Journal of Maps (Dec 2020)

Geology of Las Minas: an example of an exhumed geothermal system (Eastern Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt)

  • Emmanuel Olvera-García,
  • Caterina Bianco,
  • Garduño-Monroy Víctor Hugo,
  • Andrea Brogi,
  • Domenico Liotta,
  • Walter Wheeler,
  • Fidel Gómez-Alvarez,
  • Sergio Najera-Blas,
  • Adrián Jiménez-Haro,
  • Jorge Alejandro Guevara-Alday,
  • Eivind Bastesen,
  • Baptiste Lepillier,
  • Martina Zucchi,
  • Alfredo Caggianelli,
  • Giovanni Ruggieri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2020.1842815
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 2
pp. 918 – 926

Abstract

Read online

The Las Minas area corresponds to an exhumed geothermal system considered a proxy for the deep part of the nearby Los Humeros active geothermal system. The stratigraphic succession is made up of: Palaeozoic-Miocene granitoids, a thick Jurassic- Cretaceous carbonate succession, Neogene lava flows and volcano-sedimentary deposits. Linked to a Miocene magma intrusion, marble and skarn rock-volumes developed by contact metamorphism and geothermal fluid flow. Faults are arranged in SW- and NNW-striking systems. These controlled the morphological evolution and favored Neogene-Quaternary dyke emplacement. Faulting gave rise to a tectonic depression where lacustrine sediments and pyroclastics deposited. Skarn rocks are mainly located at fault intersections and along pre-existing discontinuities, suggesting the role of bedding and/or fractures in channeling deep fluids. Results give inputs for exploration at depth of Los Humeros geothermal system.

Keywords