4.5 Article

A helium isotope perspective on the Dixie Valley, Nevada, hydrothermal system

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GEOTHERMICS
卷 35, 期 1, 页码 26-43

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.geothermics.2005.09.004

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helium isotopes; noble gases; magmatic; permeability; geothermal; Dixie Valley; basin and range

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Fluids from springs, fumaroles, and wells throughout Dixie Valley, NV were analyzed for noble gas abundances and isotopic compositions. The helium isotopic compositions of fluids produced from the Dixie Valley geothermal field range from 0.70 to 0.76 Ra, are among the highest values in the valley, and indicate that similar to 7.5% of the total helium is derived from the mantle. A lack of recent volcanics or other potential sources requires flow of mantle-derived helium up along the valley bounding Stillwater Range Front Fault, from which the geothermal fluids are produced. Using a one-dimensional flow model, a lower limit fluid flow rate up through the fault of 7 mm/yr is estimated, corresponding to a mantle He-3 flux of similar to 104 atoms m(-2) s(-1). A comparison between the fluids from Dixie Valley springs, fumaroles, and wells and the fluids produced from the geothermal field reveals a mixing trend between the geothermal fluid and younger, cooler ground-waters. The exceptions are those features that either emanate directly from the Stillwater fault or wells that penetrate and extract fluids from the fault zone, all of which have helium isotopic compositions that are indistinguishable from the geothermal production fluids. The results of our study indicate that the Stillwater Range Front Fault system must act as a permeable conduit that can sustain high vertical fluid flow rates from deep within the crust and crust-mantle boundary and that high permeability may exist along most of its length. This suggests that the geothermal potential of the Stillwater fault may be significantly greater than the 6-8 km long system presently under production. Since all the numerous springs, wells, and fumaroles in the valley also contain a fluid component that is indistinguishable from the geothermal/Stillwater fault fluid, the potential for an additional deeper and more pervasive geothermal system also exists and should be further evaluated. Furthermore, we suggest that elevated helium isotope compositions in regions with little or no recent magmatism are an indicator of the deep crustal permeability that is required to drive and sustain extensional geothermal systems. (c) 2005 CNR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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