Premium
Long‐term temperature monitoring in a borehole drilled into the Nojima Fault, southwest Japan
Author(s) -
Yamano Makoto,
Goto Shusaku
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
island arc
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.554
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 1440-1738
pISSN - 1038-4871
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1738.2001.00331.x
Subject(s) - borehole , geology , casing , fault (geology) , advection , groundwater flow , petrology , anomaly (physics) , thermal conductivity , fracture (geology) , seismology , aquifer , geomorphology , geotechnical engineering , groundwater , geophysics , materials science , physics , condensed matter physics , composite material , thermodynamics
Long‐term monitoring of temperature distribution in an active fault zone was carried out using the optical fiber temperature‐sensing technique. An optical fiber cable was installed in a borehole drilled into the Nojima Fault in Awaji Island, south‐west Japan, and the temperature profile to a depth of 1460 m had been measured for 2.5 years (July 1997–January 2000). Although the obtained temperature records showed small temporal variations due to drifts of the measurement system all along the cable, local temperature anomalies were detected at two depths. One at around 80 m seems to correspond to a fracture zone and may be attributed to groundwater flow in the fracture zone. This anomaly had been stable throughout the monitoring period, whereas the other anomaly at around 500 m was a transient one. The water level in the borehole could be estimated from the diurnal temperature variations in the uppermost part of the borehole and may provide information on the hydrological characteristics of the fault zone, which is connected to the borehole through perforations on the casing pipe. Except for these minor variations, the temperature profile had been very stable for 2.5 years. The conductive heat flow calculated from this profile and the thermal conductivity measured on core samples increases with depth, probably resulting from errors in thermal conductivity due to sampling problems and/or from advective heat transfer by regional groundwater flow. Assuming that the middle part of the borehole (less fractured granite layer) is least affected by these factors, heat flow at this site is estimated to be approximately 70 mW/m 2 .