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Wiley InterScience | ||||||||
![]() GeofluidsVolume 5 Issue 3, Pages 185 - 201 Published Online: 14 Jul 2005 © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd (a Blackwell Publishing Company)
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 2095K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking A simulation of the hydrothermal response to the Chesapeake Bay bolide impact Copyright 2005 Blackwell Publishing Ltd KEYWORDS crater • groundwater • hydrothermal • simulation Abstract
Groundwater more saline than seawater has been discovered in the tsunami breccia of the Chesapeake Bay Impact Crater. One hypothesis for the origin of this brine is that it may be a liquid residual following steam separation in a hydrothermal system that evolved following the impact. Initial scoping calculations have demonstrated that it is feasible such a residual brine could have remained in the crater for the 35 million years since impact. Numerical simulations have been conducted using the code HYDROTHERM to test whether or not conditions were suitable in the millennia following the impact for the development of a steam phase in the hydrothermal system. Hydraulic and thermal parameters were estimated for the bedrock underlying the crater and the tsunami breccia that fills the crater. Simulations at three different breccia permeabilities suggest that the type of hydrothermal system that might have developed would have been very sensitive to the permeability. A relatively low breccia permeability (1 × 10 Received 12 April 2004; accepted 18 December 2004 |