Barrick Kenneth A
Geography Department, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, 99775, USA.
Environ Manage. 2007 Jun;39(6):783-805. doi: 10.1007/s00267-005-0195-1. Epub 2007 Apr 19.
Geysers are rare natural phenomena that represent increasingly important recreation, economic, and scientific resources. The features of geyser basins, including hot springs, mud pots, and fumaroles, are easily damaged by human development. In New Zealand, the extinction of more than 100 geysers provides important lessons for the environmental management of the world's remaining geyser basins. The impacts on New Zealand's geysers are described in sequential "phases," including the following: the first use of geothermal resources by the indigenous people-the Maori; early European-style tourism and spa development; streamside geyser decline caused by river level modification at the Spa geyser basin; multiple geyser basin extinctions caused by industrial-scale geothermal well withdrawal at Wairakei; the drowning of geysers at Orakeikorako after the filling of a hydroelectric reservoir; and geyser decline caused by geothermal well heating systems in Rotorua City. The crisis in Rotorua prompted preservation of the few remaining geysers at Whakarewarewa -- the last major geyser basin in New Zealand. The New Zealand government ordered the geothermal wells within 1.5 km of Pohutu Geyser, Whakarewarewa, to be closed, which was a locally controversial measure. The well closure program resulted in a partial recovery of the Rotorua geothermal reservoir, but no extinct geysers recovered. The implications of recent geothermal computer modeling and future planning are discussed. The New Zealand case suggests that the protection of geysers requires strong regulations that prevent incompatible development at the outset, a prescription that is especially relevant for the future management of the geothermal fields adjacent to the geyser basins of Yellowstone National Park, U.S.A.
间歇泉是罕见的自然现象,代表着日益重要的娱乐、经济和科学资源。间歇泉盆地的地貌,包括温泉、泥火山口和喷气孔,很容易因人类开发而受损。在新西兰,100多个间歇泉的消失为世界上其他间歇泉盆地的环境管理提供了重要教训。对新西兰间歇泉的影响按连续的“阶段”进行了描述,包括以下内容:原住民毛利人首次利用地热资源;早期欧式旅游和温泉开发;温泉间歇泉盆地因河道水位改变导致溪边间歇泉减少;怀拉基地热井大规模开采导致多个间歇泉盆地消失;奥雷科拉科的间歇泉因一座水电站水库蓄水而被淹没;罗托鲁瓦市的地热井加热系统导致间歇泉减少。罗托鲁瓦的危机促使人们保护了怀卡雷瓦雷瓦仅存的少数间歇泉——新西兰最后一个主要的间歇泉盆地。新西兰政府下令关闭怀卡雷瓦雷瓦波胡图间歇泉1.5公里范围内的地热井,这一措施在当地颇具争议。关闭地热井的计划使罗托鲁瓦地热储层部分恢复,但已消失的间歇泉没有恢复。文中还讨论了近期地热计算机建模的意义和未来规划。新西兰的案例表明,保护间歇泉需要强有力的法规,从一开始就防止不相容的开发,这一规定对美国黄石国家公园间歇泉盆地附近地热田的未来管理尤为重要。