Heat Transfer through the Wairākei-Tauhara Geothermal System quantified
by multi-channel data modelling
Abstract
To obtain the fullest picture of geothermal systems, it is necessary to
integrate different types of data, e.g., surface electromagnetic
surveys, lithology, geochemistry and temperature logs. Here, by joint
modelling a multi-channel dataset we quantify the spatial distribution
of heat transfer through the hydrothermally-altered, impermeable
smectite layer that has developed atop the Wairākei-Tauhara system, New
Zealand. Our approach involves first constraining magnetotelluric
inversion models with methylene blue analysis (an indicator of
conductive clay) and mapping these onto temperature and lithology data
from geothermal wells. Then, one-dimensional models are fitted to the
temperature data to estimate heat flux variations across the field. As a
result, we have been able to map the primary seal that insulates the
geothermal reservoir and estimate the heat flow of the system. The
approach could be applied in geothermal provinces around the world with
implications for sustainable resource management and our understanding
of these magmatic systems.