The travertine of Mammoth Hot Springs - Caldera Chronicles

 

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Early explorers during the separate Washburn, Hayden, and Hague expeditions of the 1870s were astonished by the massive terraces and pools of hot-spring limestone, better known as travertine, at Mammoth Hot Springs—a chemical oddity that is quite different from other Yellowstone thermal areas.

Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. This week's contribution is from Pat Shanks, research geologist emeritus with the U.S. Geological Survey.

Map of Yellowstone National Park showing locations of thermal basins that host hot springs, geysers, and mudpots.
Map of Yellowstone National Park showing locations of thermal basins that host hot springs, geysers, and mudpots.  Dark green areas host alkaline-chloride fluids.  Yellowstone Caldera margin shown as bold dashed line.

Three main varieties of hot spring fluids are recognized in Yellowstone: alkaline-chloride, acid-sulfate, and calcium-carbonate waters.  Previous editions of Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles covered the stories behind alkaline-chloride features, like Old Faithful, and acid-sulfate systems, like that at Mud Volcano.  Today, we focus on calcium-carbonate hot springs and examine possible sources for the travertine-depositing fluids, like those that are responsible for the amazing terraces at Mammoth Hot Springs.

Studies have shown that calcium-carbonate-rich fluids at and near Mammoth Hot Springs:

  • are meteoric waters (rain or snow) that are heated by contact with hot rocks at depth to temperatures of about 100℃ (212℉),
  • circulate through and react with older limestones and sedimentary rocks beneath the surface,
  • occur well outside the Yellowstone caldera and therefore are removed from the main Yellowstone magma chamber beneath the caldera,
  • contain some carbon dioxide and helium gases incorporated from magmatism that occurs between Norris Geyser Basin and Mammoth Hot Springs, and
  • ascend along active faults.
Narrow Gauge spring, Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park
Narrow Gauge spring, Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park.  Vent area is between the two trees on top of the travertine deposits.  Terraced pools form due to deposition of travertine from the fluids as they cool and degas carbon dioxide.

Samples of hot spring fluids at Mammoth Hot Springs, including from USGS drill hole Y-10, show that measured near-surface temperatures never exceed 73℃ (163.4℉), and the chemistry of the water suggests that subsurface fluid temperatures have not exceeded 100℃ (212℉).  Compared with alkaline-chloride waters, like those from Old Faithful, thermal waters at Mammoth Hot Springs are rich in calcium, magnesium, bicarbonate, and sulfate.  The bicarbonate comes from two sources: magmatic carbon dioxide and reaction with marine carbonate rocks (limestone), resulting in a slightly acidic fluid pH of about 6.  When hot spring fluids emerge from the subsurface into the pools on Mammoth terrace, pressure release causes them to degas (like opening a can of soda), and this loss of carbon dioxide causes the pH to increase to about 8.  Calcium carbonate is less soluble at higher pH, causing travertine to precipitate out of the water and forming the famous terraces of Mammoth Hot Springs.

Travertine is found not just at Mammoth Hot Springs, but also a few miles to the north and south of the iconic terraces. To the north, near Gardiner, MT, travertine deposits formed in hot springs systems that were active about 20,000-40,000 years ago.  To the south, at Terrace Mountain, travertine deposits formed about 400,000 years ago—the oldest documented hydrothermal deposits in all of Yellowstone!

Geologic studies indicate that the most likely rocks to react with the thermal fluids in the subsurface (see figure below) are dolomitic limestones of Mississippian age (~350 million years) that are present in a rock unit called the Madison Formation.  This formation is well known as an important petroleum-producing unit and aquifer throughout Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, and South Dakota.  Detailed studies of rocks in this unit show the most abundant minerals are calcite (CaCO3), dolomite (CaMg[CO3]2), and anhydrite (CaSO4).  Minor minerals include feldspars, quartz, and clays.  Detailed studies of samples typically show evidence that anhydrite and dolomite have been leached by warm waters, and dolomite is often replaced by calcite.

Geologic block-diagram and conceptual model of Mammoth Hot Springs area
Geologic block-diagram and conceptual model of possible flow systems associated with thermal areas at Mammoth Hot Spring (MHS) area from Sorey (1991) (USGS Water-Resources Investigations Report 91-4052).  Also shown are the Bear Creek Hot Springs (BC) and La Duke Hot Spring (LD). Arrows indicate general directions of fluid flow. Faults are shown as heavy solid lines. Simplified stratigraphic units are labeled Ks (Cretaceous sedimentary rocks), pKs (pre-Cretaceous sedimentary rocks), Tvc (Tertiary volcaniclastic rocks), Ti (Tertiary intrusives), and pCg (Precambrian gneiss and schist). Approximate position of the Mississippian Madison Formation, a regionally continuous aquifer, is shown by the blocky white pattern.

Using geochemical reaction calculations, it is possible to confirm that the Madison Formation is indeed the main contributor to the chemistry of Mammoth Hot Springs water. By assuming a cool 25℃ (75℉) dilute water reacts with dolomite and anhydrite and minor amounts of feldspar minerals at 100℃ (212℉), it becomes clear that most of the dolomite and anhydrite dissolve, and minor amounts of clays and pyrite (also known as fool’s gold) form.  The reacted fluid has a pH of 6.2 and a chemical composition similar to the Mammoth Hot Spring waters.  

Mammoth travertine deposits and hot spring fluids are very different from the other types of systems in Yellowstone because of the very different geologic setting around Mammoth Hot Springs.  This system is still dependent on magmatic heat and gases related to sporadic young volcanic activity along the massive and active tectonic corridor that extends north from the caldera boundary near Norris Geyser Basin to the Mammoth area and beyond. Compared to the hot alkaline-chloride or acid-sulfate fluids within the caldera, however, the Mammoth fluids are relatively cool and react with sedimentary limestones, instead of high-silica rhyolite volcanic rock in and near the caldera.

Although it’s the biggest travertine system, Mammoth is not the only such system place to find travertine in the Yellowstone region.  Additional small travertine deposits are currently forming north of Yellowstone National Park at Bear Creek Hot Springs and La Duke Hot Spring.  Within Yellowstone National Park, small travertine deposits form at a few sites, including Terrace Spring, Hillside Springs, at Firehole Lake, and along the Snake River near the southern boundary of YNP.  But Mammoth Hot Springs is the classic locality, and the most spectacular.