are more stable than many of the coastal
passage segments, and vadose speleothems are com-
mon. The northern sections of the Sac Actun region ex-
emplify this type of passage development. The anasto-
mosing configuration may be in part be influenced by
regional structure though local conditions can also be
important. Extensional fractures associated with me-
chanical ceiling collapse and the formation of cenotes
may result in collapse zones that host an anastomosing
pattern of passages The Balancanche. Cenote (Fig. 6),
located in the Nohoch Nah Chich region has 10 collapse
cenotes located within a 0.6 km2 zone of anastomo-
sing passages. The cross section in Figure 6 displays a
600-metre wide collapse zone that strongly influences
the morphological pattern of the cave passage. Other
factors that influence cave patterns include sediment
and speleothem occlusion and hydrologic piracies.
The morphological difference from coastal to in-
land configuration may in part be caused by changes
in lithology where Pleistocene to Holocene age car-
bonates transition to older, more consolidated ones
and cave passages are contained within more mas-
sive and stable bedrock (Kambesis and Coke 2013).
At distances of 3 to 6 km from the coast the south-
ern and northern arms of the system (Sac Actun-
Naval and Nohoch Nah Chich respectively) there are
Neogene rocks. Lateral branching of passages still
occurs but the number of passages is limited to just
one or two primar y discharge tunnels; secondary
passages are small in dimension and length and typi-
cally end in impassible tubes or cracks that discharge
fresh water (Coke 2009).
As with any extensive cave system, individual
cave passage morphologies within Sac Actun sys-
tem range from the simple canyon-type and elliptical
shapes to more complex morphologies that indicate
the overprinting of processes. Ceiling collapse, sed-
iment fills, speleothem deposition and undercutting
of passage walls have modified the original cross
section of many cave passages within the system.
Vertical development of the Sac Actun System:
The submerged passages of the Sac Actun system
are fairly shallow in terms of world depth standards.
Depths, which are measured below the surface in the
Sac Actun region, have ranges that span from < 2 m
to 20 metres; the Nohoch Nah Chich region depth
ranges span from 2-6 m and 8-15 m and 16-20 m; the
Actun Hu region from 5-10 m; and the Dos Ojos re-
gion at 5-10 m and 14-20 m. However, there are three
notable exceptions that all occur within the Nohoch
Nah Chich-Aktun Hu-Dos Ojos regions of the Sac
Actun system. These areas require advanced cave
diving techniques and equipment, mixed gases, and
experience. The Blue Abyss (Fig.7) is an underwater
vertical shaft with a depth of 71 metres and has been
explored to a breakdown maze at the base of the
shaft. “The Pit” in the Dos Ojos (Fig. 8) is a steeply
descending breakdown-floored passage that begins
at a cenote entrance and leads to a series of large
breakdown-floored chambers, giving that section of
cave a depth of 119 metres. The largest chamber in
Figure 6: The influence of cenote collapse on cave configuration,
Balancanche Cenote (Nohoch Nah Chich region). Cartography by E.
Hutcheson and modified by P. Kambesis.
Figura 6. Influencia del cenote de colapso en la configuración
de la cueva Cenote Balankanche (región de Nohoch nah Chich).
Cartografía por E. Hutcheson y modificada por P. Kambesis
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
185
this section is the Wakulla Room, 150 m long and 30 m
wide. The Hoyo Negro (Fig. 9) is a breakdown-floored
pit within the Actun Hu region with a depth of 60 me-
tres. Significant archeological and paleontological re-
mains have been found in this area (Nava Blank 2011)
(Fig. 10).
The deep sections of the Sac Actun system are in
salt water and hint at the existence of deeper levels
of cave development which are mostly unknown.
Water samples collected in The Pit were analyzed
to be chemically identical to nearby marine wa-
ter (Barton 2001). There are reports of large holes
along the walls of the modern barrier reef at depths
of 100 metres that could potentially lead to deep lev-
els of cave development formed when sea level was
over a hundred metres lower than it is today (Barton
2001) .
The Yax Muul section (Figs. 11 and 12) of the
Nohoch Nah Chich region is an air-filled segment of
cave that exists above underwater passages. This
section probably formed when sea level was 6 me-
tres higher, associated with the last interglacial that
took place 125 000ka.
Figure 7: Blue Abyss in the Nohoch Nah Chich Region. Cartography
by E. Hutcheson and modified by P. Kambesis.
Figura 7. Región de Blue Abyss Nohoch Nah Chich. Cartografía por
E. Hutcheson y modificado por P. Kambesis.
Figure 8: The Pit in the Dos Ojos Region. Cartography by Hazel Barton.
Figura 8. El Pit en la región de Dos Ojos. Cartografía por Hazel Barton.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
186
Figure 9. Map of Hoyo Negro in Aktun Hu region. Cartography by Alberto Nava Blank.
Figura 9. Mapa de Hoyo Negro en la región de Aktun Hu. Cartografía de Alberto Nava en blanco.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
187
Controls on cave development of Sistema Sac Actun
Hydrogeologic controls
The development of the Sac Actun system, as well
as the many other caves systems along the Yucatan
Caribbean coast is controlled by the coastal hydrol-
ogy, driven by major fluctuations in sea level, and
influenced by stratigraphy and geological structure.
The Sac Actun system is composed of linear phre-
atic conduits that formed as a result of the rock/water
interaction between meteoric and saline groundwa-
ter. As meteoric water infiltrates the bedrock it at-
tains chemical equilibrium with respect to carbonate
and loses much of its dissolutional capability. Saline
groundwater is also typically saturated with respect
to carbonate and has very little dissolutional capacity.
At the halocline the two end members mix and form
a brackish water zone that is undersaturated with
Figure 10: Divers documenting human remains in the Aktun-Hu re-
gion. Photo by Daniel Riordan.
Figura 10. Buceadores documentando los restos humanos en la re-
gión de Aktun-Hu. Foto de Daniel Riordan.
Figure 11: Map of the Yax Muul section in the Nohoch Nah Chich region. Cartography by Jim Coke
Figura 11. Mapa de la sección de la región de Yax Muul Nohoch Nah Chich. Cartografía de Jim Coke
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
188
respect to carbonate (Wigley and Plummer 1976).
Dissolution of limestone occurs at the mixing zone
along the path of discharge of the undersaturated
brackish water (Beddows 2003). Mixing zone corro-
sion is accepted as the main mechanism for conduit
development in the eogenetic aquifer of the Yucatan
Caribbean (Beddows 2004a, Smart et al., 2006). This
idea is supported by the observation that the vertical
location of caves in the region is either directly asso-
ciated with the position of the halocline or is above
it -between 10 to 25 meters below current sea level
(Beddows 2004a, Smart et al. 2006). Though genesis
of the Sac Actun system as well as many of the other
extensive underwater cave systems of the region is
thought to be predominantly from mixing corrosion
(Beddows 2004b), microbially mediated reactions as-
sociated with redox processes involving sulfates and
reoxidation of sulfide to produce sulfuric acid may
also drive dissolution (Stoessel et al., 1993). These
processes can also occur in sediments derived from
surface runoff via cenotes (Smart et al., 2006).
Gulley et al. (2013) put forth an alternate model
for cave formation in eogenetic karst aquifers. They
hypothesize dissolution occurs when water flows
from aquifer regions with low pCO2 into regions with
higher pCO2. The increase in pCO2 comes from frac-
tures connecting the soil zone to water tables and
water flowing from regions of low pCO2 into regions
of high pCO2. This condition dissolves CO2 from the
atmosphere, reduces pH, and dissolves limestone.
They posit that simple geochemical models demon-
strate small gradients in pCO2 along flow paths are an
order of magnitude more efficient at dissolving lime-
stone than mixing of vadose and phreatic water.
Smart et al. 2006 suggested that dissolution could
occur in the salt-water-occupied deeper zones of the
cave. Beddows (2004a) documented an increase in
temperature with depth in The Pit and Blue Abyss
(approximately 2oC/100m). Though these waters are
typically saturated with respect to carbonate, forced
advection could cool the water and result in under-
saturated water that could dissolve limestone in the
deep saline zone (Smart et al., 2006).
Stratigraphic Controls
The Sac Actun system is formed in eogenetic coastal
strata that consist of marine and non-marine sequenc-
es accumulated in shelf margin, reef, and back reef
environments facies. The units are separated by un-
conformities indicative of exposure and erosion of the
platform surface when sea level retreated (Perry et
al., 1995). The marine strata include beach, near shore
and lagoonal types, and coral-reef limestone; non-ma-
rine strata consist of eolianites, freshwater lacustrine
carbonate mudstone, and caliche (Ward 2003).
The coastal strata have been chronologically divid-
ed by Back et al. (1979), into Upper (125 000 ybp), Middle
(174 000 ybp), and Lower Pleistocene (200 000-800 000
ybp) units. The Upper Pleistocene unit was deposited
when sea level was 6-meteres above current levels
and cave passages have developed at this level. Cueva
Yax Muul, located in the Nohoch Nah Chich region
is an example of vadose-zone cave passage formed
when sea level was highest 125 000 years ago (MI5e).
Miocene-Pliocene rocks underlie the Quaternary-age
strata (Ward 2003, Richards and Richards 2009) and
contain the region’s deepest cave passages.
An important local feature in the Tulum area is a
Pleistocene ridge whose location ranges from 200 m
to a kilometre inland from the coast and displays a
10-metre increase in elevation. This area may mark
a change in lithology where Pleistocene to Holocene
age carbonates transition to older, more consolidated
ones and cave passages are contained within more
massive and stable bedrock. Analogous to this would
be Vallgornera Cave of the Migjorn karst on the island
of Mallorca, Spain. Though that region is more struc-
turally complex than the Yucatan peninsula, bedrock
lithology strongly influences cave passage density
and shape (Ginés et al. 2009a, Ginés et al., 2009b).
Structural Controls
Sistema Sac Actun is located within the Yucatan
peninsula’s Eastern Block-Fault district that extends
Figure 12: A sump in the dry Yax Muul section of Nohoch Nah
Chich region. Photo by Simon Richards.
Figura 12. Un sumidero en la sección seca de Yax Muul de la re-
gión Nohoch Nah Chich. Foto por Simon Richards.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
189
from the tip of the northeast coast, to the Yucatan’s
border with Belize. The two main faults /lineaments
in Quintana Roo are the Holbox Lineament Zone and
the Rio Hondo Fault Zone (Kambesis and Coke 2013).
The directional trends of Sistema Sac Actun, as well
as other caves along the coast appear to be controlled
by these dominant regional structures.
The Holbox Lineament Zone (HLZ) is a northeast
trending feature that starts at the northeastern coast
of the peninsula and continues south to within 10 km
of the coast inland from Tulum (Bauer-Gottwein et al.
2012). HLZ is evident on the surface by the alignment
of polje-like features (Weidie 1978). The extensive
cave systems that characterize the northeast coast
of Quintana Roo all appear to terminate at HLZ and
there are no known extensive cave systems formed
beyond HLZ.
The Rio Hondo Fault Zone (RHFZ) is an extension-
al feature composed of northeast trending normal
faults and is the on-shore continuation of an exten-
sive horst and graben system located off the south-
ern Caribbean coast of Quintana Roo (Weidie 1985).
Remote sensing analysis suggests that RHFZ extends
northwards and intersects with the HFZ in the vicinity
of Tulum (Gondwe et al., 2010). This intersection of
structural features could account for the density of
cave passages that have been documented in this
area.
Coastal features, including “caletas” and cres-
cent-shaped beaches, appear to be influenced by
a well-defined northwest trending fracture that
controls their inland development and a northeast
trending set that parallels the coast and influences
the lateral extent of these features (Gondwe et al.,
2010). Based on changes in fracture trends along
the coast, Wedie (1978) speculated the existence of
a conjugate fracture system. This may explain the
parallel and perpendicular trends of cave develop-
ment and the high density of cave passages in the
Tulum area.
The orientation of “caletas” and crescent-shape
beaches correlate with areas of maximal fracturing.
The existence of extensive underwater conduits with
trends that appear to match those of the regional
structures strongly suggest that linear dissolution
corridors are developed along the extensive frac-
ture and lineament zones that occur in northeastern
Quintana Roo (Tułaczyk et al., 1993).
Figure 13: Multi-level passages in Hells Gate section of Nohoch Nah Chich. Cartography by E. Hutcheson and modified by P. Kambesis.
Figura 13. Pasajes multiniveles en la sección Hells Gate de Nohoch Nah Chich. Cartografía por E. Hutcheson y modificado por P. Kambesis.
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
190
Multiphase cave development
The low hydraulic gradient of the Yucatan peninsu-
la means that water levels within Quintana Roo cave
systems track sea level (Mosley et al., 2013). The cur-
rent location of the halocline and the vertical distribu-
tion of cave passages indicate that the Sac Actun sys-
tem has undergone multiple phases of development.
The existence of air-filled cave passages such as Yax
Muul and multilevel areas such Hells Gate, both in
the Nohoch Nah Chich region (Fig.13) attest to the re-
lationship of sea level to cave passage development.
Speleothems are prevalent at all of the inland
sections of cave as are calcite rafts. These features
typically form under vadose conditions where cave
passages would be air-filled allowing the degassing
of CO2 from infiltrating waters, and the deposition of
calcite. Calcite rafts, which are common throughout
the cave system especially near cenotes, precipitate
from pooled water that is degassing CO2. When sea
level rises, these typically vadose-zone features be-
come inundated.
Pristine speleothems are characteristic of the in-
land passages in the Sac Actun region and indicate
at least one phase of development. However, areas
near the coast such as the Abejas area of the Sac
Actun region and the Balancanche Cenote area in
the Nohoch Nah Chich region display speleothems
that are corroded; an indication of re-inundation of
existing cave passages and thus multiple phases of
cave development (Smart et al., 2006). Preliminary
work on the correlation of U-series dates of corals on
Quintana Roo with speleothems from various caves
in the region (Mosley et al., 2013) is beginning to re-
late age-dates of the different elevations of cave pas-
sage development to the stadial and interstadials of
MIS5 series.
Environmental impact of human development
The Sac Actun system is part of one of the most
extensive and significant eogenetic karst aquifers
in the world. The hydrodynamics of the aquifer ex-
pose the cave system to extensive saline intrusion
that restricts the thickness of the freshwater lens.
The karstic permeability of the aquifer makes it vul-
nerable to the anthropogenic impacts of agriculture,
quarries, and touristic development (Kambesis and
Coke 2013) .
The coastal district in Quintana Roo, called the
Mayan Riviera, is undergoing large-scale develop-
ment for tourism that poses significant threats to
the groundwater resources. The many cenotes and
“caletas” that occur along the coast are used for na-
ture parks and other touristic developments. The most
spectacular of the “caletas”, including Xel Ha and Yalk
Hu are used for recreational water activities as are the
numerous cenotes that dot the coastal zone.
Population growth that is associated with touristic
development is impacting the aquifer with increasing
amounts of wastewater and solid waste as are the
growing number of landfills (Bauer-Gotwein et al.,
2011). These land uses impact not only the ground-
water resources of the region but also the anchial-
ine cave habitants that are associated with the cave
systems. Subterranean waters move quickly through
karst conduits that drain the aquifer, at times as much
as kilometers per day (Beddows 2004a). The thin soil
cover characteristic of the peninsula, and fast ground-
water flow do not provide the natural filtration and
holding time necessary for the natural breakdown of
pollutants. All groundwater that flows through the
extensive conduit systems of Quintana Roo is even-
tually discharged onto the barrier reef system that
fringes the modern coast.
Injection of effluents into deep saline water zones
near the coast and pumping fresh water from wells
10 km inland may not be environmentally sustainable
due to the hydrodynamics of the density-stratified,
de-coupled fresh and saline waters of the aquifer
(Beddows 2003, 2004a). Effluent is similar in density
to fresh water so it tends to rise up either into the
fresh water lens or to the fresh water-saline water
mixing zone (Richards and Richards 2007). The flow
of saline water between cenotes and beaches, and
the coastward flow of freshwater can bring effluent
to beaches and reefs (Beddows 2004a).
The flow dynamics of the fresh water lens is im-
pacted by construction of waterfronts and marinas
for hotels, resorts, and housing developments. Man-
made trenches that cut inland from the coast and
the removal of shallow bedrock increases the flow of
freshwater to the coast and can potentially cause the
loss of the freshwater lens (Richards and Richards
2007).
The number of cenotes and their density are a
threat to the construction of tourist facilities and
housing developments as is the existence of exten-
sive dry sections of thin-roofed cave passages in the
area.
Protection of the Sac Actun system from the im-
pact of human development will require comprehen-
sive regulation of wastewater treatment, continued
scientific research of the aquifer and its related fea-
tures, space-temporally resolved hydrological moni-
toring programs and efficient regional policy making
(Gotwein et al., 2011) .
Kambesis, P.N. and Coke IV, J.G., 2016. The Sac Actun System, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Boletín Geológico y Minero, 127 (1): 177-192
191
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Hazel Barton, Alberto Nava
Blank, and Peter Sprouse for use of their detailed maps
in this paper. Their cartography of regional caves is a
valuable resource for our description of the Sac Actun
system. We would also like to acknowledge the work
of underwater cave cartographers and surveyors Eric
Hutcheson, Woody Jasper, Dan Lins, Andeas Matthes,
and Bill Phillips. Their work helped to frame many of
our figures. The details of their survey and mapping
work should serve as an example for today’s under-
water and dry cave explorers in Quintana Roo. We
also thank Simon Richards and Daniel Riordan for
their kind permission in allowing us to use of their
beautiful photographs. Detailed cave maps coupled
with high quality photographs such as theirs are a
critical resource for the study and understanding of
the cave systems of Quintana Roo, Mexico.
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Recibido: febrero 2015
Revisado: marzo 2015
Aceptado: abril 2015
Publicado: marzo 2016
... Groundwater contamination is mainly associated with urban areas [65], agricultural areas [26,66], or roads [26,64]. Compounds that often contaminate groundwater include heavy metals, polyaromatic hydrocarbon compounds, fertilizers, pesticides, or organic matter [64,67,68]. ...
... Sea-level rise due to climate change is predicted to be a cause of change in these systems. The below-ground water bodies consist of an upper thin lens of freshwater, recharged by rainwater, which flows towards the coast [65]. The lower, much thicker, layer is saltwater [65]. ...
... The below-ground water bodies consist of an upper thin lens of freshwater, recharged by rainwater, which flows towards the coast [65]. The lower, much thicker, layer is saltwater [65]. Sea water intrusion into the aquifer is related to hydraulic conductivity, aquifer recharge, and sea-level rise [25]. ...
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In a relatively short timescale (less than 50 years), urbanization has caused many anthropogenic disturbances that have affected ecosystem health and, directly or indirectly, quality of life for the local human population. Global disturbances, such as climate change, can also have a substantial, overarching impact on ecosystems. In this scenario, natural disturbances, previously considered an integral part of ecosystem dynamics, can now cause irreversible change to the state of ecosystems, and at the same time, negatively impact social and economic systems. The objective of this study was to identify ecosystem disturbances at a site of interest to recommend strategies to improve coastal zone management. We chose the Mexican Caribbean as a case study, because its biological and cultural complexity render it an interesting location from a coastal management point of view. The PRISMA framework was used to conduct a systematic literature review to identify the ecosystem disturbances that affect this area, as well as the main causes and consequences of these disturbances. Additionally, we discuss how disturbances and their impacts, as screened through PRISMA, can be incorporated into a coastal zone management framework. Results need to consider the limitations associated with using this technique e.g., the degree of impact from a current disturbance may vary from that reported in an earlier publication. Despite its limitations, we believe that this methodology proves useful for identifying key ecosystem disturbances and their consequences, providing a useful tool for identifying appropriate actions to inform coastal zone management plans.
... The limestone soil is highly permeable due to the combination of the dissolution mechanisms of calcium carbonate and collapse of the rock, this allows the fluvial waters to filter quickly into the aquifer, thus the absence of rivers on the surface (Polanco Rodríguez et al., 2017;Rosiles-González et al., 2017). The high permeability and porosity of the limestone soil of the YP has formed underground water reservoirs that flow slowly in a complex system of caverns (Kambesis and Coke, 2016). These are occasionally open to the surface forming large circular pools (Rubio et al., 2016), known in Mexico as 'cenotes', a word derived from the Mayan language, d'zonot. ...
Article
Objective: To detect the spatial distribution of the sinkholes of the Peninsula of Yucatan (SPY) and identify those cenotes where microorganisms have been registered. Methods: The geographic coordinates of the SPYs were obtained from various databases, as well as from scientific publications relating to the terminology ‘sinkholes’, ‘karst systems’ and ‘cenotes’. All coordinates were transformed into the Universal Transverse Mercator reference system (UTM) with datum WGS84. An infrared composite image was created with 432 RGB bands from the Landsat 8 satellite. The points with the location of the cenotes were imported into the Software TerrSet. Results: Total 1026 coordinates of sinkholes were recorded in the Yucatan Peninsula. In 18 sinkholes (<2%), microorganisms have been recovered and identified in various taxonomic levels, and only 6 sinkholes (<0.6%) has their biotechnological potential been evaluated. Conclusions: The microorganisms that inhabit the sinkholes of the Yucatan Peninsula are a reservoir with practically unexplored biotechnological potential.
... Sac Actun is thus the most extended cave system in Mexico Coke 2013, 2016;QRSS 2018). The recently discovered connection of Sac Actun with the Ox Bel Ha system makes this combined submerged cave system the longest worldwide (Kambesis and Coke 2016;QRSS 2018). ...
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Here we describe a new species of a Pleistocene felid based on the distal third of a right humerus from the submerged El Pit cenote (sinkhole) near Tulum in Quintana Roo, Mexico. The new taxon, Panthera balamoides sp. nov., is characterized by a large entepicondylar foramen, a gracile and straight humeral shaft with a prominent supracondylar ridge with a small depression on the lateral epicondyle and a distal articular surface located medially with respect to the long axis of the shaft. Two felid clavicles from the same locality have been assigned to Panthera atrox, while a humerus fragment from the Kim Ha cave near Tulum likely corresponds to Smilodon gracilis. Panthera balamoides lines up with other likely endemic mammals in the region, which suggest that at least northern Quintana Roo, if not the entire Yucatán peninsula, may have been ecologically isolated during the Pleistocene, due to the repeated expansion of grassland.
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The Yucatan Peninsula, southeast México, hosts a unique underwater karstic system of galleries connected by multiple sinkholes, locally called cenotes. This system is developed on a great Late Miocene to Early Pliocene carbonate platform belonging to the Carrillo Puerto Formation. The karstification process partially erodes these deposits’ surfaces and exposes the fossil assemblage. Here, we present the fossil fish diversity in underwater prospections in the Cenotes Sambulá, San Juan, and X-Nabuy. Our results indicate the presence of at least 11 different taxa, which include: 1) species that live today on Mexican coasts, such as Carcharhinus brachyurus, C. leucas, C. perezii, Carcharodon carcharias, and unidentified Rhinoptera species; 2) extinct taxa, such as †Galeocerdo mayumbensis, †Hemipristis serra, and †Otodus (Carcharocles) megalodon; 3) taxa that are not currently distributed in Mexican coasts, such as Carcharhinus macloti and representatives of the genus Aetomylaeus. Furthermore, a new Diodontidae species, †Chilomycterus dzonotensis sp. nov., is described. It represents an increment in the Neogene fish diversity in the Gulf of Mexico and supports a shallow marine environment associated with a coral reef system. The small size of some teeth indicates that the deposits of Carrillo Puerto could be a shelter for tiny marine organisms, and the presence of some taxa highlights local extinctions in the Western Atlantic during the Late Cenozoic.
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Constraining the spatial distribution of microorganisms and their ecological interactions is crucial for informing biogeochemistry. To that end, we explore horizontal and vertical patterns of microbial biogeography in the eastern Yucatán carbonate aquifer by examining the relative abundance of microbial taxa via 16S rRNA gene sequencing. As one of the largest anchialine groundwater systems on Earth, the density-stratified Yucatán aquifer consists of a meteoric lens overlying saline groundwater. The myriad sinkholes (cenotes) of the eastern peninsula lead into a vast network of subsurface conduits. Several studies describe microbial communities within specific regions of the aquifer, yet fundamental questions remain regarding the ecology and distribution of biogeochemically relevant microbes. Our analysis demonstrates that this aquifer hosts a distinct microbiome from nearby seawater, with regionalism observed across cave systems and vertical water column zones. We apply novel software to construct taxonomic co-occurrence networks at different scales and categorize highly connected groups of taxa into potential niches. Our network analysis approach suggests that ubiquitous, metabolically flexible taxa such as the family Comamonadaceae act as ecological linchpins across several niches, often directly or indirectly co-occurring with taxa capable of anammox (e.g., Gemmataceae ), methanotrophy (e.g., Methyloparacoccus ), or organoheterotrophy. Furthermore, communities from a deep, pit-like cenote open to the surface show the strongest niche partitioning between water column zones, differing from those encountered throughout the mostly dark and oligotrophic aquifer system, including another deep pit cenote with no direct surface opening. Our results suggest that members of a core microbiome could modulate different biogeochemical regimes depending on location, acting as reservoirs of metabolic potential in disparate environments of this groundwater system. IMPORTANCE The extensive Yucatán carbonate aquifer, located primarily in southeastern Mexico, is pockmarked by numerous sinkholes (cenotes) that lead to a complex web of underwater caves. The aquifer hosts a diverse yet understudied microbiome throughout its highly stratified water column, which is marked by a meteoric lens floating on intruding seawater owing to the coastal proximity and high permeability of the Yucatán carbonate platform. Here, we present a biogeographic survey of bacterial and archaeal communities from the eastern Yucatán aquifer. We apply a novel network analysis software that models ecological niche space from microbial taxonomic abundance data. Our analysis reveals that the aquifer community is composed of several distinct niches that follow broader regional and hydrological patterns. This work lays the groundwork for future investigations to characterize the biogeochemical potential of the entire aquifer with other systems biology approaches.
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Coastal karst formations may remain unexplored by the global marine scientific research community. Knowledge provided by fishermen coupled with scientific research on karstic formations prompted us to explore the geomorphometric and physicochemical features of a submerged blue hole in the large tropical estuary of Chetumal Bay in the southeastern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico. Differently from the well-known literature on cenotes in the Yucatán Peninsula, no references are made to blue holes in the region. Sampling and surveying of the blue hole were conducted in September 2021 by scuba, echosounders, CTD profilers, and the collection of water samples. This study revealed a previously unknown maximum water depth for the Taam ja’ Blue Hole, as it is now named, of 274.4 meters below sea level (mbsl), making it the second deepest known blue hole in the world. The Taam ja’ Blue Hole has a nearly circular shape at its surface, encompassing an area of ~13,690 m². The sides of the blue hole are steep, with slopes >80° that form a large conic structure covered by biofilms, sediments, limestone, and gypsum ledges. The blue hole mouth locates at ~4.5-5.0 mbsl, at which water properties change significantly with temperature and salinity gradients of 4.9°C/m and 9.8 PSU/m, respectively. Hydrographic profiles show a stratified water column inside the blue hole consisting of a hypoxic layer (5-20 mbsl), a chemocline (50-80 mbsl), and an anoxic layer (>110 mbsl). Evaluation of anions and cations indicated that the water inside corresponds mainly to that of diluted seawater.
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The dynamic inter‐relationships between marine and freshwater carbonate depositional environments are illustrated in the Sian Ka’an Wetlands, a 5,280 km2 complex of groundwater‐fed freshwater marshes, lakes and brackish coastal lagoons in the South East Yucatán Peninsula (Mexico). The Yucatán Platform was subaerially emergent and extensively karstified during the last glacial maximum at 18,000 yr BP. The Late Holocene transgression has caused progressive reflooding of the continental margin, backstepping of the MesoAmerican Reef and encroachment of coastal environments into the platform interior as rising groundwaters flood an interconnected cave and sinkhole system and feed seasonal marshes above. The Sian Ka’an Wetlands form a vast palustrine carbonate factory which is directly juxtaposed and dynamically linked with the marine carbonate factory to seaward. Continuing sea‐level rise has caused synchronous landward migration of marginal marine and freshwater environments as beach barriers were breached and palustrine sloughs flooded to form marginal marine seagrass lagoons. The Rio Hondo Fault conditions fluid inflow while the sub‐environments of the Sian Ka’an Wetlands reflect tectonic controls on microtopography and hydroperiod. Modern analogues for the Sian Ka’an Wetlands include the Florida Everglades, formed during transgression of the Florida Platform, and relict marsh environments preserved on leeward shores of Andros, Abaco and other Bahama islands. A wide range of ancient examples deposited in coastal and continental interior settings similarly reflect seasonal aquifer rise in response to marine transgression and/or onlap of late‐stage basin fill onto a karstified pediment. Freshwater palustrine carbonate factories on carbonate platforms are transient deposystems, controlled by subtle water depth, climate, vegetation and hydrological factors while being critically sensitive to sea‐level changes. The preservation potential of palustrine carbonates may be relatively low in coastal settings due to erosion or shallow marine overprinting, while greater further inland where marine flooding is rarer and in tectonically subsident continental interior basins where accommodation space is continuously created.
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The Yucatán Peninsula is a vast karst platform that hosts superficial ecosystems such as sinkholes or underground cave systems. This study aims to give the first nematode species list for and explain their distribution at the Po´ol Tunich cave system. Samplings were carried out from September 2015 to February 2016, at five sampling sites along the cavern system. At each site, two sediment samples were collected with a polyvinylchloride pipe (PVC) corer; sediments were processed by decantation, and meiofauna was collected with a 45 µm sieve. Nematodes were picked manually, mounted on glass slides and identified. At three sites (1, 3 and 5), water temperature and electric conductivity were measured with HOBO data loggers. The nematode fauna was represented by six orders, nine families and 12 genera. Enoplida and Chromadorida have the highest number of species (three each), while Rhabditida and Plectida have two species each. There was only one species of Dorylaimida. Sites with the highest abundance were: 1 (25 organisms) and 2 (24 organisms), with Atrochromadora sp. as the most abundant species, followed by Ironus paludicola, Hoplolaimus tylenchiformis and Dichromadora sp., at five organisms each. The four types of nematode feeding were present, with a predominance of epistrate and deposit feeders, followed by chewers and then suction feeders, and this fact is an indicator of the food resources available in the cave. Our results reveal that nematodes are an important component in the cave fauna, and they exploit the resources available based in detritus. Further efforts are needed to understand the nematode communities associated with subterranean environments.
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• The Yucatán Peninsula (YP) contains one of the most spectacular and developed karstic aquifers in the world, which connects to the surface through water‐filled sinkholes locally known as cenotes. Cenotes and their associated submerged caves are home to a remarkable diversity of aquatic fauna, yet very little is known about spatial patterns of intraspecific genetic and morphological variation across the aquifer. The strong affinity to cenotes (vs. submerged caves) exhibited by most fishes inhabiting the YP aquifer raises a fundamental question about the ecology and evolutionary history of its ichthyofauna: how genetically structured and morphologically divergent are fish populations from different cenotes across the YP? To shed light on this question, we investigated phylogeographic structure in the Neotropical catfish Rhamdia guatemalensis, arguably the most ubiquitous representative of the YP aquifer ichthyofauna. • Geographic patterns of genetic variation were determined through phylogeographic and population genetics analyses of mitochondrial (mt)DNA sequence data. Body shape variation was investigated using both traditional and geometric morphometrics. Dense sampling across the previously overlooked YP region, coupled with the inclusion of samples from basins unrepresented in past studies, allowed for revision of previous estimates of phylogeographic structuring across the species’ range. • Our results reveal a striking spatial correspondence between major mtDNA lineages and physiographic regions defined on the basis of broad‐scale patterns of groundwater flow. Morphological variation in populations from the YP, although considerable, neither reflects the observed spatial signal of genetic differentiation nor displays any other discernible geographic pattern. The resulting range‐wide phylogeographic pattern is largely consistent with a latitudinal, isolation‐by‐distance gradient, and the expectations from catchment hydrology, while revealing an unexpectedly close relationship between YP aquifer and epigean populations (both inside and outside the YP). • Although the inferred range‐wide phylogeographic history is consistent with a single aquifer colonisation event followed by multiple instances of dispersal out of the aquifer and into neighbouring epigean basins, hypotheses regarding the colonisation and exodus of the YP by R. guatemalensis require further investigation. Within the YP aquifer, regional‐scale hydrogeological differences might impose limits to underground dispersal, potentially driving genetic divergence in populations of R. guatemalensis, and possibly in other cenote‐dwelling fishes as well. Future research focused on other YP aquifer species, however, is needed to test the generality of our findings. • Phylogeographic research on the stygofauna of the YP aquifer is a relatively nascent field of inquiry. Besides shedding novel light into the patterns and drivers of genetic differentiation in fish populations from across the aquifer, this study sets the stage for future research aimed at unravelling the evolutionary history of the stygofauna that inhabits the cenotes and submerged caves of the YP. The remarkable and hitherto undocumented phylogeographic pattern revealed herein (i.e. correspondence of major mtDNA lineages with physiographic regions defined by regional‐scale fracture zones) adds to a growing body of evidence in support of the notion that the architecture of freshwater aquifers may include physical barriers that can act as regional‐scale drivers of groundwater faunal distributions and genetic structuring.
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Solution processes in unconfined carbonate aquifers result in a network of channels. To characterize the enhancement of porosity and permeability by dissolution, we examine four contrasting carbonate aquifers: Paleozoic dolostone, Paleozoic limestone, Mesozoic chalk, and Cenozoic limestone. In all four cases, the channels add little to the porosity, but they enhance the permeability of fractured rock by one to three orders of magnitude. Similar porosity and permeability changes are predicted for all unconfined carbonate aquifers, in both dolostone and limestone, in both allogenic and autogenic settings, and in carbonate rocks of all ages.
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A 180-km-diameter semicircular band of abundant karst sinkholes (Ring of Cenotes) in northwest Yucatan, Mexico, coincides approximately with a concentric ring of the buried Chicxulub structure, a circular feature manifested in Cretaceous and older rocks, that has been identified as the product of the impact of a bolide. The ring, expressed in Tertiary rocks, marks a zone of high permeability as shown by (1) the sinkholes themselves, (2) breaks in the coastal dune system and high density of springs where the ring intersects the coast, and (3) water-level transects characterized by a decline in water level toward the ring. Any direct relation that exists between the Ring of Cenotes and the Chicxulub structure bears on regional hydrogeology. If the layer or zone responsible for the ring is deeply buried, it may act as a barrier to the movement of ground water across the main flow direction. Shallower zones of horizontal permeability could result in less complete diversion of ground water. Through its influence on Yucatan aquifer characteristics, the ring may provide a link between modern environmental problems and astrogeology. Possible origins for the Ring of Cenotes are (1) faulting, perhaps reactivated by post-Eocene mid-Miocene basin loading, (2) permeability in a buried reef complex developed in the shallow Paleocene sea around the crater rim, or (3) breccia collapse occasioned by consolidation or by solution of evaporite components. If the ring developed on ancient faults, it may outline hydrothermal systems and mineral deposits produced during Paleocene cooling of the Chicxulub melt sheet.
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A regional tectonic feature extending in a 100km long and 30 to 40km wide belt, the Holbox fracture zone, crosses the flat, karstified terrain of the NE Yucatan Peninsula controlling development of large, elongated, flat-bottomed swales. The swales evolve from solution corridors whose floors reached the local water table which inhibits further deepening of these forms and controls their lateral expansion to produce the typical shape of the swales with flat floors and steep walls. The swale floors reached the level of the water table by a process that combined solution deepening with Holocene rise of sea level and consequent rise of the water table. A few of the deeper solution corridors were submerged providing elongated lake basins. Continuous swales that intersect the northern coast support periodic and/or episodic water flow. -from Authors
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The northeast coast of the state of Quintana Roo, Mexico is known for its vast underwater cave systems, numerous cenotes, and unusual coast line features that are all expressions of the coastal hydrology of an eogenetic karst region. Variations in geological and hydrological controls, and boundary conditions, have resulted in the formation of extensive linear phreatic caves located in the phreatic and vadose zone, and relict flank margin caves in the vadose zone. A significant number of the region’s cenotes are portals into underwater cave systems. Dry sinkholes provide access to caves currently located in the vadose zone. A combination of karstification and littoral processes have affected the northeast coastline of Quintana Roo resulting in the formation of features such as coastal and off-shore springs, caletas, and crescent-shaped beaches. The juxtaposition of extensive inland recharge, diagenetically immature carbonates, intersection of regional fault, fracture and lineament trends, and mixing zone dynamics, all within glacioeustatic-driven fresh/saline water regime have resulted in a density-stratified coastal karst aquifer drained by an extensive network of conduits. Sea-level change has stranded the higher-elevation conduit networks and the flank margin caves in the vadose zone. The conduits, indicative of turbulent flow, and flank margin caves formed from laminar flow, are both the result mixing-zone dissolution. Surface and littoral erosion facilitate the continued karstification of the inland and coastal areas of Quintana Roo.
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Formation of extensive phreatic caves in eogenetic karst aquifers is widely believed to require mixing of fresh and saltwater. Extensive phreatic caves also occur, however, in eogenetic karst aquifers where fresh and saltwater do not mix, for example in the upper Floridan aquifer. These caves are thought to have formed in their modern settings by dissolution from sinking streams or by convergence of groundwater flow paths on springs. Alternatively, these caves have been hypothesized to have formed at lower water tables during sea level low-stands. These hypotheses have not previously been tested against one another. Analyzing morphological data and water chemistry from caves in the Suwannee River Basin in north-central Florida and water chemistry from wells in the central Florida carbonate platform indicates that phreatic caves within the Suwannee River Basin most likely formed at lower water tables during lower sea levels. Consideration of the hydrological and geochemical constraints posed by the upper Floridan aquifer leads to the conclusion that cave formation was most likely driven by dissolution of vadose CO2 gas into the groundwater. Sea level rise and a wetter climate during the mid-Holocene lifted the water table above the elevation of the caves and placed the caves tens of meters below the modern water table. When rising water tables reached the land surface, surface streams formed. Incision of surface streams breached the pre-existing caves to form modern springs, which provide access to the phreatic caves. Phreatic caves in the Suwannee River Basin are thus relict and have no causal relationship with modern surficial drainage systems. Neither mixing dissolution nor sinking streams are necessary to form laterally extensive phreatic caves in eogenetic karst aquifers. Dissolution at water tables, potentially driven by vadose CO2 gas, offers an underappreciated mechanism to form cavernous porosity in eogenetic carbonate rocks.
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Rates of sea-level fall at the termination of the last interglacial are poorly defined and archives from which sea-level elevations are constrained during marine isotope stage (MIS) 5 in the western North Atlantic–Caribbean region are restricted spatially to a few key sites. Here, growth periods of presently submerged but subaerially deposited speleothems from the Yucatan Peninsula, south-east Mexico, are dated using the 230Th/234U multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometric method. The growth periods, used to constrain maximum elevations of relative sea level, are in agreement with glacio-isostatic adjustment models for the near to intermediate region of the former North American ice sheets. Furthermore, our data provide additional constraints on the timing of peak relative sea levels during MIS 5a and 5c, and the timing of the regression following the last interglacial highstand. Combining our data with coral archives of minimum relative sea level from the same region provides a novel approach to calculating the rate of relative sea-level fall, although initial estimates are poorly constrained because of the wide range in ages observed for the most suitable corals. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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Xel Ha is a lagoon whose location and morphology are partly controlled by the fracture pattern in upper Pleistocene coral reef limestone. Chemical, isotopic, and hydrologic observations were made nearby where groundwater could be sampled. In addition, similar observations along vertical profiles were made at stations within the lagoon. A thin lens of rapidly moving fresh groundwater overlies a regional thick body of nearly stagnant saline groundwater that is close to ocean water in chemical composition. These two chemically distinct groundwaters are separated by a thin zone of dispersion, and both are at or slightly beyond saturation with respect to calcite. Where these two end-member groundwaters mix to form the brackish dispersion zone, the resulting solution is undersaturated with respect to calcite. This was confirmed by mass transfer and isotopic modeling which show that the mixing of two solutions of different ionic strength, each saturated with respect to calcite, can result in an undersaturated solution. Model calculations indicate that as much as 1.23 mmol of CaCO3 may be dissolved per kilogram of water. We hypothesize that many of the cuspate beaches along the east coast of the Yucatan formed in this manner and that mixing of waters of different chemistry may be an important geomorphic process in similar geologic-hydrologic settings.
Article
Extensive flooded cave systems are developed in a zone 8-12 km inland of the east coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, Quintana Roo, Mexico. In plan, the systems comprise cross-linked anastomosing networks composed of horizontal elliptical tubes (which are actively developing where associated with the present fresh water/saline water mixing zone) and canyon-shaped passages. Both forms are heavily modified by sedi- ment and speleothem infill, and extensive collapse. The pattern of Quintana Roo caves differs both from the mixing chamber form of flank-margin eogenetic caves, and also the dendritic and rectilinear maze patterns of epigenetic continental (telogenetic) caves. Unlike the latter, Quintana Roo caves are formed by coastal zone fresh water/saline water mixing processes. While mixing dissolution is also responsible for development of flank-margin caves, these may be typical of small islands and arid areas with limited coastal discharge, whereas Quintana Roo-type caves are formed when coastal discharge is greater. In the Quintana Roo caves, multiple phases of cave development are associated with glacio-eustatic changes in sea level. Two critical conditions control cave develop- ment following lowstands: (1) if the passage remains occupied by the mixing zone and connected to underlying deep cave systems, and (2) for passages above the mixing zone, if active freshwater flow is maintained by tributaries. In the first case, inflow of saline water drives mixing dissolution, enabling removal of the lowstand carbonate fill and continued passage enlargement. In the second, despite limited dissolution in the fresh water, continued removal of uncemented sediments can maintain the cave void. Where neither of these conditions is met, enlargement will cease, and the cave void will become occluded by collapse and sediment infill.
Article
Dissolution of carbonate minerals in the coastal halocline is taking place in the karst terrain along the northeastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. The dissolution is being accelerated in cenotes (sinkholes) where sulfate reduction and oxidation of the produced sulfide is occurring. Hydrogen-sulfide concentrations ranged from 0.06 to 4 mmolal within the halocline in two sinkholes. Relative to concentrations expected by conservative mixing, fluids with high hydrogen-sulfide concentrations were correlated with low sulfate concentrations, high alkalinities, low pH values, and heavy sulfur isotope values for sulfate. Hydrogen-sulfide concentrations were less than those predicted from sulfate reduction, calculated from deficiencies in measured sulfate concentrations, indicating mobility and loss of aqueous sulfide. Fluids with low hydrogen-sulfide concentrations were correlated with very high calcium concentrations, high strontium and sulfate concentrations, slightly elevated alkalinities, low pH values, and sea-water sulfur isotope values for sulfate. Gypsum dissolution is supported by the sulfur isotopes as the major process producing high sulfate concentrations. However, oxidation of aqueous sulfide to sulfuric acid, resulting in carbonate-mineral dissolution is needed to explain the calcium concentrations, low pH values, and only slightly elevated alkalinities. The halocline may trap hydrogen sulfide that has been stripped from the underlying anoxic salt water. The halocline can act as a stable, physical boundary, holding some of the hydrogen sulfide until it is oxidized back to sulfuric acid through interaction with the overlying, oxygenated fresh water or through the activity of sulfide-oxidizing bacteria.