Record Details

Title ALTERATION, GEOTHERMOMETRY, AND GRANITOID INTRUSIONS IN WELL GMF 31-17, MEDICINE LAKE VOLCANO GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM, CALIFORNIA
Authors Susan Juch Lutz, Jeffrey B. Hulen, and Alexander Schriener Jr.
Year 2000
Conference Stanford Geothermal Workshop
Keywords Glass Mountain, Medicine Lake
Abstract Glass Mountain Federal 31-17, with a total depth (TD) of 2678 m, is one of three deep geothermal wells capable of commercial production at the sum-mit of the large, Pleistocene-Holocene, Medicine Lake shield volcano, on the eastern flank of the Cascade Range in northeastern California. Well 31-17 encountered strong flows of high-temperature (up to 260oC) geothermal fluids in intensely propylitized Quaternary volcanics. The volcanic sequence is dominated by basalt and basaltic andesite, but in-cludes some zones of rhyolite and dacite in the upper 900 m of the well. From 2460 m to TD, the mafic volcanics are contact metamorphosed and intruded by hornblende quartz diorite. The quartz diorite is probably part of a larger pluton that floors the active geothermal system. Hydrothermal alteration in well 31-17 shows a distinct vertical zonation, with an up-permost zeolite-smectite zone above a thick and in-tense argillic zone, which in turn overlies the pro-pylitic production zone. Modern temperature logs for the well show a cool isothermal interval through the zeolite-smectite zone, a steep conductive interval (up to 500oC/km) through the argillic zone (the cap on the geothermal system), and a near-isothermal (at about 250oC) zone to total depth in the propylitic interval. Fluid-inclusion temperature data (from low-salinity inclusions) show two distinct trends; one resembling the modern temperature profile; another reaching maxima of 373oC and also exceeding, by up to 20oC, temperatures appropriate for a boiling point curve emanating from the modern water table. These fluid-inclusion thermal maxima, the curve they roughly define, and the presence of deep, high-temperature alteration phases like actinolite, clinopy-roxene, talc, and biotite virtually mandate that the corresponding temperature regime was supported by a large, cooling pluton. If this igneous body is suffi-ciently young and large, it is also the likely still-cooling heat source for the modern geothermal system.
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