6533b858fe1ef96bd12b58e6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Fluid geochemistry in a low-enthalpy geothermal field along a sector of southern Apennines chain (Italy)

Francesco MutoAntonio CaracausiGiovanni VespasianoP. RandazzoMichele PaternosterMichele PaternosterR. De RosaAlessandro AiuppaGiovanni MongelliGiovanni MongelliCarmine ApollaroE. VanniIlaria Fuoco

subject

Calcitegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryδ18ODolomiteGeochemistryDeep-sourced volatiles Geochemical model Geothermometry and heat discharge Low enthalpy geothermal system Water-rock interaction Mt. Alpi massifMassif010501 environmental sciences010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologiachemistry.chemical_compoundIsotopic signaturechemistryGeochemistry and PetrologyCarbonateCarbonate rockEconomic GeologyGeothermal gradientGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

Abstract The chemical and isotopic features of the fluids (water and gases) in the Lucane thermal area (southern Italy) have been investigated in order to verify their origin, water temperature in the geothermal reservoir, and to recognize the main natural processes concerning the water composition during ascent towards the surface. The Lucane geothermal system is placed in the southern sector of the Apennines chains, a seismically active area, close to the southern base of the Mt. Alpi carbonate massif. Along the study area, two main sets of high-angle faults form an almost orthogonal fault system that, as suggested by local structural geology, acts as a preferential pathway for uprising deep fluids. Here, we recognized two different types of waters: (i) cold shallow waters having a meteoritic origin and interacting with carbonate rocks (dolomite and calcite), whose dissolved gases show a dominant atmospheric contribution and (ii) hypothermal waters (average temperature of 21 °C), having a meteoritic origin and interacting with both carbonate rocks and inter-bedded evaporitic deposit. Geochemical data allow estimating a geothermal reservoir temperature between 30 °C and 60 °C, according to silica and Ca/Mg geothermometers, respectively. A heat discharge related to hypothermal groundwater flow between 7.75E+06 and 2.00E+07 J/s was computed. δ18O and δ2Η data allowed recognizing a meteoric origin for hypothermal (hereafter TL) waters, with mean recharge (infiltration) elevations between 1300 and 1700 m a.s.l. These waters are gas-rich (e.g., CO2 and He), which amounts are higher than those in air-saturated water (ASW). Carbon and helium isotope signature in the TL waters indicate their mainly crustal origin and involve a tectonic control on fluid migration through the crust. Furthermore, we observe that the He isotopic signature in gases dissolved in TL waters is stable over time and its monitoring could be a powerful tool to assess the seismogenetic processes since their preparatory phases.

10.1016/j.gexplo.2020.106618http://hdl.handle.net/10447/498799