A brief description of geological and geophysical exploration of the Marysville geothermal area
Abstract
Extensive geological and geophysical surveys were carried out at the Marysville geothermal area during 1973 and 1974. The area has high heat flow (up to microcalories per square centimeter-second, a negative gravity anomaly, high electrical resistivity, low seismic ground noise, and nearby microseismic activity. Significant magnetic and infrared anomalies are not associated with the geothermal area. The geothermal anomaly occupies the axial portion of a dome in Precambrian sedimentary rocks intruded by Cretaceous and Cenozoic granitic rocks. The results from a 2.4-km-deep test well indicate that the cause of the geothermal anomaly is hydrothermal convection in a Cenozoic intrusive. A maximum temperature of 95 C was measured at a depth of 500 m in the test well.
- Publication:
-
Research for the Development of Geothermal Energy Resources
- Pub Date:
- December 1974
- Bibcode:
- 1974rdge.conf...98B
- Keywords:
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- Energy Technology;
- Geothermal Resources;
- Resources Management;
- California;
- Geodetic Surveys;
- Heat Measurement;
- Heat Sources;
- Energy Production and Conversion