At southern Cordoba Province (Spain), an evaporitic karst plateau drained by brine
springs is located. A periodic monitoring of discharge rate, EC, water temperature,
and pH was performed in one of them (Lower Anzur spring) and water samples were
collected for chemical analysis. Physicochemical data were used to perform a principal
component analysis (PCA) to characterize the functioning of the system. Temporal
evolution of the controlled parameters reveals a markedly karst behavior. PCA has
defined two principal factors, one related to salinity and other linked to infiltration
processes (NO3−, Ca2+). The slight thermal anomaly and the high mineralization
registered indicate the existence of ascending regional groundwater flows of long
residence time, which would converge into the spring, mixed with recently infiltrated
water that circulated through a conduit network formed in the evaporite rocks