A deep research drill hole at the summit of an active volcano, Kilauea, Hawaii

Autor: George V. Keller, John C. Murray, Charles J. Zablocki, Robert I. Tilling, Donald W. Peterson, Robert L. Christiansen
Rok vydání: 1974
Předmět:
Zdroj: Geophysical Research Letters. 1:323-326
ISSN: 0094-8276
DOI: 10.1029/gl001i007p00323
Popis: Drilling and geophysical logging data for a 1,262 m-deep bore hole in the area inferred to overlie the magma reservoir of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, support earlier interpretations based on surface geophysical surveys that a zone of brackish or saline water lies above the reservoir. Temperatures encountered within the hole are not sufficiently high to warrant commercial interest; the maximum temperature, 137°C, is at the hole bottom. However, the temperature gradient toward the bottom of the hole (approximately 160 m below sea level) increases sharply to about 370°C/km, perhaps partly reflecting the effect of decreased water circulation as suggested by the geophysical logging data. If this gradient persists or increases with depth, magmatic temperatures would be attained within 3 km from the hole bottom (i.e., approximately 4 km from ground surface)—a depth in accord with data from ground-deformation and seismic studies.
Databáze: OpenAIRE