6533b872fe1ef96bd12d4361

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Geochemical characterisation of the thermo-mineral waters of Greece

Kyriaki DaskalopoulouWalter D'alessandroLorenza Li VigniKonstantinos KyriakopoulosFilippo BrugnoneFrancesco ParelloSergio CalabreseSergio Calabrese

subject

Environmental EngineeringGlobal meteoric water lineδ18OCarbon dioxide Geothermometry Hydrogeochemistry Stable isotopesGeochemistry010501 environmental sciences010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundIsotopesGeochemistry and PetrologyEnvironmental ChemistrySeawaterGroundwaterGeothermal gradient0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceWater Science and TechnologyMineralGreeceStable isotope ratioGeneral MedicineSilicon DioxideSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiachemistryCarbon dioxideMeteoric waterEnvironmental scienceSeawaterMineral Waters

description

AbstractGeothermal areas of Greece are located in regions affected by recent volcanism and in continental basins characterised by elevated heat flow. Many of them are found along the coast, and thus, water is often saline due to marine intrusion. In the current study, we present about 300 unpublished and literature data from thermal and cold mineral waters collected along Greece. Samples were analysed for major ions, Li, SiO2 and isotopes in water. Measured temperatures range from 6.5 to 98 °C, pH from 1.96 to 11.98, while Total Dissolved Solutes (TDS) from 0.22 to 51 g/L. Waters were subdivided into four main groups: (1) thermal; (2) cold; (3) acidic (pH < 5); and (4) hyperalkaline (pH > 11). On statistical basis, thermal waters were subdivided into subgroups according to both their temperature [warm (< 29 °C), hypothermal (29–48 °C), thermal (48–75 °C) and hyperthermal (> 75 °C)] and TDS [low salinity (< 4 g/L), brackish (4–30 g/L) and saline (> 30 g/L)]. Cold waters were subdivided based on their pCO2 [low (< 0.05 atm), medium (0.05–0.85 atm) and high (> 0.85 atm)]. δ18O–H2O ranges from − 12.7 to + 2.7‰ versus SMOW, while δ2H–H2O from − 91 to + 12‰ versus SMOW being generally comprised between the Global Meteoric Water Line and the East Mediterranean Meteoric Water Line. Positive δ18O shifts with respect to the former are mostly related to mixing with seawater, while only for a few samples these shifts point to high-temperature water–rock interaction processes. Only a few thermal waters gave reliable geothermometric estimates, suggesting reservoir temperatures between 80 and 260 °C.

10.1007/s10653-021-01001-1https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5009750_2/component/file_5012228/5009750.pdf