Preliminary assessment of the geologic setting, hydrology, and geochemistry of the Hueco Tanks geothermal area, Texas and New Mexico. Geological Circular 81-1
Abstract
The Hueco Tanks geothermal area contains five known but now inactive hot wells (50/sup 0/ to 71/sup 0/C). The area trends north-south along the east side of Tularosa-Hueco Bolson astride the Texas-New Mexico border approximately 40 km northeast of El Paso. Because of its proximity to El Paso, geothermal water in the Hueco Tanks area could be a significant resource. Hueco Bolson is an asymmetric graben. Greatest displacement along boundary faults is on the west side adjacent to the Franklin Mountains. Faults, probably with less displacement, also form an irregular boundary on the east side of the bolson. Several probable faults may allow the rise of thermal waters from depth. Ground water in the central part of Hueco Bolson flows southward to the Rio Grande. However, four of the five hot wells occur in a ground-water trough along the eastern margin of the bolson. The trough may be bounded by one of the postulated faults serving as a barrier to ground-water flow. Data on permeability of potential reservoir rocks, including basin fill and fractured bedrock, suggest that they may be sufficiently permeable for development of geothermal water. The concentration of dissolved solids in the geothermal waters varies from 1100 tomore »
- Authors:
- Publication Date:
- Research Org.:
- Texas Univ., Austin (USA). Bureau of Economic Geology; Texas Energy and Natural Resources Advisory Council, Austin (USA)
- OSTI Identifier:
- 6630119
- Report Number(s):
- TENRAC/EDF-040
ON: DE83900792
- Resource Type:
- Technical Report
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: Portions of document are illegible
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
- Subject:
- 15 GEOTHERMAL ENERGY; NEW MEXICO; GEOCHEMICAL SURVEYS; GEOLOGY; GEOTHERMAL WELLS; HYDROLOGY; TEXAS; BASEMENT ROCK; GEOTHERMOMETRY; GROUND WATER; PERMEABILITY; RESERVOIR ROCK; RESOURCE ASSESSMENT; RESOURCE POTENTIAL; RIO GRANDE RIVER; SODIUM CHLORIDES; SODIUM SULFATES; THERMAL WATERS; ALKALI METAL COMPOUNDS; CHLORIDES; CHLORINE COMPOUNDS; FEDERAL REGION VI; HALIDES; HALOGEN COMPOUNDS; HYDROGEN COMPOUNDS; NORTH AMERICA; OXYGEN COMPOUNDS; RIVERS; SODIUM COMPOUNDS; STREAMS; SULFATES; SULFUR COMPOUNDS; SURFACE WATERS; SURVEYS; USA; WATER; WELLS; Geothermal Legacy; 150201* - Geology & Hydrology of Geothermal Systems- USA- (-1989); 150302 - Geothermal Exploration & Exploration Technology- Geochemical Techniques & Surveys
Citation Formats
Henry, C D, and Gluck, J K. Preliminary assessment of the geologic setting, hydrology, and geochemistry of the Hueco Tanks geothermal area, Texas and New Mexico. Geological Circular 81-1. United States: N. p., 1981.
Web. doi:10.2172/6630119.
Henry, C D, & Gluck, J K. Preliminary assessment of the geologic setting, hydrology, and geochemistry of the Hueco Tanks geothermal area, Texas and New Mexico. Geological Circular 81-1. United States. https://doi.org/10.2172/6630119
Henry, C D, and Gluck, J K. Thu .
"Preliminary assessment of the geologic setting, hydrology, and geochemistry of the Hueco Tanks geothermal area, Texas and New Mexico. Geological Circular 81-1". United States. https://doi.org/10.2172/6630119. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/6630119.
@article{osti_6630119,
title = {Preliminary assessment of the geologic setting, hydrology, and geochemistry of the Hueco Tanks geothermal area, Texas and New Mexico. Geological Circular 81-1},
author = {Henry, C D and Gluck, J K},
abstractNote = {The Hueco Tanks geothermal area contains five known but now inactive hot wells (50/sup 0/ to 71/sup 0/C). The area trends north-south along the east side of Tularosa-Hueco Bolson astride the Texas-New Mexico border approximately 40 km northeast of El Paso. Because of its proximity to El Paso, geothermal water in the Hueco Tanks area could be a significant resource. Hueco Bolson is an asymmetric graben. Greatest displacement along boundary faults is on the west side adjacent to the Franklin Mountains. Faults, probably with less displacement, also form an irregular boundary on the east side of the bolson. Several probable faults may allow the rise of thermal waters from depth. Ground water in the central part of Hueco Bolson flows southward to the Rio Grande. However, four of the five hot wells occur in a ground-water trough along the eastern margin of the bolson. The trough may be bounded by one of the postulated faults serving as a barrier to ground-water flow. Data on permeability of potential reservoir rocks, including basin fill and fractured bedrock, suggest that they may be sufficiently permeable for development of geothermal water. The concentration of dissolved solids in the geothermal waters varies from 1100 to at least 12,500 mg/L, but most waters show high concentrations. They are Na-Cl-(SO/sub 4/) waters similar in composition to nonthermal waters in basin fill. The composition probably results from contact with evaporite deposits either in basin fill or in Paleozoic bedrock. Shallow reservoirs reach maximum temperatures of about 80/sup 0/ to 110/sup 0/C. Available data are too limited to evaluate adequately the resource potential of geothermal water in the Hueco Tanks area.},
doi = {10.2172/6630119},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6630119},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {1981},
month = {1}
}