4.3 Article

Present-day geothermal regime of the Uliastai Depression, Erlian Basin, North China

Journal

ENERGY EXPLORATION & EXPLOITATION
Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 770-786

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0144598718785970

Keywords

Heat flow; lithospheric thermal structure; thermal lithospheric thickness; lithospheric thermo-rheological structure; Uliastai Depression; Erlian Basin

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41374089]

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In this study, we calculated the present-day terrestrial heat flow of the Uliastai Depression in Erlian Basin by using systematical steady-state temperature data obtained from four deep boreholes and 89 thermal conductivity measurements from 22 boreholes. Then, we calculated the lithospheric thermal structure, thermal lithospheric thickness, and lithospheric thermo-rheological structure by combining crustal structure, thermal conductivity, heat production, and rheological parameter data. Research from the Depression shows that the present-day terrestrial heat flow (q(s)) is 86.3 +/- 2.3 mW/m(2), higher than the average of 60.4 +/- 12.3 mW/m(2) of the continental area of China. Mantle heat flow (q(m)) in the Depression ranges from 33.7 to 39.3 mW/m(2), q(m)/q(s) ranges from 40 to 44%, show that the crust plays the dominant position in the terrestrial heat flow. The thermal thickness of the lithosphere is about 74-88 km and characterized by a strong crust-weak mantle rheological characteristic. The total lithospheric strength is 1.5 x 10(12) N/m under wet mantle conditions. Present-day geothermal regime indicates that the Uliastai Depression has a high thermal background, the activity of the deep-seated lithosphere is relatively intense. This result differs significantly from the earlier understanding that the area belongs to a cold basin. However, a hot basin should be better consistent with the evidences from lithochemistry and geophysical observations. The results also show the melts/fluids in the study area may be related to the subduction of the Paleo-Asian Ocean. The study of the geothermal regime in the Uliastai Depression provides new geothermal evidence for the volcanic activity in the eastern part of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt and has significant implications for the geodynamic characteristics.

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