Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16284
Authors: Billarent-Cedillo, Andrea* 
Hernández-Pérez, Eliseo* 
Levresse, Gilles* 
Inguaggiato, Claudio* 
Ferrari, Luca* 
Inguaggiato, Salvatore* 
López-Alvis, Jorge* 
Silva-Fragoso, Argelia* 
Title: Mantellic degassing of helium in an extensional active tectonic setting at the front of a magmatic arc (central Mexico)
Journal: Geosphere 
Series/Report no.: 1/19 (2023)
Publisher: GSA
Issue Date: 2023
DOI: 10.1130/GES02549.1
Abstract: The physicochemical and isotopic characteristics of groundwater and dissolved gas of central Mexico provide valuable information about the geologic and tectonic context of the area. Low–high-enthalpy manifestations (up to 98 °C in springs and more than 100 °C in geothermal wells) are distributed within the San Juan del Río, Querétaro, and Celaya hydrologic basins, located at the boundary between the current Mexican magmatic arc and an extensional continental area with intraplate volcanism called Mesa Central Province. Groundwaters in the study area represent a mixture between the cold water end-member with a Ca2+-Mg2+-HCO3- composition and a hydrothermal end-member enriched in Na+ , K+ , SO4 2−, and Cl-. Cold and hot groundwaters δ2 H and δ18O plot along the same evaporation lines and do not exhibit a magmatic input. Dissolved and free gas do not show a typical volcanic composition signature. He and Ne isotope composition provide evidence of an important contribution of non-atmospheric noble gases. Although helium composition mainly has a crustal origin (21–83%), the mantellic contribution (1–39%) is higher than expected for an area lacking recent volcanism. A volatile-rich magma aging at depth was discarded as the source of this mantellic helium signature but points out a recent mantellic contribution. Thus, we propose that mantellic helium comes from the sublithospheric mantle into the shallow crust through the highly permeable tectonic boundaries between the geologic provinces, namely the N−S Taxco−San Miguel de Allende and ChapalaTula fault systems. Mantellic helium flow rates through these fault systems were estimated to have values ranging from 0.1 m/yr to 2.9 m/yr. This He flux range implies that aside from subduction, mantle volatile degassing enhanced by crustal fault systems is the main degassing process in the region studied.
Appears in Collections:Article published / in press

Files in This Item:
Show full item record

Page view(s)

74
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Download(s)

14
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric