Structural and heat-flow implications of infrared anomalies at Mt. Hood, Oregon

Open-File Report 77-599
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Abstract

Surface thermal features occur in an area of 9700 m2 at Mt. Hood, on the basis of an aerial line-scan survey made April 26, 1973. The distribution of the thermal areas below the summit of Mt. Hood, shown on planimetrically corrected maps at 1:12,000, suggests structural control by a fracture system and brecciated zone peripheral to a hornblende-dacite plug dome (Crater Rock), and by a concentric fracture system that may have been associated with development of the present crater. The extent and inferred temperature of the thermal areas permits a preliminary estimate of a heat discharge of 10 megawatts, by analogy with similar fumarole and thermal fields of Mt. Baker, Washington. This figure includes a heat loss of 4 megawatts (MW) via conduction, diffusion, evaporation, and radiation to the atmosphere, and a somewhat less certain loss of 6MW via fumarolic mass transfer of vapor and advective heat loss from runoff and ice melt. The first part of the estimate is based on two-point models for differential radiant exitance and differential flux via conduction, diffusion, evaporation, and radiation from heat balance of the ground surface. Alternate methods for estimating volcanogenic geothermal flux that assume a quasi-steady state heat flow also yield estimates in the 5-11 MW range. Heat loss equivalent to cooling of the dacite plug dome is judged to be insufficient to account for the heat flux at the fumarole fields.
Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Structural and heat-flow implications of infrared anomalies at Mt. Hood, Oregon
Series title Open-File Report
Series number 77-599
DOI 10.3133/ofr77599
Edition -
Year Published 1977
Language ENGLISH
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey,
Description 22, [6] leaves :ill., maps ;27 cm.; (29 p. - PGS)
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