2:30 PM - 2:45 PM
[SGC37-04] Monitoring dissolved gases in thermal water to assess the potential relation between fluid geochemistry and seismicity
★Invited Papers
Keywords:seismicity, noble gases, geochemical changes
To address this issue, we deployed a portable gas equilibrium membrane-inlet mass spectrometer (miniRUEDI, [2]) at the hot springs of Lavey-les-Bains located in a seismically active region of Switzerland (range of geothermal fluids: 50 °C – 65 °C). This instrument provided high-frequency and long-term time-series of dissolved gas concentrations (e.g., He, Ar, Kr, N2, O2, H2, CH4 and CO2), including data from over a year-long period. These data set the experimental basis to critically assess if gas evolution in geological fluids and seismicity are causally linked.
[1] Toutain et Baubron (1999), Tectonophysics, 304, 1-27
[2] Brennwald et al. (2016), ES&T, 50, 13455-13463