Yellowstone Belches Ancient Helium

Gas stored in the Earth’s crust for hundreds of millions of years is released by volcanic hotspot

Yellowstone steam
Plumes of steam rise up from many spots along the Firehole River in Yellowstone National Park. Ken McGee, U.S. Geological Survey

Yellowstone National Park’s geysers, hot springs, fumaroles and other hydrothermal features spew out a collection of gases from deep within the Earth—steam, carbon dioxide, methane, neon, argon and helium. There’s not enough of that last one, helium, for the park to start selling balloons or for visitors to sound like chipmunks, but there’s plenty for scientists to study.

Helium can bubble out of volcanic rocks that drive hydrothermal activity, but that’s not where most of Yellowstone’s helium is coming from, it seems. The park’s gas originates deep in rocks where it’s been stored for hundreds of millions of years, U.S. Geological Survey scientists report today in Nature.

Helium is the second-most abundant element in the universe—it’s formed by the nuclear fusion of hydrogen atoms, a process that powers stars—but it’s pretty rare here on Earth. Lucky for birthday-party goers and clowns (and modern medicine), helium can be extracted from reserves of natural gas underground.

Helium on Earth can be found in two main forms: Nearly all occurs as helium-4 (named thus because it has two protons and two neutrons), which can be produced during the radioactive decay of heavy elements such as uranium. A tiny fraction (about one in a million) occurs as helium-3 (two protons and one neutron), most of which has been present on Earth since the planet’s formation and is a vestige of material that originally formed the planet.

The ratio of helium-3 to helium-4, though, slightly varies and scientists can actually use that ratio to determine the approximate source of any helium they find. Uranium and other heavy elements are more incompatible with minerals found in the Earth's mantle, so these elements filter up to the crust, where their decay produces helium-4. Mantle materials, which contain less of these heavy radioactive elements, don't produce as much helium-4, so the helium present there is mostly in the form of helium-3.

The hydrothermal system at Yellowstone National Park has a relatively high amount of helium-3, and scientists consider this to be evidence that the Yellowstone hotspot originates deep within the mantle and has a relatively straight path up.

Gas bubbling up through a hot spring in Yellowstone National Park is collected through a funnel. Credit: J. Lowenstern, U.S. Geological Survey

But it seems that the helium-4 has a more complicated journey to the surface. Researchers from the USGS have been collecting gas samples from across Yellowstone for a decade and performing chemical and isotopic analyses of the helium, carbon dioxide and other gases in those samples. The amount of helium-4 that’s being emitted in Yellowstone, they found, exceeds by several orders of magnitude the average amount they'd expect to find elsewhere.

Most of Yellowstone’s helium-4 is at least hundreds of millions—perhaps even billions—of years old, the scientists calculated. Given the amount of gas present, scientists conclude that it probably comes from rocks within very ancient crust known to be buried nearby. This super-old pocket of crust, from the Archaean eon, was formed more than 2.5 billion years ago and contains uranium and other radioactive materials that have been steadily decaying. That would have allowed high concentrations of helium-4 to build up underground. Then about two million years ago, the Yellowstone hotspot penetrated these ancient rocks, some of the oldest on the planet, and began releasing the helium-4 stored there along with helium-3 brought up from the mantle.

This discovery probably qualifies as “kind of interesting” for any Yellowstone fans, but for scientists, there might be more important implications. Helium and other noble gases are used to estimate groundwater residence times—for example, scientists assume that the more helium-4 present in water, the longer that water has been sitting in the rocks surrounding it.

But the study of helium at Yellowstone shows that some of these assumptions—specifically helium-4 produced by the steady decay of elements found only within the rocks and sediments of the local aquifer—aren’t quite right. Helium can suddenly come into a system from unexpected places—a pocket of ancient rock, for instance, or an magma source—so the dates in past calculations, particularly those from aquifers in volcanic regions or near earthquake faults, might be way off because of that extra helium.

Scientists, though, are used to dealing with new data that changes long-held theories; that’s the nature of science, after all. Residents of the Yellowstone area, however, probably wish researchers would just hurry up and figure out whether or not the supervolcano that’s simmering below them and last erupted 640,000 years ago is going to blow again anytime soon.

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