The Yangbajing Basin lies between the Nyainquentanglha Range to the northwest and the
Yarlu-Zangbo suture to the south. The geothermal field is in the central part of a
semi-graben fault-depression basin caused by the foremontane fault zone of the Nyainqentanglha Mountains. The SE-dipping
detachment fault began to form about 8 Ma. Most of the outcropped rocks are
metamorphosed lower
Paleozoic rocks,
Paleogene volcano-clastic rock series,
Neogene conglomerates and loose sediment accumulations from the
Quaternary. The fault structures in the region run NE, NW, and nearly N-S. The NE faults are the largest and oldest, and usually have been cut by later fractures and faults. Although there still seems to be frequent magmatic activity, the main stages of magmatic intrusion were the
Yanshanian granitic intrusion (88.7 Ma), the Yanshanian dioritic intrusion (88.0 Ma), and the Later Himalayan granitic intrusion (29.7 Ma). The field is part of the
Himalayan Geothermal Belt in the
Lhasa-Gangdise terrane. The geothermal reservoir is basically a Quaternary basin underlaid by a large granite
batholith. The basin has been filled with glacial deposits from the north and alluvial-pluvial sediments from the south. Fluid flows horizontally into the reservoir through the faults around the basin. A drill hole in the northern part of the field with a final depth of found thermal fluid with a maximum temperature of . Chemical analysis of the thermal fluid indicate that there is shallow-seated magmatic activity not far below the geothermal field. Other evidence, however, indicates that if there is a magmatic heat source vertically below the field, it must be over below. A 1996 paper proposed that the magmatic heat source lies to the southeast of the field at a depth of . In the area north of the highway, thermal fluids from this depth rises through a deep fault to the surface. In the area south of the highway, thermal fluid in the surface zone is heated by mixing with fluids that in turn are heated by deep circulation near the magmatic heat source. Carbon dioxide in the hot spring gases is probably largely organic, from the sedimentary rocks of the field. A 2000 paper presented evidence for a shallow reservoir with temperatures up to , and a deep reservoir with temperatures up to . The deep reservoir included an upper section between deep and a lower and hotter section below . Both the upper and lower reservoirs contained
sodium chloride thermal water. The shallow reservoir covers and is mostly hosted in porous Quaternary
alluvium. Its basement is Himalayan granite and tuff. The water is a mixture of cold groundwater and deep thermal water. The deep reservoir was thought to have an area of below , contained in fractured bedrock. The thermal water is held in tectonic fissures and fracture zones. The isotopic composition of the thermal waters indicates local meteoric origin (rain and snow), including run-off from the Nyainquentanglha Range. The water runs down through the fractured rock, and is gradually warmed, with the warmer water rising towards the surface. ==Recreational use==