Fontaine de Vaucluse (spring)


The Fontaine de Vaucluse is a karst spring in the commune of Fontaine-de-Vaucluse, Vaucluse department.
It is the largest karst spring in metropolitan France by flow, and fifth largest in the world, with annual output of of water.
The spring is the prime example in hydrogeology of a "Vaucluse spring".

Geography

Location

The Fontaine de Vaucluse is in the commune of Fontaine-de-Vaucluse in the department of Vaucluse.
The commune was formerly called "Vaucluse", but being in a department with the same name created many confusions. The commune was therefore renamed "Fontaine-de-Vaucluse", after the spring.

Origin of name

The village in which the spring is located was called "Vallis Clausa" in Latin because of its topographical position.
This became "Vaucluse", which gave its name to the Fontaine de Vaucluse.
The name in the Provençal dialect is "Font de Vau-cluso", the spring of the closed valley.
The word "font" has two meanings in Provençal, "fountain" and "spring".
Here it designates a spring and not a fountain.

Geology

The Fontaine de Vaucluse was formed after the Messinian salinity crisis, during the latter part of the Messinian age of the Miocene epoch, from 5.96 to 5.33 Ma, which caused the depth of the exsurgence.
Above the spring there is a -high limestone cliff with innumerable breaks and faults. This acts as a reservoir, a karst aquifer, in which the water circulates along the discontinuities until it meets a barrier of limestone and clay.
The spring, which feeds the River Sorgue, is the only exit point of a underground basin, which captures waters from Mont Ventoux, the Vaucluse Mountains, the Albion Plateau and the Lure Mountain. The water of this exsurgence contains an average of of calcium carbonate, and has an annual flow of about, so the reservoir loses of limestone each year.
This phenomenon acting on the surface of the impluvium, removes an annual volume of per square kilometre, which disappears after being dissolved in the water. That figure becomes more meaningful when calculations show that, in 3.5 million years, the Vaucluse Mountains, the Albion Plateau, and the Lure Mountain, will have had their thickness reduced by.

History

In Antiquity the site was a place of ritual offerings.
During various dives, particularly in 1998, the members of the Fontaine-de-Vaucluse Speleological Society, were intrigued by the presence of many coins.
Prospecting dives were made by SSFV speleologists under the direction of the Department of Underwater and Underwater Archaeological Research.
The Spélénaute submarine let them work between in 2001, revealing ancient deposits of currency.
A year later, during a new exploration campaign, speleologists retrieved 400 pieces of great historical value.
In 2003 a new archaeological site allowed other discoveries.
1,600 pieces and objects have been recovered, dating from the 1st century BC to the middle of 5th century AD.

Legend

Legend of the Coulobre

A legend tells that Saint Veranus, bishop of Cavaillon, rid the Sorgue of a horrible Drac, a devil or dragon, the Coulobre.
This Coulobre, whose name could be derived from the Latin word , was a winged creature who lived in the Fontaine de Vaucluse.
According to legend, she coupled with dragons who then abandoned her, forcing her to raise on her own the small black salamanders to which she gave birth.
She was desperate for a new husband and a father for her children but her ugliness repulsed all suitors.
According to Albert Dauzat and Charles Rostaing, the Drac is a Ligurian divinity of tumultuous waters and the Coulobre owes its name to two Celto-Ligurian roots: Kal and Briga.
This is the cliff overlooking the spring which still holds the Vache d'Or, the site of an ancient pastoral religion celebrating the strength and form of water and stone.
On the trail, we can see the Traou dou Couloubre, symbol of the fight of Saint Veranus against the ancient religions.

Legend of the nymph

This legend recounts the story of a minstrel, Basil, who fell asleep on the way to the spring and saw a nymph appear.
She led him to the edge of the spring, which opened to let them descend to a meadow strewn with supernatural flowers.
The nymph showed seven diamonds to the minstrel.
By lifting one of them, she made a powerful jet of water gush out.
"Here," she said, "is the secret of the spring of which I am the guardian.
To make it swell I remove the diamonds.
With the seventh the water reaches the fig tree, which drinks only once a year.
She disappeared while waking Basil.

Exploration

The first dive in heavy diving gear took place in 1879 when Nello Ottonelli ventured down to.
Dr. Henri Louis Joseph Ayme organized exploration of the basin and on 24 September 1938 Negri reached a depth of.
It was then necessary to wait for the arrival of the scuba diving suit in 1946 when Jacques Cousteau reached, then nine years later.
This is the limit of dives with air.
In 1981 Claude Touloumdjian reached with an oxygen-helium mixture.
Finally, in 1983, Jochen Hasenmayer reached.
To go even deeper and touch the bottom it would be necessary to use robots.
In 1985 the Modexa 350 Mission removed the mystery about the depth of the system.
The robot touched bottom at a depth of.
In 1989 another robot, Spélénaute, reached the lowest point known to date in the siphon at a depth of.
In 1997 the diver Pascal Bernabé descended to the depth of.
In 2014 a virtual tour was created by the photographer Christoph Gerigk in collaboration with the Speleological Society of Fontaine de Vaucluse from 360° spherical panoramic views.

Structure

Today, the joint efforts of geologists, hydrogeologists, hydrochemists and speleologists have made it possible to gain a better understanding of the functioning of this karst spring.
Its catchment receives waters from Mont Ventoux, the Vaucluse Mountains, the Albion Plateau and Lure Mountain, but it excludes Bluye Mountain in the north, as well as the Luberon massif and the Apt syncline in the south.

Explored area

This is the part of the reservoir that is accessible to speleologists.
It exceeds a depth of, since it has been explored during a period of low water from several open cavities forming the karst system of the Souffleur hole of Saint-Christol, the "underground river of Albion".
This system of chasms and cavities, which riddles the Albion Plateau, is one of the effects of karstification.
During heavy storms, it can store around.

Hidden area

There remains the great unknown.
A mathematical model was able to demonstrate that, based on the greatest depth of and the surface area of the catchment, permanent reserves could reach .

Flow

Over a decade the annual flow varies between.
With an average of per second, it yields seven times more than all the drinking water distributed in the Vaucluse department.
It is the largest spring in France by volume of water released, and ranks fifth among the world's largest springs.