scholarly journals Appraising Mahallat Geothermal Region using thermal surveying data accompanied by the geological, geochemical and gravity analyses

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Javad Nouraliee ◽  
Davar Ebrahimi ◽  
Ali Dashti ◽  
Maziar Gholami Korzani ◽  
Sepehr Sangin

AbstractMahallat Geothermal Region, located in the central part of Iran, is known as one of the largest low-temperature geothermal fields. In this study, Mahallat geothermal resource has been evaluated based on integrated geological, geochemical and geophysical analyses. Gravity data revealed three major negative anomaly zones. Based on the geochemical analyses, quartz geothermometers are more reliable than others and confirmed that the reservoir is about 90 °C. Lithological properties of Jurassic layers and high sulphate content observed in geochemical data showed traces of the coal-rich layers on the hot fluids. Measured temperatures in 7 boreholes with the depths ranging from 50 to 100 m, have proposed that expected geothermal gradient will be about 81.5 °C/km. Among all drilled boreholes, the data coming from only one resulted in this almost reliable gradient. Other boreholes are clearly too shallow or affected by upflow or downflow of water along existing faults. Geological, geochemical, gravity and measurements of drilled boreholes suggested the existence of a shallow reservoir with an approximate temperature of 90 °C. Regarding gravity and observed faults, geothermal reservoir is elongated parallel to one of the main faults of the region with NE-SW strike.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco Airam Morales González ◽  
Luca D'Auria ◽  
Fátima Rodríguez ◽  
Eleazar Padrón ◽  
Nemesio Pérez

<p>The Canary Islands archipelago, due to their recent volcanism, are the only Spanish territory with high enthalpy geothermal resources. However, there is no evidence in the islands of endogenous fluids manifestations with the exception of the Teide fumaroles, in Tenerife. Although some efforts have been made to investigate the geothermal resources from the 1970s to the 1990s and later during the past decade, the final goal has not yet been achieved, which is to locate and define the size, shape and structure of the geothermal resource, and determine their characteristics and capacity to produce energy (Rodríguez et al. 2015). For this reason it is extremely important to use new tools that allow a better understanding of the geothermal resource. In this work we describe a probabilistic evaluation of the geothermal potential of the island of Tenerife using Geographical Information Systems (GIS) through a collection of geological, geophysical and geochemical data.</p><p>The Play Fairway Analysis (PFA) was used, as illustrated by Lautze et al. (2017) in a similar study for an environment having similar characteristics: the Hawaiian Archipelago.  The PFA approach consists of joining information coming from multidisciplinary datasets within a probabilistic framework. Basically, the probabilities related to the presence of heat (H), fluids (F) and permeability (P) are computed quantitatively from the starting datasets and combined to obtain the probability of presence of geothermal resources and its confidence.</p><p>In the present study this probabilistic method have been implemented using GIS geoprocessing tools and raster image analysis using geological (Holocene vents, volcano-tectonic structures), geophysical (seismicity, resistivity data, gravity data) and geochemical (hydrogeochemistry, soil gas emission and geochemistry, etc…).</p><p>The main result of this work is a cartographic set that allow showing the areas of Tenerife with the greatest potential for geothermal exploration. Furthermore, using the statistical framework of PFA analysis, we obtained also confidence intervals on the retrieved probability maps.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Ramírez-Salazar ◽  
Thomas Mueller ◽  
Sandra Piazolo ◽  
Alexander Webb ◽  
Christoph Hauzenberger ◽  
...  

<p>The Eoarchean Isua Supracrustal Belt (ISB) is one of the few locations where it is possible to study the tectono-metamorphic evolution of a young planet. The ISB is thought to represent meta-volcano-sedimentary units from two different embryotic continental segments/terranes associated with two large TTG bodies of contrasting crystallization age. Until recently, geochemical and metamorphic signatures have been interpreted to be consistent with a subduction-collision event, thereby matching Earth’s active ‘horizontal’ tectonic regime. This interpretation is often cited as evidence that plate tectonics has operated since the Early Archean. New structural, field, isotopic and geochemical data, however, suggest that the ISB is rather a continuous volcano-sedimentary sequence with a rock record that could be explained by ‘vertical’ tectonic models involving extensive volcanic resurfacing and single-plate tectonics. In this work, we present metamorphic data retrieved from a new set of samples from the eastern ISB to evaluate the two contrasting hypotheses. Throughout the ISB, two major Archean medium grade metamorphic events (M<sub>1</sub>, M<sub>2</sub>) can be identified, overprinted partially by near-pervasive low-temperature retrogression. The pre-Ameralik dykes (≈ 3500 Ma) event M<sub>1</sub>, is characterized by a strong foliation and typically lineation that plunges towards the SE with development of amphibolite facies assemblages, with common appearance of syn-tectonic garnet and amphibole porphyroblasts. Phase equilibria modelling, classic and isopleth geothermobarometry show that M<sub>1</sub> evolved as a nearly isothermal prograde metamorphism that culminated in an amphibolite facies peak (0.65 GPa and 550-580 °C) common to the entire belt. M<sub>2</sub>, probably Neoarchean in age, is identified by the frequent appearance of post-tectonic garnet rims with estimated lower grade conditions. Low temperature retrogression is widespread along the ISB, however, it seems more penetrative in the northern area occurring as garnet pseudomorphism and retrograde chlorite commonly mimicking the foliation by replacing biotite, with some samples showing complete chloritization. We argue that the retrogression textures could be responsible for the apparent zones of lower metamorphism previously reported as prograde, a conclusion also supported by our geothermobarometric data, and that the tectonic models supported by previuos interpretations need to be revised. The isothermal prograde path as well as the high geothermal gradient associated with peak conditions (≈ 900 °C/GPa) is consistent with vertical tectonics models during the Eoarchean. This interpretation is in agreement with global data analysis that suggest non-uniformitarian geodynamics in the Early Archean, as well as the viability of early vertical tectonics on the other terrestrial bodies of our solar system. It follows that studies like this can shed light on not just the cooling of early Earth, but also on the cooling of terrestrial planets universally.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Boone ◽  
Fabian Kohlmann ◽  
Moritz Theile ◽  
Wayne Noble ◽  
Barry Kohn ◽  
...  

<p>The AuScope Geochemistry Network (AGN) and partners Lithodat Pty Ltd are developing AusGeochem, a novel cloud-based platform for Australian-produced geochemistry data from around the globe. The open platform will allow laboratories to upload, archive, disseminate and publish their datasets, as well as perform statistical analyses and data synthesis within the context of large volumes of publicly funded geochemical data. As part of this endeavour, representatives from four Australian low-temperature thermochronology laboratories (University of Melbourne, University of Adelaide, Curtin University and University of Queensland) are advising the AGN and Lithodat on the development of low-temperature thermochronology (LTT)-specific data models for the relational AusGeochem database and its international counterpart, LithoSurfer. These schemas will facilitate the structured archiving of a wide variety of thermochronology data, enabling geoscientists to readily perform LTT Big Data analytics and gain new insights into the thermo-tectonic evolution of Earth’s crust.</p><p>Adopting established international data reporting best practices, the LTT expert advisory group has designed database schemas for the fission track and (U-Th-Sm)/He methods, as well as for thermal history modelling results and metadata. In addition to recording the parameters required for LTT analyses, the schemas include fields for reference material results and error reporting, allowing AusGeochem users to independently perform QA/QC on data archived in the database. Development of scripts for the automated upload of data directly from analytical instruments into AusGeochem using its open-source Application Programming Interface are currently under way.</p><p>The advent of a LTT relational database heralds the beginning of a new era of Big Data analytics in the field of low-temperature thermochronology. By methodically archiving detailed LTT (meta-)data in structured schemas, intractably large datasets comprising 1000s of analyses produced by numerous laboratories can be readily interrogated in new and powerful ways. These include rapid derivation of inter-data relationships, facilitating on-the-fly age computation, statistical analysis and data visualisation. With the detailed LTT data stored in relational schemas, measurements can then be re-calculated and re-modelled using user-defined constants and kinetic algorithms. This enables analyses determined using different parameters to be equated and compared across regional- to global scales.</p><p>The development of this novel tool heralds the beginning of a new era of structured Big Data in the field of low-temperature thermochronology, improving laboratories’ ability to manage and share their data in alignment with FAIR data principles while enabling analysts to readily interrogate intractably large datasets in new and powerful ways.</p>


Geothermics ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 728-755 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hulya Sarak ◽  
Mustafa Onur ◽  
Abdurrahman Satman

2020 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Halley

Abstract Analytical methods used by commercial assay laboratories have improved enormously in recent years. Inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectroscopy and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry methods now report analyses for half of the periodic table with exceptional detection limits and precision. It is becoming commonplace for mining companies to use such methods routinely for the analysis of drill samples throughout mineral deposits. Improvements in software and computing power now allow rapid interrogation of upward of 100,000 assay samples. Geochemical analyses are quantitative, are independent of observer bias, and can form the basis for robust geologic and mineralogical models of mineral deposits, as well as shed light on scientific questions. In particular, consistently collected, high-quality geochemical analyses can significantly improve and systematize logging of lithological and hydrothermal alteration mineralogic changes within drill core. In addition, abundant, high-quality geochemical data provide insights into magmatic and hydrothermal processes that were previously difficult to recognize and that have obvious applications to mineral exploration and improved genetic models of ore deposits. This paper describes a workflow that mining industry geologists can apply to their multielement analysis data to extract more information about magma compositions and gangue mineralogy.


Author(s):  
P. Avramidis ◽  
G. Iliopoulos ◽  
N. Kontopoulos ◽  
D. Panagiotaras ◽  
P. Barouchas ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThis study presents sedimentological, palaeoecological and geochemical data from a shallow Mediterranean coastal lagoon which has been severely influenced by human intervention over the last 70 years. The Gialova Lagoon is protected by international conventions and is listed in the Natura 2000 European Community Network as Special Protection Area (SPA) and Site of Community Importance (SCI). The spatial variability of sediment characteristics such as grain size, total organic carbon (TOC) and moment measures, mean, sorting, kurtosis and skewness were calculated. Moreover, micro- and macrofossil and sediment geochemical analyses were carried out on six gravity core samples. Study of the above parameters indicates that the anthropogenic impact and intervention are reflected in the micro- (ostracods, foraminifera, charophytes) and macrofossil (molluscs) taxa corresponding to different depositional environmental facies, representing a brackish lagoon with the influence of (a) fresh water inflow, (b) shallow marine environment and (c) hypoxic and dystrophic conditions. The geochemical characteristics and the calculation of the degree of sediment contamination using enrichment factors (EF), contamination factors (Cif) and the index of geo-accumulation (Igeo) indicate a recent relative improvement of the lagoon towards the upper layers of the gravity cores, rendering the lagoon as unpolluted to moderately polluted. This combinatorial study of sediment geochemical characteristics, as well as the downcore micro- and macrofossil assemblages, can be considered as a baseline for future monitoring in accordance with European Union directives, and for any future engineering interventions for the lagoon environmental maintenance and conservation; as this is the first time that geochemical and downcore palaeoecological data have been presented from this lagoon.


Geophysics ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 56 (7) ◽  
pp. 992-1002 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. A. Alatorre‐Zamora ◽  
J. O. Campos‐Enríquez

La Primavera geothermal field (Mexico) is associated with a Pleistocene rhyolitic caldera. This gravity study was conducted to assist its development and explotation. Digital processing of the gravity data (upward and downward continuations, vertical derivatives) enabled delineation of the main features of the caldera’s subsurficial structure. A 3-D structural model was established, which could be supported by gravity modeling (2-D and 3-D forward modeling). Accordingly, the caldera is featured by an asymmetric subsurface structure: a major depression in its northern half, and a boomerang‐shaped structural high to the south. Lineaments reflecting the regional northwest‐southeast and northeast‐southwest structural fabric were observed. The basal volcanics units are affected by lineaments of the northwest‐southeast system, whereas the northeast‐southwest system affects only the shallower units. The structural high has a northwest‐southeast trend at the western and southwestern portion of the caldera. From its middle part eastward, it has a northeast‐southwest direction. The actual geothermal production zone is located above this structural high, on the portion where it changes orientation. Correlation with hydrogeological and geochemical data enabled interpreting the different geologic structures in the context of the hydrothermal system: at depth the northwest‐southeast structures seem to control lateral fluid migration, and connect areas of enhanced permeability (i.e., the central production zone and the hydrothermal manifestations located at the caldera’s western rim). Enhanced zones of fracturing favorable for entrapping hydrothermal fluids and structural accidents that may act as conduits (respectively as barriers) for fluids are delineated. In particular, a new target zone, where the production of geothermal fluids may extend, has been identified to the south of the production zone. The structural image elaborated here constitutes a geologic frame for the prevailing hydrogeological conceptual model. This structural information is also useful for the tasks of selecting sites for the reinjection of geothermal brines.


Geothermics ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 70 ◽  
pp. 62-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Li ◽  
E. Júlíusson ◽  
H. Pálsson ◽  
H. Stefánsson ◽  
Á. Valfells

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