
Soil CO 2 emissions as a proxy for heat and mass flow assessment, T aupō V olcanic Z one, N ew Z ealand
Author(s) -
Bloomberg S.,
Werner C.,
Rissmann C.,
Mazot A.,
Horton T.,
Gravley D.,
Kennedy B.,
Oze C.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1002/2014gc005327
Subject(s) - hydrothermal circulation , volcano , geothermal gradient , geology , impact crater , carbon dioxide , stable isotope ratio , atmosphere (unit) , magma , flux (metallurgy) , geochemistry , mineralogy , geophysics , chemistry , meteorology , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , astronomy , seismology
The quantification of heat and mass flow between deep reservoirs and the surface is important for understanding magmatic and hydrothermal systems. Here, we use high‐resolution measurement of carbon dioxide flux (φCO 2 ) and heat flow at the surface to characterize the mass (CO 2 and steam) and heat released to the atmosphere from two magma‐hydrothermal systems. Our soil gas and heat flow surveys at Rotokawa and White Island in the Taupō Volcanic Zone, New Zealand, include over 3000 direct measurements of φCO 2 and soil temperature and 60 carbon isotopic values on soil gases. Carbon dioxide flux was separated into background and magmatic/hydrothermal populations based on the measured values and isotopic characterization. Total CO 2 emission rates (ΣCO 2 ) of 441 ± 84 t d −1 and 124 ± 18 t d −1 were calculated for Rotokawa (2.9 km 2 ) and for the crater floor at White Island (0.3 km 2 ), respectively. The total CO 2 emissions differ from previously published values by +386 t d −1 at Rotokawa and +25 t d −1 at White Island, demonstrating that earlier research underestimated emissions by 700% (Rotokawa) and 25% (White Island). These differences suggest that soil CO 2 emissions facilitate more robust estimates of the thermal energy and mass flux in geothermal systems than traditional approaches. Combining the magmatic/hydrothermal‐sourced CO 2 emission (constrained using stable isotopes) with reservoir H 2 O:CO 2 mass ratios and the enthalpy of evaporation, the surface expression of thermal energy release for the Rotokawa hydrothermal system (226 MW t ) is 10 times greater than the White Island crater floor (22.5 MW t ).