Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16976
Authors: Granieri, Domenico* 
Mazzarini, Francesco* 
Cerminara, Matteo* 
Calusi, Benedetta* 
Scozzari, Andrea* 
Menichini, Matia* 
Lelli, Matteo* 
Title: Shallow portion of an active geothermal system revealed by multidisciplinary studies: The case of Le Biancane (Larderello, Italy)
Journal: Geothermics 
Series/Report no.: /108 (2023)
Publisher: Elsevier
Issue Date: 2023
DOI: 10.1016/j.geothermics.2022.102616
Keywords: Larderello geothermal field
Fracture network connectivity
Diffuse CO2 soil degassing
Thermal infrared images
Hydrothermal gas
Subject Classification04. Solid Earth
Abstract: The natural park of Le Biancane is located in the southern sector of the Larderello-Travale geothermal field (LTGF). It extends over an approximately 100,000 m2 area where the impermeable caprock is locally absent and deep fluids may directly reach the surface. Through a multidisciplinary approach including measurements of soil CO2 flux (total output of 11.5 t day􀀀 1), soil temperature (average 34.4 ◦C), stable isotope and chemical data on fluids from fumaroles (dominated by a mixture of geothermal gases and air or gases from air-saturated meteoric water), and structural analysis of the formation outcropping, we found that anomalous CO2 emissions are positively correlated with shallow temperature anomalies. These are in restricted locations adjacent to vents and fumaroles, where a network of well-connected fractures (preferentially NW-SE and NE-SW orientated and with steep dips) drains efficiently allowing upward migration of the deep fluids and the energy toward the surface.
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