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The origin of thermal waters from the eastern flank of the Dead Sea Rift Valley (western Jordan)

✍ Scribed by Bruno Capaccioni; Orlando Vaselli; Elvio Moretti; Franco Tassi; Roberto Franchi


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
422 KB
Volume
15
Category
Article
ISSN
0954-4879

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✦ Synopsis


ABSTRACT

Thermal waters emerging along the eastern flank of the northernmost part of the Dead Sea Rift Valley close to the Yarmuk river are dilute, Ca–SO~4~–(HCO~3~) and Na–Cl water types with measured temperatures of 35–60 °C and estimated teperatures, according to silica solubility, of 60–110 °C. They are fed only by present‐day recharged meteoric waters (Wadi Hasa, Al Himma and North Shuna thermal baths) and by meteoric waters contaminated with saline waters (El Ma'in thermal Bath). Although they have been known for a long time, there is still dispute about their origins and the source of heat. On the basis of new chemical and isotopic analyses, the saline waters could represent residual pockets of groundwater in equilibrium with those filling the Dead Sea depression before the last retreat of Lake Lisan at 17–15 kyr bp or with the ancient seawaters of the Sedom Lagoon in the early Pleistocene, in both cases unaffected by significant evaporation processes but chemically and isotopically modified by water/rock interaction.


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