| Title | Aluto-Langano Geothermal Field, Ethiopia: Complete Image of Underlying magmatic-hydrothermal System Revealed by Revised Interpretation of Magnetotelluric Data |
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| Authors | Friedemann SAMROCK, Alexander GRAYVER, Biruk CHERKOSE, Alexey KUVSHINOV, Martin O. SAAR |
| Year | 2020 |
| Conference | World Geothermal Congress |
| Keywords | Ethiopia, Aluto-Langano, magnetotellurics, 3-D inversion, volcano monitoring |
| Abstract | Aluto-Langano in the Main Ethiopian Rift Valley is currently the only producing geothermal field in Ethiopia and probably the best studied prospect in the Ethiopian Rift. Geoscientific exploration began in 1973 and led to the siting of exploration well LA-3 on top of the volcanic complex. The well was drilled in 1983 to a depth of 2144m and encountered temperatures of 320°C. Since 1990 Aluto has produced electricity, albeit with interruptions. Currently it is undergoing a major expansion project with the plan to generate 75MWe from eight new wells, until now two of them have been drilled successfully. Geophysical exploration at Aluto involved magnetotelluric (MT) soundings, which helped to delineate the clay cap atop of the hydrothermal reservoir. However, until now geophysical studies did not succeed in imaging the proposed magmatic heat source that would drive the observed hydrothermal convection. For this study we inverted 208 MT stations that were measured over the entire volcanic complex in three independent surveys by the Geological Survey of Ethiopia and ETH Zurich, Switzerland. For the inversion we used a novel 3-D inverse solver that employs adaptive finite element techniques, which allowed us to accurately model topography and account for varying lateral and vertical resolution. We inverted MT phase tensors. This transfer function is resistant to galvanic distortions that have long been recognized as an obstacle in MT inversion. Our recovered model shows for the first time the entire magmatic-hydrothermal system under the geothermal field. The up-flow of melt is structurally controlled by extensional rift faults and sourced by a lower crustal basaltic mush reservoir. Productive wells were all drilled into a weak fault zone below the clay cap. The productive reservoir is underlain by an electrically conductive upper-crustal feature, which we interpret as highly crystalline rhyolitic mush zone acting as the main heat source. Our results demonstrate the importance of a dense MT site distribution and state-of-the-art inversion tools in order to obtain reliable and complete subsurface models of high enthalpy systems below volcanic geothermal prospects. |