格拉斯哥地热能研究现场的钻孔温度记录:城市发展引起的地表温度过去变化的记录

IF 0.5 4区 地球科学 Q4 GEOLOGY Scottish Journal of Geology Pub Date : 2020-04-06 DOI:10.1144/sjg2019-033
S. Watson, R. Westaway
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引用次数: 9

摘要

作为格拉斯哥地热能研究现场(GGERFS)项目的一部分,GGC-01钻孔于2018年11月开始在格拉斯哥市东部的Dalmarnock地区钻探,该项目旨在作为矿井水地热的试验场。它于2019年1月被记录,提供了197的地下温度记录 m深,在这个有着悠久煤矿开采和工业发展历史的城区。这一钻孔温度记录明显偏离了其自然状态,部分原因是过去附近煤矿开采的“渗透”效应,部分原因也是人为气候变化和当地城市发展造成的地下城市热岛效应导致的地表变暖。我们的数值模型表明,地表总变暖效应为2.7°C,分为自工业革命以来全球变暖的2.0°C和局部超高温高压发展的0.7°C。我们无法解决影响地表变暖的局部因素的精确组合,因为地下热特性的不确定性与地表变暖历史的不确定性相权衡。然而,通过浅层地下的背景向上热流估计仅为约28-33 mW m−2,取决于其他模型参数的选择,远低于c.80 mW 预计格拉斯哥地区为m−2。我们推断,“缺失”的地热通量是由GGC-01浅钻孔以外深度的水平流携带的。尽管研究区域的浅层地下比工业革命前更温暖,但深度更大——大约在90到300之间 m–由于背景热流减少的影响,天气更冷。在未来,GGERFS项目可能会利用约90米深处的水 m、 但由于气候变化和城市发展,这些深度的地下水温度在很大程度上是由过去地表变暖的影响维持的;因此,它是一种可能被“开采”但无法持续补充的资源,而且由于地表变暖而不是向上的热流,可以说一开始就不应该算作“地热”。因此,我们的分析表明,GGERFS场地作为矿井水地热的试验场地是一个糟糕的选择。补充材料:研究区域的煤矿开采历史摘要可在以下网站获取:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.4911495.v2
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Borehole temperature log from the Glasgow Geothermal Energy Research Field Site: a record of past changes to ground surface temperature caused by urban development
As part of the Glasgow Geothermal Energy Research Field Site (GGERFS) project, intended as a test site for mine-water geothermal heat, the GGC-01 borehole was drilled in the Dalmarnock area in the east of the city of Glasgow, starting in November 2018. It was logged in January 2019 to provide a record of subsurface temperature to 197 m depth, in this urban area with a long history of coal mining and industrial development. This borehole temperature record is significantly perturbed away from its natural state, in part because of the ‘permeabilizing’ effect of past nearby coal mining and in part due to surface warming as a result of the combination of anthropogenic climate change and creation of a subsurface urban heat island by local urban development. Our numerical modelling indicates the total surface warming effect as 2.7°C, partitioned as 2.0°C of global warming since the Industrial Revolution and 0.7°C of local UHI development. We cannot resolve the precise combination of local factors that influence the surface warming because uncertainty in the subsurface thermal properties trades against uncertainty in the history of surface warming. However, the background upward heat flow through the shallow subsurface is estimated as only c. 28–33 mW m−2, depending on choice of other model parameters, well below the c. 80 mW m−2 expected in the Glasgow area. We infer that the ‘missing’ geothermal heat flux is entrained by horizontal flow at depth beyond the reach of the shallow GGC-01 borehole. Although the shallow subsurface in the study area is warmer than it would have been before the Industrial Revolution, at greater depths – between c. 90 and >300 m – it is colder, due to the effect of reduced background heat flow. In future the GGERFS project might utilize water from depths of c. 90 m, but the temperature of the groundwater at these depths is maintained largely by the past effect of surface warming, due to climate change and urban development; it is thus a resource that might be ‘mined’ but not sustainably replenished and, being the result of surface warming rather than upward heat flow, arguably should not count as ‘geothermal’ heat in the first place. Our analysis thus indicates that the GGERFS site is a poor choice as a test site for mine-water geothermal heat. Supplementary material: A summary history of coal mining in the study area is available at: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.4911495.v2
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来源期刊
Scottish Journal of Geology
Scottish Journal of Geology 地学-地质学
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Although published only since 1965, the Scottish Journal of Geology has a long pedigree. It is the joint publication of the Geological Society of Glasgow and the Edinburgh Geological Society, which prior to 1965 published separate Transactions: from 1860 in the case of Glasgow and 1863 for Edinburgh. Traditionally, the Journal has acted as the focus for papers on all aspects of Scottish geology and its contiguous areas, including the surrounding seas. The publication policy has always been outward looking, with the Editors encouraging review papers and papers on broader aspects of the Earth sciences that cannot be discussed solely in terms of Scottish geology. The diverse geology of Scotland continues to provide an important natural laboratory for the study of earth sciences; many seminal studies in geology have been carried out on Scottish rocks, and over the years the results of much of this work had been published in the Journal and its predecessors. The Journal fully deserves its high reputation worldwide and intends to maintain its status in the front rank of publications in the Earth sciences.
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