Hydrothermal also refers to the transport and circulation of water within the deep crust, in general from areas of hot rocks to areas of cooler rocks. The causes for this convection can be: • Intrusion of magma into the crust • Radioactive heat generated by cooled masses of granite • Heat from the mantle • Hydraulic head from mountain ranges, for example, the
Great Artesian Basin • Dewatering of metamorphic rocks, which liberates water • Dewatering of deeply buried sediments Hydrothermal circulation, in particular in the deep crust, is a primary cause of
mineral deposit formation and a cornerstone of most theories on
ore genesis.
Hydrothermal ore deposits During the early 1900s, various geologists worked to classify hydrothermal ore deposits that they assumed formed from upward-flowing aqueous solutions.
Waldemar Lindgren (1860–1939) developed a classification based on interpreted decreasing temperature and pressure conditions of the depositing fluid. His terms: "hypothermal", "mesothermal", "epithermal" and "teleothermal", expressed decreasing temperature and increasing distance from a deep source. Recent studies retain only the
epithermal label. John Guilbert's 1985 revision of Lindgren's system for hydrothermal deposits includes the following: • Ascending hydrothermal fluids,
magmatic or
meteoric water •
Porphyry copper and other deposits, 200–800 °C, moderate pressure • Igneous metamorphic, 300–800 °C, low to moderate pressure • Cordilleran veins, intermediate to shallow depths • Epithermal, shallow to intermediate, 50–300 °C, low pressure • Circulating heated meteoric solutions •
Mississippi Valley-type deposits, 25–200 °C, low pressure •
Western US uranium, 25–75 °C, low pressure • Circulating heated seawater •
Oceanic ridge deposits, 25–300 °C, low pressure ==See also==