B.M. Kennedy
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by B.M. Kennedy.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 1998
Michael L. Sorey; William C. Evans; B.M. Kennedy; Christopher D. Farrar; Laura J. Hainsworth; B. Hausback
Carbon dioxide and helium with isotopic compositions indicative of a magmatic source ( δ13C = −4.5 to −5‰, 3He/ 4He = 4.5 to 6.7 RA) are discharging at anomalous rates from Mammoth Mountain, on the southwestern rim of the Long Valley caldera in eastern California. The gas is released mainly as diffuse emissions from normal-temperature soils, but some gas issues from steam vents or leaves the mountain dissolved in cold groundwater. The rate of gas discharge increased significantly in 1989 following a 6-month period of persistent earthquake swarms and associated strain and ground deformation that has been attributed to dike emplacement beneath the mountain. An increase in the magmatic component of helium discharging in a steam vent on the north side of Mammoth Mountain, which also began in 1989, has persisted until the present time. Anomalous CO2 discharge from soils first occurred during the winter of 1990 and was followed by observations of several areas of tree kill and/or heavier than normal needlecast the following summer. Subsequent measurements have confirmed that the tree kills are associated with CO2 concentrations of 30–90% in soil gas and gas flow rates of up to 31,000 g m−2 d−1 at the soil surface. Each of the tree-kill areas and one area of CO2 discharge above tree line occurs in close proximity to one or more normal faults, which may provide conduits for gas flow from depth. We estimate that the total diffuse CO2 flux from the mountain is approximately 520 t/d, and that 30–50 t/d of CO2 are dissolved in cold groundwater flowing off the flanks of the mountain. Isotopic and chemical analyses of soil and fumarolic gas demonstrate a remarkable homogeneity in composition, suggesting that the CO2 and associated helium and excess nitrogen may be derived from a common gas reservoir whose source is associated with some combination of magmatic degassing and thermal metamorphism of metasedimentary rocks. Furthermore, N2/Ar ratios and nitrogen isotopic values indicate that the Mammoth Mountain gases are derived from sources separate from those that supply gas to the hydrothermal system within the Long Valley caldera. Various data suggest that the Mammoth Mountain gas reservoir is a large, low-temperature cap over an isolated hydrothermal system, that it predates the 1989 intrusion, and that it could remain a source of gas discharge for some time.
Chemical Geology | 2001
William C. Evans; Michael L. Sorey; B.M. Kennedy; David A. Stonestrom; John D. Rogie; David L. Shuster
Abstract Diffuse emissions of CO2 are known to be large around some volcanoes and hydrothermal areas. Accumulation-chamber measurements of CO2 flux are increasingly used to estimate the total magmatic or metamorphic CO2 released from such areas. To assess the performance of accumulation chamber systems at fluxes one to three orders of magnitude higher than normally encountered in soil respiration studies, a test system was constructed in the laboratory where known fluxes could be maintained through dry sand. Steady-state gas concentration profiles and fractionation effects observed in the 30-cm sand column nearly match those predicted by the Stefan-Maxwell equations, indicating that the test system was functioning successfully as a uniform porous medium. Eight groups of investigators tested their accumulation chamber equipment, all configured with continuous infrared gas analyzers (IRGA), in this system. Over a flux range of ∼200–12,000 g m−2 day−1, 90% of their 203 flux measurements were 0–25% lower than the imposed flux with a mean difference of −12.5%. Although this difference would seem to be within the range of acceptability for many geologic investigations, some potential sources for larger errors were discovered. A steady-state pressure gradient of −20 Pa/m was measured in the sand column at a flux of 11,200 g m−2 day−1. The derived permeability (50 darcies) was used in the dusty-gas model (DGM) of transport to quantify various diffusive and viscous flux components. These calculations were used to demonstrate that accumulation chambers, in addition to reducing the underlying diffusive gradient, severely disrupt the steady-state pressure gradient. The resultant diversion of the net gas flow is probably responsible for the systematically low flux measurements. It was also shown that the fractionating effects of a viscous CO2 efflux against a diffusive influx of air will have a major impact on some important geochemical indicators, such as N2/Ar, δ15N–N2, and 4He/22Ne.
Nature | 1995
Christopher D. Farrar; Michael L. Sorey; William C. Evans; James F. Howle; B.D. Kerr; B.M. Kennedy; Chi-Yu King; John Southon
Earth-Science Reviews | 2014
Zheng-Tian Lu; Peter Schlosser; William M. Smethie; Neil C. Sturchio; Tobias P. Fischer; B.M. Kennedy; Roland Purtschert; Jeffrey P. Severinghaus; D.K. Solomon; Toste Tanhua; Reika Yokochi
Chemical Geology | 2011
Eric Pili; B.M. Kennedy; M.E. Conrad; Jean-Pierre Gratier
Chemical Geology | 2013
Reika Yokochi; Neil C. Sturchio; Roland Purtschert; Wenyu Jiang; Zheng-Tian Lu; P. Mueller; G.-M. Yang; B.M. Kennedy; Yousif K. Kharaka
Chemical Geology | 2013
Jennifer L. Lewicki; George E. Hilley; Laura M. Dobeck; T.L. McLing; B.M. Kennedy; M. Bill; B.D.V. Marino
Chemical Geology | 2014
Reika Yokochi; Neil C. Sturchio; Roland Purtschert; Wenyu Jiang; Lu Z.-T.; P. Mueller; Yang G.-M.; B.M. Kennedy; Yousif K. Kharaka
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory | 2002
M.C. van Soest; B.M. Kennedy; William C. Evans; R.H. Mariner
Geothermal science and technology | 1994
Fraser Goff; William C. Evans; Jamie N. Gardner; Andrew I. Adams; Cathy J. Janik; B.M. Kennedy; P.E. Trujillo; Dale Counce