Title of article :
Lichen bioindication of air quality in the Mt. Amiata geothermal area (Tuscany, Italy)
Author/Authors :
Stefano Loppi، نويسنده , , Juri Nascimbene، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Interaction between geothermal fluids and the rocks through which
they migrate alters many earlier formed minerals and produces others. The
minerals thus formed preserve evidence of hydrological conditions prevailing
within an active geothermal system; in particular, they can reflect the range of
temperatures under which they formed. This feature was tested at the Ngawha
geothermal system, which is different from others in New Zealand in that its
reservoir comprises fractured basement rocks covered by a 500-600 m thick
sequence of sedimentary rocks. Petrographic examination of cores and cuttings
recovered from drillholes at Ngawha shows that the secondary minerals present
within the rock matrices and veins are of different ages. The thermally sensitive
minerals include epidote, titanite, biotite and clays, including some that are
interlayered. Comparison of the measured downwell temperatures with those
deduced from the secondary mineralogy and by homogenizing fluid inclusions,
shows that the central part of the field has remained thermally stable since the
youngest secondary minerals deposited there but its southern margin has cooled
by 20-40°C or perhaps more. A likely cause of this is an inflow of cooler water
from the east, which also causes the temperature inversion clearly evident in
hole Ng8. By contrast, some fluid inclusion geothermometry results suggest that
the northern part of the drilled field has heated since their host hydrothermal
quartz crystals formed. © 1998 CNR. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.
Keywords :
fluid inclusion , Geothermometry , Ngawha , Hydrothermal alteration , New Zealand.
Journal title :
Geothermics
Journal title :
Geothermics