(Editor's Note: The following is an abstract of a paper presented at
the Mount Rainier National Park Science Symposium on January 21,
1984.)
HYDROTHERMAL ALTERATION AT MOUNT RAINIER
Field studies and thermal-infrared mapping indicate that present
excess surface heat flux from thermal activity at Mount Rainier may be
estimated at about 13 megawatts, a value between that of Mount Baker (82
megawatts for 1975) and Mount Hood (4-10 megawatts for 1977). Three
representative settings of hydrothermal activity at the cone
include:
a. An extensive area (>10,000m2) of boiling-point
fumaroles at 76-82°C and heated ground along and marginal to the
overlapping rims of East and West Craters at the volcano's summit;
b. A small area (<500m2) of sub-boiling-point fumaroles
at 55-60°C and heated ground on the upper flank at Disappointment
Cleaver, and other probably similar but inaccessible areas on the upper
flank at Willis Wall and Sunset Amphitheater;
c. Thermal springs at 9-24°C on the lower flank of the volcano in
valley walls of the Winthrop and Paradise Glaciers.
Thermal springs also issue from thin sediments that overlie Tertiary
rocks at, or somewhat beyond, the base of the volcanic edifice in valley
bottoms of the Nisqually and Ohanapecosh Rivers where maximum spring
temperatures are 19-25°C and 38-50°C respectively.
During the period of study, fumaroles at the summit had a mildly
acidic condensate (pH 4-5), and contained no noticeable H2S
or SO2. Summit rocks are mainly augite hypersthene andesite
flows with minor amounts of lithic explosion rubble. Hydrothermal
alteration at the summit is localized only around active fumarole
clusters, and is more extensive in the somewhat older West Crater than
in the East Crater. In contrast, vapor temperatures are typically
4-6°C higher in the East Crater. Alteration products include an
abundance of dioctahedral smectite, poorly crystallized kaolinite,
cristobalite, tridymite, opal, and calcite. Alunite is common in the
West Crater but not the East, attesting to the recently past presence of
a higher sulfate activity westward.
Thermal springs on the lower flank are low-temperature
NA-SO4-HCO3 waters that are greatly mixed with
shallow, cold ground water. Thermal springs at Longmire and Ohanapecosh
are Na-HCO3-Cl waters that may have little or no relationship
to the present Mount Rainier hydrothermal system. Presently forming
alteration products around all springs typically include calcite, with
aragonite in some areas; additionally, opal and gypsum occur at the
lower-flank springs.
David Frank
Department of Geological Science
University of Washington