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PRINCIPAL
INVESTIGATOR:
B. Mack Kennedy
VOICE: 510-486-6451
FAX: 510-486-5496
Email:bmkennedy@lbl.gov
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FACILITIES |
CIG PUBLICATIONS
PEOPLE
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Volcanic
Hazards and CO2 Emissions
Earthquake
Processes: The San Andreas Fault
Oil
Hydrogeology
Geothermal
Resources
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RARGA:
Noble Gases in Fluids
TANGO:
Noble Gases in Rocks and Minerals
GC/MS:
Bulk Gas Geochemistry
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The Noble Gas Laboratory
is a facility with capabilities for high precision isotopic and elemental
abundance measurements of the five stable noble gas elements (He,
Ne, Ar, Kr, and Xe) as contained in fluids, rocks and minerals.
The noble gases represent
excellent natural tracers for sources and migration of volatiles
in the Earth's crust, mantle and atmo-hydrosphere. For instance,
the utility of using noble gases to trace the influence of mantle
volatiles in the crust, to assess volcanic
hazard, as natural tracers for fluid
origins and reservoir processes,
and in constraining geodynamic models
is well established. Several low abundance noble gas isotopes, particularly
3He and 21Ne, are also produced at sufficient rates by in situ cosmic-ray
interactions to be extremely valuable for studying Quaternary events,
rates and processes related to geomorphology, paleoclimates, as
well as, meteorite exposure histories.
The facility houses
two ultra-high-vacuum gas source mass spectrometers each with a
dedicated ultra-high vacuum sample preparation line. One mass spectrometer
(RARGA) was built in
house with a sample preparation line designed specifically for the
analyses of noble gases contained in fluids and can be deployed
in the field. The other is a VG/Fisons 5400 Noble Gas mass spectrometer
(TANGO) with sample preparation
line designed for vacuum gas extraction from rocks and minerals.
This system is equipped with an in vacuo rock/mineral crusher and
high temperature vacuum furnace.
The Center for Isotope
Geochemistry and the Noble Gas Laboratory also maintain a Gas-Chromatograph
Mass Spectrometer for determining bulk gas composition and speciation
in fluid samples.
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