LiDAR and Hyperspectral Analysis of Mineral Alteration and Faulting On The West Side of The Humboldt Range, Nevada
LiDAR and Hyperspectral Analysis of Mineral Alteration and Faulting On The West Side of The Humboldt Range, Nevada
LiDAR and Hyperspectral Analysis of Mineral Alteration and Faulting On The West Side of The Humboldt Range, Nevada
Earth and Planetary Sciences Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
PFC Energy, 13 Farrell Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts 01950, USA
3
HyVista Corporation, Unit 11, 10 Gladstone Road, Castle Hill, NSW 2154, Australia
4
Columbia Geosciences, 22495 NW Quatama Road, Hillsboro, Oregon 97124-6648, USA
2
ABSTRACT
In order to evaluate the setting of the
HumboldtRye Patch geothermal field, we
carried out a program of hyperspectral and
light detection and ranging (LiDAR) imaging of the Humboldt River basin to test
(1) whether fault patterns, surface mineral
alteration, and mud volcanoes in the HumboldtRye Patch district offer the potential
for additional geothermal exploration sites;
(2) whether mud diapirism in this region
could be caused by seismic shaking; and
(3) whether significant improvements in
exploration can be made using these remotesensing tools in addition to the more traditional techniques. In the southern (Rye
Patch) region, a set of faults cuts the surface
of the alluvial fans, and several faults cut
shorelines of Lake Lahontan. These shorelines lie at an elevation of 1290 m, which
corresponds with the elevation of the Lake
12,500 500 yr ago. We find no signs of surface mineral alteration in the Rye Patch area
in spite of the existence of these faults and
known alteration at depth. Farther north,
in the Humboldt House region, we find
abundant evidence of alteration products,
including siliceous sinter, carbonate, montmorillonite, hematite, and jarosite. This
alteration is widespread, and corresponds
to young faulting in only one location. The
LiDAR data show at least two mud volcanoes and a large field of low-carbonate
mounds. Some of these (apparently) diapiric features may have been associated with
seismicity, and both active and paleoseismic
events would have been sufficiently close and
energetic to have initiated liquefaction in this
region. Such liquefaction events would have
been more likely, however, during the high
*Deceased.
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119W
117W
41N
Winnemucca
BM
Fig 2 HR
HH
RP
ix
ie
Va
lle
y
Fallon
Nevada
39N
Figure 1. Surface projection of digital elevation model (DEM) of central Pershing County,
Nevada, showing the location of the Humboldt House (HH)Rye Patch (RP) geothermal area
and its relationship to the Humboldt Range (HR) and the Dixie Valley and Battle Mountain (BM) geothermal districts. DEM downloaded from Shuttle Radar Topography Mission
website 30 m data. Location of Figure 2 shown in box. Note that all maps are oriented N-S.
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2 Km
Nevada
Fig 9
Rye Patch
Reservoir
Standard
Mine
Fig 3
Figure 2. HyMap image mosaic of the HumboldtRye Patch area using bands at 2.2 m,
0.75 m, and 0.55 m as RGB. Greens indicate presence of vegetation; white is evaporates
and surface alteration minerals; dark blue is water (Rye Patch reservoir); reds indicate
soils enriched in iron-bearing minerals. Florida Canyon mine stands out to the NE of center.
Highway 80 runs north to northeast through the central and upper right part of image. Inset
shows location, as does Figure 1. Boxes show locations of Figures 3, 4, and 9.
2 Kilometers
Rye Patch PP
Fig. 6
lt
u
Fa
ch
t
a
eP
Ry
4030
Fig. 5
D
D
T
D D D
SM
Humboldt
Mtn Fault
in
eF
au
lt
Fig. 7
St
an
da
rd
M
Figure 3. Light detection and ranging (LiDAR) image of southern part of the
LiDAR survey, showing a set of faults cutting the alluvial surface and base of mountain range. Left: shaded-relief image, with
locations of Figures 5, 6, and 7 outlined.
Right: labeled faults, and location of Rye
Patch reservoir is shown with short arrow.
T is location of trench across Humboldt
Mountain fault of Wesnousky et al. (2005).
Dashed arrow shows direction of global
positioning system vector for site TUNG,
relative to stable North America, located just
south of this figure (Niemi et al., 2004). D is
location of geothermal well; SM is Standard
Mine.
11815W
1359
11814
4038
N
Fig. 8
Shorelines
Humboldt
House
HMF
Fig. 9
4036
FCM
Fig.
16
4034
Figure 4. Shaded-relief image of the Humboldt House geothermal area and the Florida Canyon mine (FCM).
Left: unlabeled shaded-relief image. Right, labeled: showing the Humboldt Mountain fault (HMF) and small
fault cutting alluvium. Location of Figures 8, 9, and 16 outlined, and Humboldt House is located. D is location of
geothermal well. Lake Lahontan shorelines are evident in the images.
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We made three field excursions to the HumboldtRye Patch field area to obtain field spectra as a ground truth for the mineral mapping,
to field check the fault maps, and to obtain
geologic field observations. We checked mineral maps generated using an advanced spectral
device (ASD) Field Spec Pro and a GPS unit
for location. The ASD Field Spec Pro is a handheld spectrometer with 2150 bands spanning a
spectral range of 0.35 to 2.5 m. The instrument
was calibrated before each use and after approximately three to five spectral collections. Calibration from radiance to reflectance was done using
the reflectance from a diffusely reflecting white
plate and a dark current correction. Variation in
light reflecting from the white plate is assumed
to be from atmospheric influence and is therefore
subtracted from the data. Dark current correction
works similarly but subtracts any interference in
the signal from the instrument, such as changes
in the temperature of the instrument. Field spectra were collected using an 8 lens at a distance
of 0.31 m. We created a spectral library using
the ENVI software package, and then identified each spectrum by comparison with the U.S.
Geological Survey laboratory spectra. The resultant mineral identifications were used to assess
the accuracy of the mineral maps.
RESULTS
Fault Systems
The west side of the Humboldt range is
marked by a set of faults, considered by dePolo
(2008) to be younger than 15,000 yr (Figs. 3 and
4). The locations of faults that we have mapped
with LiDAR are very similar to the locations of
Davis (1983) and dePolo (2008). What we can
add using LiDAR is the relationship between
these faults and the Lake Lahontan shorelines.
The base of the mountains shows a sharp break,
indicating range-front faulting (Figs. 3 and 4).
This fault, named the Humboldt Mountain fault,
can be followed essentially continuously northward through the Florida Canyon mine and to
the north of the mine. A very prominent fault
cuts irregularly across the alluvial plain between
the mountains and the reservoir, which we name
the Standard mine fault, because the fault is on
line with that mine (Fig. 3). The fault is mapped
in three segments, and its outcrop pattern is that
of a normal fault dipping to the NW. Northwest
of the Standard mine fault is the Rye Patch
fault (Fig. 3), which we map in three segments.
The northernmost segment is irregular, with
sharp escarpments separating highly dissected
500 Meters
Shorelines
e
Ry
h
tc
Pa
u
Fa
lt
Figure 5. Shaded-relief image (left) with superimposed 1-m contours (right) of southern end of the Rye Patch fault,
showing shorelines of ancient Lake Lahontan. Rye Patch fault cuts a young alluvial fan surface and displaces Lake
Lahontan shorelines. Note that contours follow shorelines exactly but do not follow the Rye Patch fault.
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500 m
500 m
Standard Mine Fault
1362
Sh
or
el
in
e
Humboldt LiDAR
300 m
Fault
Young Alluvial Fan
Fault
Figure 8. Left: shaded-relief image of small fault west of Humboldt Mountain fault, with alluvial fans and shorelines of Lake Lahontan. Right: labeled, with 1-m contours.
Fig. 10
see Fig. 16
Figure 9. Left: Mineral identification of HyMap data using ENVI. Bluesinter, redcalcite, cyangypsum,
greenIllite. Right: shaded-relief light detection and ranging image of the same area, showing dune fields and
carbonate mounds. Locations of Figures 10 and 16 are shown on right.
cemented mudstone and sandstone. The photomicrograph in Figure 12 shows fine, arcuate
banding and carbonate veins, implying flow
structures, which would be consistent with mud
diapirism. We also field checked the region of
small mudrock mounds (Figs. 13 and 14) and
found all of these small features to contain abundant carbonate. The section in Figure 13 shows
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Fig. 13
Dunes
Field of
Mounds
MV1
Fig. 11
200 meters
Figure 10. Detail of shaded-relief light detection and ranging data
showing mud volcano, dunes, and field of carbonate mounds. Also
located are Figures 11 and 13.
top). We field checked this finding and discovered that the proposed mud volcano was indeed
a mound ~2 m tall, with flanking structures
similar to that of MV1 and a small central crater
(also visible on the LiDAR image). The rocks
making up this mound are carbonate rich as
well, and appear to have the same origin as that
of MV1 and the small mounds. Daviss (1983)
depiction of this set of rocks as travertinearmored spring mounds implies that he felt they
were formed by fluid (springs) rising through
the surface and injecting into the Eetza Formation. Our discovery of at least two of these
mounds with central craters (MV1 and MV2),
and macroscopic and microscopic evidence for
soft sediment flowage (Fig. 12), supports our
suggestion that these features are mud volcanoes
with carbonate cement. The latter explains why
these features are lithified, although they are
only 23,00030,000 yr old.
A puzzling aspect of this region is that a relatively small part of the Wyemaha Formation is
identified as carbonate in the hyperspectral data,
even though the rock exposed at the surface
contains significant amounts of carbonate. We
suggest that the weak carbonate signal in the
airborne data is due to two potential causes. The
first is that much of the rock is not carbonate;
only the veins and pore filling are carbonate
cement. A second reason may be that regional
dust and surface alteration blanket the rocks, filtering the spectral signature in flown data.
On the southern part of Figure 9 there are two
parallel north-trending ridges, and the eastern
ridge shows displacement of beds in the field,
indicating faulting (Figs. 9 and 16). The east-
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Figure 11. Layering on the flank of mud volcano (MV1). Photomicrograph shown in Figure 12 was taken from near the top.
Figure 12. Photomicrograph from near the top of the mud volcano,
showing fine internal banding. White zone near the base of section
and scattered through the section is carbonate, as are light parts of
the bands.
1365
150 m
MV2
Mounds
CONCLUSIONS
MV2
jarosite. This sequence suggests a longer lifetime than single events. If seismicity played a
role in fluidization of materials, it would likely
have been enhanced during late Pleistocene high
stands of Lake Lahontan, allowing the ground to
fully saturate. Because the cores show increasing temperature gradients approaching the range
front (Johnson, 2005), exploration would be best
focused there in the Humboldt House district.
Finally, can geothermal exploration be
improved significantly by the use of remote sensing? A number of previous studies have shown
a close relationship between mineral alteration
and faulting, and successful geothermal sites in
Long Valley, California; Dixie Valley, Nevada;
and BradyDesert Peak, Nevada, are associated
with high-temperature mineralization along
fault zones. Such regions have been mapped
with hyperspectral remote-sensing tools. In the
HumboldtRye Patch district, such relationships
are not clearly presented, but intersecting fault
systems mapped by LiDAR and earlier with air
photos (Davis, 1983) offer distinct exploration
possibilities. What our study provided beyond
that of Davis (1983) is the LiDAR evidence
showing that the Rye Patch fault cuts shore-
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200 m
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