Tracing and quantifying magmatic carbon discharge in cold groundwaters: lessons learned from Mammoth Mountain, USA

被引:58
作者
Evans, WC
Sorey, ML
Cook, AC
Kennedy, BM
Shuster, DL
Colvard, EM
White, LD
Huebner, MA
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA
[2] Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab, Ctr Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, Livermore, CA 94551 USA
[3] Lawrence Berkeley Lab, Ctr Isotope Geochem, Berkeley, CA 94701 USA
关键词
volcanoes; groundwater; magmatic gas; carbon dioxide;
D O I
10.1016/S0377-0273(01)00268-2
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
A major campaign to quantify the magmatic carbon discharge in cold groundwaters around Mammoth Mountain volcano in eastern California was carried out from 1996 to 1999. The total water flow from all sampled cold springs was greater than or equal to1.8 X 10(7) m(3)/yr draining an area that receives an estimated 2.5 X 10(7) m(3)/yr of recharge, suggesting that sample coverage of the groundwater system was essentially complete. Some of the waters contain magmatic helium with He-3/He-4 ratios as high as 4.5 times the atmospheric ratio, and a magmatic component in the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) can be identified in virtually every feature sampled. Many waters have a C-14 of 0-5 pmC, a delta(13)C near -5parts per thousand, and contain high concentrations (20-50 mmol/1) Of CO2(aq); but are otherwise dilute (specific conductance = 100-300 muS/cm) with low pH values between 5 and 6. Such waters have previously escaped notice at Mammoth Mountain, and possibly at many other volcanoes, because CO, is rapidly lost to the air as the water flows away from the springs, leaving neutral pH waters containing only 1-3 mmol/l HCO3-. The total discharge of magmatic carbon in the cold groundwater system at Mammoth Mountain is similar to20000 t/yr (as CO2), ranging seasonally from about 30 to 90 t/day. Several types of evidence show that this high discharge of magmatic DIC arose in part because of shallow dike intrusion in 1989, but also demonstrate that a long-term discharge possibly half this magnitude (similar to10000 t/yr) predated that intrusion. To sustain a 10000 t/yr DIC discharge would require a magma intrusion rate of 0.057 km(3) per century, assuming complete degassing of magma with 0.65 wt% CO2 and a density of 2.7 t/m(3). The geochemical data also identify a small (<1 t/day) discharge of magmatic DIC that can be traced to the Inyo Domes area north of Mammoth Mountain and outside the associated Long Valley caldera. This research, along with recent studies at Lassen Peak and other western USA volcanoes, suggests that the amount of magmatic carbon in cold groundwaters is important to constraining rates of intrusion and edifice weathering at individual volcanoes and may even represent a significant fraction of the global carbon discharge from volcanoes. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:291 / 312
页数:22
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