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HOT SPRINGS AND
GEYSERS
The Walker School
Physical Geology
Hotsprings
   A spring that is produced by
    the emergence of
    geothermally heated
    groundwater from the earth's
    crust.
   Can be found in many
    regions of the world.
   Occur where water
    temperature is below the
    boiling point.
   Mineral Content: gray to       Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone.
    white geyserite, a hydrated
    silicon dioxide.
Source of Heat (Non-Volcanic Origin)
   Heated by geothermal heat,
    i.e., heat from the Earth's
    interior.
   the temperature of rocks
    within the earth increases with
    depth. The rate of
    temperature increase with
    depth is known as the
    geothermal gradient.
   If water percolates deeply
    enough into the crust, it will be
    heated as it comes into
    contact with hot rocks.
Source of Heat (Volcanic Origin)
   Water may be heated
    by coming into contact
    with magma.
   If the water only reaches
    the surface in the form of
    steam, it is called a
    fumarole.                    Fumaroles escape through Fourpeaked
                                 Glacier covering Fourpeaked Volcano
                                 in Alaska
Details of Fumaroles
   Occur along tiny cracks or
    long fissures, in chaotic
    clusters or fields, and on the
    surfaces of lava flows and
    thick deposits of pyroclastic
    flows.
   Typically boils off all or most
    its water before the water
    reaches the surface.
   They are static and do not
    change in appearance over         Sampling gases at a fumarole on Mount
    time.                             Baker in Washington, USA.
   Gasses emitted: carbon
    dioxide, sulfur dioxide,
    hydrochloric acid, and
    hydrogen sulfide.
Mudpots
   If the water is mixed with
    mud and clay, it is called
    a mud pot.
   Mudpots form in high-
    temperature geothermal
    areas where water is in
    short supply.
   The thickness of the mud
    usually changes along
    with seasonal changes in     Mudpot in Hverir, Námafjall, Iceland
    the water table.
Details of Mudpots
   Water comes from rainfall and
    snow melt throughout the year.
   Contains fumes, like fumaroles,
    such as hydrogen sulfide is
    oxidized in the water by
    chemical reactions.
   Contains high levels of Sulfolobus
    (a primitive bacteria) which forms
    sulfuric acid.
   Sulfuric Acid attacks the rocks
    like strong battery acid,
    disintegrating the rock and          Sulfurous fumaroles, Whakaari/White
    creating a mud pot.                  Island, New Zealand
   Can dry out and revert to a
    fumarole.
Pools
   Hot springs that have enough
    water that comes to the surface to
    keep the fluid from entirely
    boiling away and carry away the
    mud and debris.
   Water is near the boiling point
    and does not support the growth
    of colorful bacteria or algae.
   Color of some pools is not           Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone;
    because of bacteria or algae, but    the largest hot springs pool in the
                                         world.
    because the water is so clear and
    pure, it reflects the sunlight and
    refracts it like a prism.
Geysers
   A geyser is a hot spring
    characterized by intermittent
    discharge of water ejected
    as a turbulent eruption that
    is accomplished by a vapor
    phase.
   Erupts water at or usually
    above the boiling point.
   About a thousand geysers
    exist worldwide, roughly half
    of which are in Yellowstone
    National Park.

                                    Castle Geyser, Yellowstone
World’s Major Known Geyser Fields
                                  #5 Geysier,
           #1 Yellowstone   Haukadalur, Iceland
           National Park,                            #2 Dolina
           Wyoming                                   Geizerov,
                                                     Kronotsky
                                                     Nature
                                                     Preserve



#3 El Tatio
El Loa Province, Chili



                                          #4 Rotorua, Taupo
                                          Areas, North
                                          Island, New
                                          Zealand
Cone Type Geysers
   Most have a geyserite cone
    at the ground surface.
   Just below the ground is a
    narrow constriction.
   Often spray water during
    the quite intervals between
    eruptions.
   Make up most of the famous
    geysers around the world.
                                  Atomizer Geyser in Yellowstone’s
                                  Upper Geyser Basin
Fountain Type Geysers
   Have open craters at the
    surface that fill with
    water during an eruption.
   Steam bubbles cause
    bursting and spraying
    eruptions.
   The most common type of
                                Iceland’s Geysir, largest fountain geyser
    geyser, most are small      in the world.
    but a few are some of
    the largest in the world.
Bubble Shower Springs
   Undergo intermittent
    episodes of vigorous
    surface boiling because
    of rising superheat
    water.
   Most are small in size,
    and eruptions only reach
    a few inches in height.
   Some scientists want to    Yellowstone’s Crested Pool
    classify them as
    intermittent springs,
    rather than geysers.
Soda Pop Geysers
   Erupt ice cold water.
   Powered by the release
    of carbon dioxide.
   Interesting, but not
    considered a true
    geyser.

                             Crystal geyser, Utah
Thermophilic Life
   At 170 F – Thermus
    aquaticus (yellow or pale
    pink)                           Thermus aquaticus




   At 167 F – Synechococcus
    and Chloroflexus (blue-
    green)
                                                        Synechococcus

                                Chloroflexus
   At 120 F – Cyanidium
    (true algae)

                                        Cyanidium
Geological Requirements - Water
   How much water is
    available (needs upwards
    of 10,000 gals per
    eruption)
   Many require presence of
    high snow melt and rain.
   Yellowstone’s hot springs
    require 600 million gallons
    of water per day.
                                  Old Faithful, Yellowstone National
                                  Park requires 12 million gallons
                                  per day.
Geological Requirements - Heat
   Most geyser fields are young volcanic areas.
   Water is heated by contact with the rocks and can get as
    hot as 650 F.
   It remains liquid, rather than being vaporized, because
    of the high pressures and confinement of the rock strata,
    typically at 13,000 feet or more below the Earth’s
    surface.
   Movement of water in the system is very slow, and water
    can take up to 1,100 years to travel from surface to
    base and back to the surface during an eruptions.
   Yellowstone system releases 70 trillion calories of heat
    per day, which could melt 23,000 pounds of snow per
    second.
Geological Requirements - Rock
   Rock below geysers are mostly
    sand and gravel deposited by
    rivers.                                                               Rhyolite
   Below this layer of the geyser
    field, where the temperature is
    high and the pressure is great
    exist igneous rocks such as
    rhyolite.
   Rhyolite is the source of the silica
    that forms greserite, which is
    percipitated on the wall of the
    hydrothermal vent.
   Deposits grow at an average of 1
    cm per 100 years.

                                           Greserite, a silica, which forms
                                           intricate patterns and beads.
Geological Requirement - Plumbing
   Network of Underground
    Fractures (maintain water
    supply)
   Chambers (boiling water)
   Constrictions close to the
    Surface (which help to
    maintain pressure)
How Geysers Erupt

    Eruption Indicators
    •Intermittent Overflow                Continues Until?
    •Some Bubbling                        1. Geyser runs out of water.
    •Small Splashes                       2. Geyer runs out of energy.




                                           New Zealand’s Waimangu
Water needs to boil and raise the          Geyers, whose name means
temperature high enough to overcome the    “Black Water”, was by far the
weight of the water column.                largest geyser ever known. Active
                                           between 1900 and 1904.
Dating Geysers
   Uranium-Thorium dating
    of old sinter deposits.
   Radiocarbon dating of
    petrified wood.
   Belong to recent
    volcanic activity; most
    range from 10,000 to
                              The sinter cone of Castle Geyser,
    25,000 years old.         Yellowstone, is dated to over 500 years.

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Geysers and Hotsprings

  • 1. HOT SPRINGS AND GEYSERS The Walker School Physical Geology
  • 2. Hotsprings  A spring that is produced by the emergence of geothermally heated groundwater from the earth's crust.  Can be found in many regions of the world.  Occur where water temperature is below the boiling point.  Mineral Content: gray to Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone. white geyserite, a hydrated silicon dioxide.
  • 3. Source of Heat (Non-Volcanic Origin)  Heated by geothermal heat, i.e., heat from the Earth's interior.  the temperature of rocks within the earth increases with depth. The rate of temperature increase with depth is known as the geothermal gradient.  If water percolates deeply enough into the crust, it will be heated as it comes into contact with hot rocks.
  • 4. Source of Heat (Volcanic Origin)  Water may be heated by coming into contact with magma.  If the water only reaches the surface in the form of steam, it is called a fumarole. Fumaroles escape through Fourpeaked Glacier covering Fourpeaked Volcano in Alaska
  • 5. Details of Fumaroles  Occur along tiny cracks or long fissures, in chaotic clusters or fields, and on the surfaces of lava flows and thick deposits of pyroclastic flows.  Typically boils off all or most its water before the water reaches the surface.  They are static and do not change in appearance over Sampling gases at a fumarole on Mount time. Baker in Washington, USA.  Gasses emitted: carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrochloric acid, and hydrogen sulfide.
  • 6. Mudpots  If the water is mixed with mud and clay, it is called a mud pot.  Mudpots form in high- temperature geothermal areas where water is in short supply.  The thickness of the mud usually changes along with seasonal changes in Mudpot in Hverir, Námafjall, Iceland the water table.
  • 7. Details of Mudpots  Water comes from rainfall and snow melt throughout the year.  Contains fumes, like fumaroles, such as hydrogen sulfide is oxidized in the water by chemical reactions.  Contains high levels of Sulfolobus (a primitive bacteria) which forms sulfuric acid.  Sulfuric Acid attacks the rocks like strong battery acid, disintegrating the rock and Sulfurous fumaroles, Whakaari/White creating a mud pot. Island, New Zealand  Can dry out and revert to a fumarole.
  • 8. Pools  Hot springs that have enough water that comes to the surface to keep the fluid from entirely boiling away and carry away the mud and debris.  Water is near the boiling point and does not support the growth of colorful bacteria or algae.  Color of some pools is not Grand Prismatic Spring, Yellowstone; because of bacteria or algae, but the largest hot springs pool in the world. because the water is so clear and pure, it reflects the sunlight and refracts it like a prism.
  • 9. Geysers  A geyser is a hot spring characterized by intermittent discharge of water ejected as a turbulent eruption that is accomplished by a vapor phase.  Erupts water at or usually above the boiling point.  About a thousand geysers exist worldwide, roughly half of which are in Yellowstone National Park. Castle Geyser, Yellowstone
  • 10. World’s Major Known Geyser Fields #5 Geysier, #1 Yellowstone Haukadalur, Iceland National Park, #2 Dolina Wyoming Geizerov, Kronotsky Nature Preserve #3 El Tatio El Loa Province, Chili #4 Rotorua, Taupo Areas, North Island, New Zealand
  • 11. Cone Type Geysers  Most have a geyserite cone at the ground surface.  Just below the ground is a narrow constriction.  Often spray water during the quite intervals between eruptions.  Make up most of the famous geysers around the world. Atomizer Geyser in Yellowstone’s Upper Geyser Basin
  • 12. Fountain Type Geysers  Have open craters at the surface that fill with water during an eruption.  Steam bubbles cause bursting and spraying eruptions.  The most common type of Iceland’s Geysir, largest fountain geyser geyser, most are small in the world. but a few are some of the largest in the world.
  • 13. Bubble Shower Springs  Undergo intermittent episodes of vigorous surface boiling because of rising superheat water.  Most are small in size, and eruptions only reach a few inches in height.  Some scientists want to Yellowstone’s Crested Pool classify them as intermittent springs, rather than geysers.
  • 14. Soda Pop Geysers  Erupt ice cold water.  Powered by the release of carbon dioxide.  Interesting, but not considered a true geyser. Crystal geyser, Utah
  • 15. Thermophilic Life  At 170 F – Thermus aquaticus (yellow or pale pink) Thermus aquaticus  At 167 F – Synechococcus and Chloroflexus (blue- green) Synechococcus Chloroflexus  At 120 F – Cyanidium (true algae) Cyanidium
  • 16. Geological Requirements - Water  How much water is available (needs upwards of 10,000 gals per eruption)  Many require presence of high snow melt and rain.  Yellowstone’s hot springs require 600 million gallons of water per day. Old Faithful, Yellowstone National Park requires 12 million gallons per day.
  • 17. Geological Requirements - Heat  Most geyser fields are young volcanic areas.  Water is heated by contact with the rocks and can get as hot as 650 F.  It remains liquid, rather than being vaporized, because of the high pressures and confinement of the rock strata, typically at 13,000 feet or more below the Earth’s surface.  Movement of water in the system is very slow, and water can take up to 1,100 years to travel from surface to base and back to the surface during an eruptions.  Yellowstone system releases 70 trillion calories of heat per day, which could melt 23,000 pounds of snow per second.
  • 18.
  • 19. Geological Requirements - Rock  Rock below geysers are mostly sand and gravel deposited by rivers. Rhyolite  Below this layer of the geyser field, where the temperature is high and the pressure is great exist igneous rocks such as rhyolite.  Rhyolite is the source of the silica that forms greserite, which is percipitated on the wall of the hydrothermal vent.  Deposits grow at an average of 1 cm per 100 years. Greserite, a silica, which forms intricate patterns and beads.
  • 20. Geological Requirement - Plumbing  Network of Underground Fractures (maintain water supply)  Chambers (boiling water)  Constrictions close to the Surface (which help to maintain pressure)
  • 21. How Geysers Erupt Eruption Indicators •Intermittent Overflow Continues Until? •Some Bubbling 1. Geyser runs out of water. •Small Splashes 2. Geyer runs out of energy. New Zealand’s Waimangu Water needs to boil and raise the Geyers, whose name means temperature high enough to overcome the “Black Water”, was by far the weight of the water column. largest geyser ever known. Active between 1900 and 1904.
  • 22. Dating Geysers  Uranium-Thorium dating of old sinter deposits.  Radiocarbon dating of petrified wood.  Belong to recent volcanic activity; most range from 10,000 to The sinter cone of Castle Geyser, 25,000 years old. Yellowstone, is dated to over 500 years.