The geothermal industry is tapping into research uncovered by a University of Nevada, Reno project. Researchers and several grad students through UNRโ€™s Bureau of Mines and Geology are studying and cataloguing the geothermal potential of 463 sites throughout the Great Basin, using a $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.

โ€œMost, about two-thirds, of the geothermal resources in the Great Basin are blindโ€”that is, there are no surface expressions, such as hot springs, to indicate whatโ€™s perhaps 1,500 feet below the surface,โ€ said principal investigator and UNR professor Jim Faulds (pictured) in a prepared statement.

In the past year, the team has assessed 250 of the sites using existing records and on-site analysis. The project is intended to help the industry better understand geothermal processes and to identify where to drill, thereby saving time, money and resources.

โ€œThe geothermal industry doesnโ€™t have the same depth of knowledge for geothermal exploration as the mineral and oil industries,โ€ said Faulds. โ€œMineral and oil companies conducted extensive research years ago that helps them to characterize favorable settings and determine where to drill. With geothermal, itโ€™s studies like this that will enhance understanding of what controls hot fluids in the Earthโ€™s crust and thus provide an exploration basis for industry to use in discovering and developing resources.โ€

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