Abstract :
The study of hydrothermal processes in an active geothermal system provides an excellent
opportunity to test the equilibrium between the hydrothermal mineral assemblage and present-
day fluid. Simulations of selected hydrothermal processes in the Tongonan geothermal
system were performed to ascertain the effectiveness of different depositional mechanisms for
hydrothermal minerals. Hydrothermal processes, such as boiling, fluid mixing and water–rock
interaction were simulated using the reaction path programme CHILLER. Adiabatic boiling
was done from 300 to 100 C. The steam-heated end-member used for the mixing was generated
by titrating the vapor phase at 100 C after boiling of the primary water and mixing with
a sample of the groundwater. Water-rock interaction in the Tongonan geothermal field was
simulated by titrating andesite into 1 kg of primary water at 300 C. Adiabatic boiling resulted
in the precipitation of a sequence containing paragenetically early traces of gold with
quartz, followed by quartz, acanthite, chalcocite and late quartz and base metals. Mixing of
the steam-heated water with the boiled primary water resulted in the formation of the ore
minerals acanthite, bornite, chalcocite, covellite, galena, pyrite, and sphalerite. Gangue
minerals include anhydrite, Mg-chlorite, alunite, kaolinite, muscovite, and quartz. The
mineral assemblages predicted using the water–rock interaction calculations provide a close
approximation to the hydrothermal alteration commonly observed for measured temperatures
of 300 C. Minerals predicted to precipitate include tremolite, actinolite, diopside, and epidote,
together with anhydrite. These minerals are observed to occur in hot regions of the
geothermal system. The results of the chemical modeling suggest that the combination of
boiling, mixing and water–rock interaction could precipitate the hydrothermal minerals in a
Tongonan-like geothermal system. However, the absence of some minerals predicted by thesimulation (e.g. acanthite and calcite) suggests that physico-chemical conditions other than
those assumed in the simulations are prevailing in the system.
# 2003 CNR. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Keywords :
Philippines , Reaction path calculation , Vein mineralization , water-rock interaction , mixing , Geochemical modelling , boiling , Tongonan