Abstract

Monitoring Yellowstone National Park’s hydrothermal systems and establishing hydrothermal baselines are the main goals of an ongoing collaborative effort between Yellowstone National Park’s Geology program and Utah State University’s Remote Sensing Services Laboratory. During the first years of this research effort, improvements were made in image acquisition, processing and calibration. In 2007, a broad-band, forward looking infrared (FLIR) camera (8–12 microns) provided reliable airborne images for a hydrothermal baseline of the Hot Spring Basin hydrothermal system. From 2008 to 2011, night-time, airborne thermal infrared image acquisitions during September yielded temperature maps that established the temporal variability of the hydrothermal system. A March 2012 airborne image acquisition provided an initial assessment of seasonal variability. The consistent, high-spatial resolution imagery (~1 m) demonstrates that the technique is robust and repeatable for generating corrected (atmosphere and emissivity) and calibrated temperature maps of the Hot Spring Basin hydrothermal system. Atmospheric conditions before and at flight-time determine the usefulness of the thermal infrared imagery for geohydrologic applications, such as hydrothermal monitoring. Although these ground-surface temperature maps are easily understood, quantification of radiative heat from the Hot Spring Basin hydrothermal system is an estimate of the system’s total energy output. Area is a key parameter for calculating the hydrothermal system’s heat output. Preliminary heat calculations suggest a radiative heat output of ~56 MW to 62 MW for the central Hot Spring Basin hydrothermal system. Challenges still remain in removing the latent solar component within the calibrated, atmospherically adjusted, and emissivity corrected night-time imagery.

Highlights

  • Within Yellowstone National Park (Figure 1), the Hot Spring Basin hydrothermal system is remote and suitable for monitoring with airborne thermal infrared imaging techniques

  • Airborne thermal infrared imaging provides an effective means for high-spatial resolution monitoring of this hard-to-access hydrothermal system

  • The Hot Spring Basin imagery with the largest areas of intermediate temperatures occurred during the Fall acquisitions of 2010 and 2011

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Summary

Introduction

Within Yellowstone National Park (Figure 1), the Hot Spring Basin hydrothermal system is remote and suitable for monitoring with airborne thermal infrared imaging techniques. As natural fractures in this hydrothermal system experience large amounts of variable strain associated with uplift and subsidence, changes in ground deformation may affect fluid flow pathways. Monitoring this system’s temporal and spatial variability can document how hydrothermal fluids move through this silicic, fracture-controlled terrain. Airborne thermal infrared imaging provides an effective means for high-spatial resolution monitoring of this hard-to-access hydrothermal system

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