posted on 2015-04-07, 00:00authored byVictor M. Heilweil, Paul L. Grieve, Scott
A. Hynek, Susan L. Brantley, D. Kip Solomon, Dennis W. Risser
The environmental impacts of shale-gas
development on water resources,
including methane migration to shallow groundwater, have been difficult
to assess. Monitoring around gas wells is generally limited to domestic
water-supply wells, which often are not situated along predominant
groundwater flow paths. A new concept is tested here: combining stream
hydrocarbon and noble-gas measurements with reach mass-balance modeling
to estimate thermogenic methane concentrations and fluxes in groundwater
discharging to streams and to constrain methane sources. In the Marcellus
Formation shale-gas play of northern Pennsylvania (U.S.A.), we sampled
methane in 15 streams as a reconnaissance tool to locate methane-laden
groundwater discharge: concentrations up to 69 μg L–1 were observed, with four streams ≥5 μg L–1. Geochemical analyses of water from one stream with high methane
(Sugar Run, Lycoming County) were consistent with Middle Devonian
gases. After sampling was completed, we learned of a state regulator
investigation of stray-gas migration from a nearby Marcellus Formation
gas well. Modeling indicates a groundwater thermogenic methane flux
of about 0.5 kg d–1 discharging into Sugar Run,
possibly from this fugitive gas source. Since flow paths often coalesce
into gaining streams, stream methane monitoring provides the first
watershed-scale method to assess groundwater contamination from shale-gas
development.