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<sup>–1</sup> were observed, with four streams ≥5 μg L<sup>–1</sup>. 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<sup>–1</sup> 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.