4.6 Article

O, H, and Sr isotope evidences of mixing processes in two geothermal fluid reservoirs at Yangbajing, Tibet, China

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 59, Issue 7, Pages 1589-1597

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12665-009-0145-y

Keywords

Geothermal fluid; Oxygen-18 and deuterium isotope; Sr-87/Sr-86 ratio; Mixing; Yangbajing; Tibet

Funding

  1. Open Fund of State Key Laboratory of Environmental Geochemistry
  2. National Natural Science of Foundation of China [40425001, 40702041]
  3. Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of Higher Education of China [20070491008]
  4. Postdoctoral Science Foundation [200801333, 20080430146]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province of China [2007ABA312]
  6. State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources [GPMR200714]

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The Yangbajing geothermal field with the highest reservoir temperature among Chinese hydrothermal systems is located about 90 km northwest to Lhasa City, capital of Tibet, where high temperature geothermal fluids occur in two reservoirs: a shallow one at a depth of 180 280 m and a deep one at 950-1,850 m. In this study, Oxygen-18 and deuterium isotope compositions as well as Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios of water samples collected from geothermal wells, cold springs and surface water bodies were characterized to understand the genesis of geothermal fluids at Yangbajing. The results show that the deep geothermal fluid is the mixing product of both magmatic and infiltrating snow-melt water, whereas the shallow geothermal fluid is formed by the mixing of deep geothermal fluid with cold groundwater. Using a binary mixing model with deep geothermal fluid and cold groundwater as two endmembers, the mixing ratios of the latter in most shallow geothermal water samples were calculated to be between 40 and 50%. The combined use of O, H, and Sr isotopes proves to be an effective approach to depict the major sources of geothermal fluids and the mixing processes occurring in two reservoirs at Yangbajing.

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