Title: Geology, Structure and Hydrothermal Alteration of Geothermal Systems
1Geology, Structure and Hydrothermal Alteration of
Geothermal Systems
Joe Moore Energy Geoscience Institute
2Outline
- 1. Hydrologic structure of geothermal systems
-
- Deep circulation systems
- Silicic volcanic terrains with little topographic
relief - Andesitic volcanoes with high topographic relief
- Hydrothermal alteration
- Distribution of alteration phases
- Relationship to fluid flow patterns
- Influence of rock type
- Relationship to permeability
- Duration of hydrothermal activity
3The Challenge
- Locate the upflow zones
- Determine the characteristics of the geothermal
aquifers - Produce the resource in a sustainable manner
4- All geothermal systems are characterized by
- A heat source (magmatic or nonmagmatic)
- Convective upflow
- Recharge by meteoric waters
- Deep mixing with meteoric waters and/or
condensate - Boiling and steam migration
- Outflow of the deep fluids to the surface or
other hydraulic base level
5Geothermal Environments
Consider geothermal systems related to Deep
circulation of groundwaters (frequently
associated with fault bounded basins Dixie
Valley, Beowawe) Silicic volcanic terrains
with low topographic relief Taupo volcanic zone,
Coso, Roosevelt Hot Springs) Andesitic
volcanoes with high topographic relief
Ahuachapan, Zunil Other environments include
rift basins (Salton Sea, Cerro Prieto), and
calderas (Yellowstone, Los Humeros)
6Deep Circulation Hydrothermal Resource
7Temperatures at 3 km Depth
(INL Website data from SMU)
8Geothermal Resources In Utah
(INL Website)
9Formation of Geothermal Aquifers
(G. Culver, Geo-Heat Center)
10Temperatures in the Ellidaar Geothermal Field,
Iceland
(Tomasson, 1993)
Cross section 3 km
11HEAT SOURCE Circles and Squares
Magmatic Triangles Extensional Diamonds not sure
Cyan gt 3.0 Ra Yellow 2 3 Ra Red 1 2
Ra Orange 0.6 1 Ra Green 0. 3 0. 6 Ra Blue
lt 0.3 Ra
Mantle Helium Evidence (Kennedy and van Soest,
2005)
12Sulphurdale
N
13Conceptual Model of a Silica Volcanic System
(Henley and Ellis, 1985)
14Coso Geothermal Field, CA
CHS
DK
WP
1 mile
15Thermal Structure Along N-S Profile, West Side of
Coso
16Roosevelt Hot Springs, Utah
Silica (Sinter) Deposits
Yellowstone
Yellowstone
17Zunil Geothermal System, Guatemala
18Distribution of Lithospheric Plates and Active
Volcanoes
19Conceptual Model of an Andesitic Volcano
(Henley and Ellis, 1985)
20Surface Manifestations Associated With Boiling
Fluids
Photos by J. LaFleur and D. Foley
21Travertine (CaCO3 ) Deposits
Zunil, Guatemala
Yellowstone
22Hot Spring Mound at Midway
(Geo-Heat Center, 2004)
23Vapor-Dominated Geothermal Systems
- Pluton related volumes of 100s of km3
- The Geysers (CA), Larderello (Italy)
- Volcanic Hosted volumes of 10s of km3
- Darajat, Kamojang and Karaha-Telaga Bodas
(Indonesia), Puna (HI), Matsukawa (Japan) - Shallow vapor-caps volumes of a few km3
- Cove Fort-Sulphurdale (UT)
24View of Kawah Saat and Telaga Bodas
25Karaha-Telaga Bodas
26Hydrothermal Alteration(WHY BOTHER?)
- As the fluids circulate, they react with the
rocks. The hydrothermal minerals they produce - Influence the geophysical signatures of the rocks
through changes in their densities, porosities,
permeabilities, and electrical properties. - Provide information needed during drilling
operations (casing points). - Can be utilized to guide exploration and
development by providing information on
temperature distributions, thermal gradients,
fluid compositions, permeable zones. - Provide spatial information with respect to the
location of the caprock and zones of discharge
and recharge.
27Useful Tools
- Binocular microscope and chipboards
- Thin sections
- X-ray diffraction analyses (clays)
- Fluid inclusions (temperature and fluid
composition) - Scanning electron microscopy (textural
relationships) - Dating techniques (14C, 40Ar/39Ar, K-Ar)
28Factors Influencing Hydrothermal Alteration
(after Browne, 1978)
- Temperature
- Pressure
- Rock Type
- Permeability
- Fluid Composition
- Duration of Activity
29Thermal Stabilities of Common Geothermal Minerals
30Argillic/Phyllic Alteration
K-33 3965 ft.
Ser
Qtz
Py
Argillic alteration (lt225oC) clays smectite and
interlayered illite-smectite and
chlorite-smectite Phyllic alteration illite
(gt225 to 250oC)
31Bulalo Geothermal Field
32(Raharjo et al, 2002)
33Propylitic Zone
Epidote
Actinolite and Pyrite
gt250oC
gt300oC
34Potassic Zone (gt320oC)
Biotite
Garnet
Pyroxene
Tour
Garnet
Biotite
KRH 2-1 9500 ft.
KRH 2-1 9850 ft.
35Distribution of Mineral Surfaces at Karaha-Telaga
Bodas
36Bulalo Geothermal Field
37Advanced Argillic Alteration, Cove
Fort-Sulphurdale, Utah
38Predicted Mineralogy
39Anhydrite After Actinolite
T-21001.3 m
40Calcite Vein
64-16
41Wairakite After Anhydrite and Calcite
K-21 1546.9 m
42Calc-silicate Stability Diagram
43General Characteristics of Alteration Assemblages
(Hedenquist, 1988)
44Rock Types
- Influences alteration mainly through control on
permeability by texture, porosity and strength - Volcanic Systems
- Dominated by
- Tuffaceous deposits (pyroclastic and epiclastic
deposits, lahars) - Lava flows
- Sediments (minor, in local basins)
- Intrusions (commonly form thin dikes and sills,
rarely large stocks) - Basement rocks (regional sedimentary and
metamorphic sequences and intrusive complexes)
45Facies Model of the Bulalo Reservoir
DEPTH RANGE FT. BSL
Shallow And-Dac Volcanic Sequence (lavas and
tuffs)
1000-2500
Rhyolitic ash-flow tuffs and lavas (SR1 SR2)
with and epiclastic deposits
2000-4000
And Lava Marker w/ related tuff deposits
3500-4500
Dacite Dome Complex w/ dac lava domes tuffs
4000-6000
5500-7000
Bas-And Volcanic Sequence
6500-10000
Deep Andesite Sequence - and lava dominated with
intrusions
46Rock Types
Tuffaceous deposits alteration to clays can
begin shortly after deposition at very low
temperatures resulting in rocks with low
permeabilities at low to moderate
temperatures (below propylitic zone) rocks
commonly behave in a ductile fashion poor
reservoir rocks until they become brittle when
affected by high temperature alteration Lava
flows can behave in a brittle fashion even at
relatively low temperatures rubbleized flow
tops and bottoms may have high porosities but
be of limited extent and be poorly connected to
major through going fractures
47Relationship of Rock Type to Fracturing
Fractured Lava Flows
Unfractured Pyroclastics
Mineralized fracture
48Fracture Orientations in Medicine Lake Well 88-28
49Litho/Structural Facies Model of Bulalo Reservoir
50Fault Kinematics in Karaha-Telaga Bodas Well K-33
Abbreviations cr caprock d dextral n
normal o oblique r reservoir s sinstral
t tensile
51Bulalo Sulfonate Tracer Summary
52Permeability Controls on Alteration Mineralogy
- Rocks with low permeabilities
- The rocks may remain relatively unaltered (lava
flows) even at relatively high temperatures - Equilibrium between the rocks and fluids may not
be reached and relict phases may persist - High permeability channels (past and present) are
frequently associated with - Hydrothermal breccias
- Boiling
- Repetitive fracturing and multiple vein sets
-
-
-
-
-
53The Effects of Boiling
- Boiling effects
- Gas contents of the fluid
- Mineral precipitation
- Temperature-pressure relationships
- The formation and distribution of condensates
54Calcite Cemented Hydrothermal Breccia
55Mineral Deposition Resulting from Boiling
Bladed calcite
56Effect of Boiling on Mineral Stabilities
Browne and Ellis, 1970
57Duration of Geothermal Activity
- Life spans of geothermal systems are poorly
known - Few geothermal systems have been dated directly
- Hochstein and Browne suggest that
- Ohaaki-Broadlands (NZ) has been active for at
least 300,000 y - Kawerau (NZ) for at least 280,000 y
- Icelandic geothermal systems for lt 250,000 y
- Individual pulses in volcanic systems may be very
short lived, with long periods of quiescence. - Dating of hot spring deposits and altered rocks
at Karaha-Telaga Bodas, Tiwi and Coso suggest
these pulses may last less than several tens of
thousands of years.
58An Example from Matalibong-25,Tiwi Philippines
Determination of mineral distributions and
paragenetic relationships Measurement of fluid
inclusion temperatures and salinities 40Ar/39Ar
spectrum dating of adularia from three
depths
59Mineral and Fracture Distributions
Spinner Log
60Fluid Inclusion Measurements
6140Ar/39Ar Spectrum dating
Adularia ages 5932 ft (303 ka 6 ka), 6065 ft
(314 ka 5 ka), 6075 ft (272 ka 22 ka)
62Conclusions
- Most geothermal systems can be described in
general terms using relatively few simple
conceptual models - These models can provide the basis for
prioritizing exploration activities and initial
interpretations of geophysical and geochemical
data. - The primary factors controlling hydrothermal
alteration are temperature, rock type and
permeability. - Faults and fractures become increasingly
important as fluuid conduits with increasing
temperature and depth. - Fluid conduits often display evidence of
reactivation, even after long periods of
quiescence.
63THE END