scholarly journals Beo v1.0: numerical model of heat flow and low-temperature thermochronology in hydrothermal systems

2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 4061-4073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elco Luijendijk

Abstract. Low-temperature thermochronology can provide records of the thermal history of the upper crust and can be a valuable tool to quantify the history of hydrothermal systems. However, existing model codes of heat flow around hydrothermal systems do not include low-temperature thermochronometer age predictions. Here I present a new model code that simulates thermal history around hydrothermal systems on geological timescales. The modelled thermal histories are used to calculate apatite (U–Th)∕He (AHe) ages, which is a thermochronometer that is sensitive to temperatures up to 70 ∘C. The modelled AHe ages can be compared to measured values in surface outcrops or borehole samples to quantify the history of hydrothermal activity. Heat flux at the land surface is based on equations of latent and sensible heat flux, which allows more realistic land surface and spring temperatures than models that use simplified boundary conditions. Instead of simulating fully coupled fluid and heat flow, the code only simulates advective and conductive heat flow, with the rate of advective fluid flux specified by the user. This relatively simple setup is computationally efficient and allows running larger numbers of models to quantify model sensitivity and uncertainty. Example case studies demonstrate the sensitivity of hot spring temperatures to the depth, width and angle of permeable fault zones, and the effect of hydrothermal activity on AHe ages in surface outcrops and at depth.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elco Luijendijk

Abstract. Low-temperature thermochronology can provide records of the thermal history of the upper crust and can be a valuable tool to quantify the history of hydrothermal systems. However, existing model codes of heat flow around hydrothermal systems do not include low-temperature thermochronology. Here I present a new model code that simulates thermal history around hydrothermal systems on geological timescales. The modelled thermal histories are used to calculate apatite (U-Th)/He (AHe) ages, which is a thermochronometer that is sensitive to temperatures up to 70 °C. The modelled AHe ages can be compared to measured values in surface outcrops or borehole samples to quantify the history of hydrothermal activity. Heat flux at the land surface is based on equations of latent and sensible heat flux, which allows more realistic land surface and spring temperatures than models that use simplified boundary conditions. Instead of simulating fully coupled fluid and heat flow, the code only simulates advective and conductive heat flow, with the rate of advective fluid flux specified by the user. This relatively simple setup is computationally efficient and allows running larger numbers of models to quantify model sensitivity and uncertainty. Example case studies demonstrate the sensitivity of hot spring temperatures to the depth, width and angle of permeable fault zones, and the effect of hydrothermal activity on AHe ages in surface outcrops and at depth.


Lithosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Susanne Theodora Schmidt ◽  
Annette Süssenberger ◽  
Klaus Wemmer

Abstract This study reports three K/Ar ages on celadonite, a dioctahedral K-Fe mica, in the Proterozoic North Shore Volcanic Group (NSVG) of the Midcontinent Rift in northeastern Minnesota. Celadonite formed during beginning posteruptive, low-temperature conditions at temperatures<100°C and with input of meteoric water. K/Ar ages between 1062±16 Ma and 955.0±12 Ma document a remarkably long posteruptive thermal history of >100 myrs in a thick continental basaltic sequence. In the stratigraphically lower part of the NSVG, celadonite formation occurred at 1062±16 Ma in an amygdule or a vesicle filled with celadonite, while another celadonite amygdule in a stratigraphically higher flow was dated at 1039.4±14 Ma. Both flows are overprinted by a later multistage lower zeolite-phyllosilicate facies assemblage (laumontite-albite-corrensite±chlorite±smectite±prehnite±pumpellyite). In the stratigraphically higher part of the sequence, celadonite crystallization at an amygdule rim is followed by upper zeolite facies conditions (stilbite-heulandite-smectite assemblage) and was dated at 955.0±12.4 Ma. The constrained time frame of 107 myrs indicates a long-lived, probably not continuous and locally occurring, posteruptive thermal alteration process. The data suggest that alteration was depth-controlled and temporally and spatially inhomogeneous and implies the progression of the sequence from a close-to-the-surface alteration mode with input of meteoric water to a burial metamorphic mode and with locally occurring hydrothermal activity due to continuous magmatic activity. Volcanism in the Midcontinent Rift system is supposed to have lasted between 1109 Ma and 1083 Ma based on U/Pb zircon ages. The first crystallization of celadonite is recorded in the lower part of the NSVG and occurred ca. 30 myrs after the emplacement of the Silver Bay aplite intrusion in the upper part of the NSVG. Burial rates are determined to be 0.04 km·Ma-1and 0.10 km·Ma-1. The hydrothermal alteration under low-temperature burial conditions clearly postdates the rift-related alkaline and tholeiitic magmatism of the Midcontinent Rift and overlaps with the depositional window of the sedimentary rocks that overlie the Midcontinent Rift volcanics, as well as crustal-scale fault systems that were active during Grenvillian tectonic uplift after the cessation of magmatic activity.


Studies of the steroidal hydrocarbons in sediment sequences demonstrate that diagenetic changes in their molecular distributions occur systematically with burial and form a coherent continuum linking the lipid constituents of organisms to those of ancient sediments and petroleums. Such changes are initially caused by (i) microbial processes, then (ii) low-temperature reactions, which appear to be catalysed by clay minerals and, finally, (iii) thermal processes. The molecular composition at stage (iii) can depend on the proportions of the different products generated by the divergent diagenetic pathways of stages (i) and (ii). Organic molecular reactions are sufficiently sensitive that some diagenetic changes are recognizable over small ( ca . 10 m) depth intervals, which should permit a system of molecular diagenetic zones to be devised. This development should enable the low-temperature thermal history of sediments to be assessed accurately. Specific diagenetic reactions within stages (ii) and (iii) also appear to reflect the sediment heat flow; thus, the reaction rates are higher in rapidly subsiding Neogene sedimentary sequences than they are in Cretaceous sediments from passive continental margins.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 38-43
Author(s):  
Elena A. Glukhova ◽  
Pavel I. Safronov ◽  
Lev M. Burshtein

The article presents the one-dimensional basin modeling performed in four wells to reconstruct the thermal history of deposits and reconstruct the effective values of the heat flow density.


Tectonics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 37 (10) ◽  
pp. 3954-3969 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilby Jepson ◽  
Stijn Glorie ◽  
Dmitry Konopelko ◽  
Jack Gillespie ◽  
Martin Danišík ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Spalding ◽  
Jeremy Powell ◽  
David Schneider ◽  
Karen Fallas

<p>Resolving the thermal history of sedimentary basins through geological time is essential when evaluating the maturity of source rocks within petroleum systems. Traditional methods used to estimate maximum burial temperatures in prospective sedimentary basin such as and vitrinite reflectance (%Ro) are unable to constrain the timing and duration of thermal events. In comparison, low-temperature thermochronology methods, such as apatite fission track thermochronology (AFT), can resolve detailed thermal histories within a temperature range corresponding to oil and gas generation. In the Peel Plateau of the Northwest Territories, Canada, Phanerozoic sedimentary strata exhibit oil-stained outcrops, gas seeps, and bitumen occurrences. Presently, the timing of hydrocarbon maturation events are poorly constrained, as a regional unconformity at the base of Cretaceous foreland basin strata indicates that underlying Devonian source rocks may have undergone a burial and unroofing event prior to the Cretaceous. Published organic thermal maturity values from wells within the study area range from 1.59 and 2.46 %Ro for Devonian strata and 0.54 and 1.83 %Ro within Lower Cretaceous strata. Herein, we have resolved the thermal history of the Peel Plateau through multi-kinetic AFT thermochronology. Three samples from Upper Devonian, Lower Cretaceous and Upper Cretaceous strata have pooled AFT ages of 61.0 ± 5.1 Ma, 59.5 ± 5.2 and 101.6 ± 6.7 Ma, respectively, and corresponding U-Pb ages of 497.4 ± 17.5 Ma (MSWD: 7.4), 353.5 ± 13.5 Ma (MSWD: 3.1) and 261.2 ± 8.5 Ma (MSWD: 5.9). All AFT data fail the χ<sup>2</sup> test, suggesting AFT ages do not comprise a single statistically significant population, whereas U-Pb ages reflect the pre-depositional history of the samples and are likely from various provenances. Apatite chemistry is known to control the temperature and rates at which fission tracks undergo thermal annealing. The r<sub>mro</sub> parameter uses grain specific chemistry to predict apatite’s kinetic behaviour and is used to identify kinetic populations within samples. Grain chemistry was measured via electron microprobe analysis to derive r<sub>mro</sub> values and each sample was separated into two kinetic populations that pass the χ<sup>2</sup> test: a less retentive population with ages ranging from 49.3 ± 9.3 Ma to 36.4 ± 4.7 Ma, and a more retentive population with ages ranging from 157.7 ± 19 Ma to 103.3 ± 11.8 Ma, with r<sub>mr0</sub> benchmarks ranging from 0.79 and 0.82. Thermal history models reveal Devonian strata reached maximum burial temperatures (~165°C-185°C) prior to late Paleozoic to Mesozoic unroofing, and reheated to lower temperatures (~75°C-110°C) in the Late Cretaceous to Paleogene. Both Cretaceous samples record maximum burial temperatures (75°C-95°C) also during the Late Cretaceous to Paleogene. These new data indicate that Devonian source rocks matured prior to deposition of Cretaceous strata and that subsequent burial and heating during the Cretaceous to Paleogene was limited to the low-temperature threshold of the oil window. Integrating multi-kinetic AFT data with traditional methods in petroleum geosciences can help unravel complex thermal histories of sedimentary basins. Applying these methods elsewhere can improve the characterisation of petroleum systems.</p>


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 112-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuang-Li Tang ◽  
Sheng-Hua Li

Abstract Thermoluminescence (TL) and isothermal thermoluminescence (ITL) signals from K-feldspar were studied. The signals from K-feldspar have provided multiple thermometers for thermochronological study. Protocols of multiple aliquot (MA) additive-dose (A) and regenerative-dose (R) have been applied and tested for equivalent dose (De) determinations using TL and ITL signals (MAA-TL, MAR-TL, MAA-ITL and MAR-ITL). Single aliquot regenerative-dose (SAR) protocol was only applied for De determination using ITL signals (SAR-ITL). A 50–60°C translation of heating temperature was necessary for the ITL De values to agree with TL De values. Based on the experiment results and merits-drawbacks comparison of the five tested protocols, the MAR-TL and SAR-ITL are favorable because of their efficiency and accuracy in De determinations. These two protocols were further applied to the samples from the Nujiang River valley and both explicitly demonstrated the thermal history of the samples. They are suitable for K-feldspar thermochronology study. They, as a parallelism of the previous studies of quartz TL and ITL signals, can provide multiple measures for a rock sample with the same thermal history in geo-thermochronological studies.


Author(s):  
Kohei Ito ◽  
Tomoaki Hagio ◽  
Akira Matsuo ◽  
Yasushi Iwaisako ◽  
Osamu Nakabeppu

We conducted an experiment to demonstrate the thermoelectric nano-gap, which is recently expected to own high performance, in principle, because it does not have conductive heat flow between the high and low temperature region. In this study, the thermoelectric nano-gap is realized with a pair of probe and substrate where they are finely positioned. A temperature difference of ca. 10 K is imposed to the nano-gap under vacuum circumstances. A representative thermoelectric voltage, tunneling-current and gap were 250 μV, 0.3 nA and 50 nm. The obtained voltage and current, with assuming an effective probe-diameter of 10 nm, roughly agreed to a theoretical study (G. Despesse and T. Jager, J. Appl. Phys., Vol.96, p.5026-, 2004). However, the obtained gap was 25 times larger than that from the theoretical study.


Terra Nova ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis Barbero ◽  
Antonio Teixell ◽  
María-Luisa Arboleya ◽  
Pedro del Río ◽  
Peter W. Reiners ◽  
...  

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