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Project HOTSPOT: Mountain Home Well Core and Drill Site Photos

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The Snake River Plain (SRP), Idaho, hosts potential geothermal resources due to elevated groundwater temperatures associated with the thermal anomaly Yellowstone-Snake River hotspot. Project HOTSPOT has coordinated international institutions and organizations to understand subsurface stratigraphy and assess geothermal potential. Over 5.9km of core were drilled from three boreholes within the SRP in an attempt to acquire continuous core documenting the volcanic and sedimentary record of the hotspot: (1) Kimama, (2) Kimberly, and (3) Mountain Home. The Mountain Home drill hole is located along the western plain and documents older basalts overlain by sediment. This submission includes photos of the core samples taken from the Mountain Home drill hole.
Data submitted by project collaborator Doug Schmitt, University of Alberta

*Note - The archive file "MH Photos.zip" contains all of the photos associated with this submission in a more easily downloaded format

Citation Formats

Utah State University. (2012). Project HOTSPOT: Mountain Home Well Core and Drill Site Photos [data set]. Retrieved from https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148776.
Export Citation to RIS
Shervais, John. Project HOTSPOT: Mountain Home Well Core and Drill Site Photos. United States: N.p., 11 Jan, 2012. Web. doi: 10.15121/1148776.
Shervais, John. Project HOTSPOT: Mountain Home Well Core and Drill Site Photos. United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148776
Shervais, John. 2012. "Project HOTSPOT: Mountain Home Well Core and Drill Site Photos". United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148776. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/289.
@div{oedi_3132, title = {Project HOTSPOT: Mountain Home Well Core and Drill Site Photos}, author = {Shervais, John.}, abstractNote = {The Snake River Plain (SRP), Idaho, hosts potential geothermal resources due to elevated groundwater temperatures associated with the thermal anomaly Yellowstone-Snake River hotspot. Project HOTSPOT has coordinated international institutions and organizations to understand subsurface stratigraphy and assess geothermal potential. Over 5.9km of core were drilled from three boreholes within the SRP in an attempt to acquire continuous core documenting the volcanic and sedimentary record of the hotspot: (1) Kimama, (2) Kimberly, and (3) Mountain Home. The Mountain Home drill hole is located along the western plain and documents older basalts overlain by sediment. This submission includes photos of the core samples taken from the Mountain Home drill hole.
Data submitted by project collaborator Doug Schmitt, University of Alberta

*Note - The archive file "MH Photos.zip" contains all of the photos associated with this submission in a more easily downloaded format}, doi = {10.15121/1148776}, url = {https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/289}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2012}, month = {01}}
https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148776

Details

Data from Jan 11, 2012

Last updated Jan 8, 2020

Submitted Feb 6, 2014

Organization

Utah State University

Contact

John Shervais

435.797.1274

Authors

John Shervais

Utah State University

Research Areas

DOE Project Details

Project Name Recovery Act: The Snake River Geothermal Drilling Project: Innovative Approaches to Geothermal Exploration

Project Lead Mark Ziegenbein

Project Number EE0002848

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