AN ASSESSMENT AND COMPARISON OF THE GEOCHEMICAL SIGNATURES OF THERMAL SPRINGS IN THE ANIMAS RIVER VALLEY, SOUTHWESTERN COLORADO
A tritium analysis of water at Trimble springs yielded a concentration of 4.8 (TU) which indicates that water in the system is either dominantly post-1952 or it is represents a mixture of deeper and older fluids that mixed with younger, near-surface water. Sulfur isotope data obtained in this study suggests that water in these thermal springs interacted with sulfate and carbonate minerals in Pennsylvanian (Hermosa) and Permian (Cutler) rocks exposed in the area.
Collectively, these data are consistent with a shallow-geothermal system recharged by meteoric fluids that circulated along fractures, were heated at depth, and then discharged along the edges of the Animas River valley. Using are geothermal gradient of 25º C/kilometer, the water would need to circulate to depths of 0.75 to 1.5 kilometers to attain the temperatures observed at the surface. Our model contrasts with some regional studies that suggest a deep, perhaps mantle source for fluids in thermal springs in Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico.