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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
ABSTRACT: New Geochemical Data Show Methane
in N.E. Pennsylvania Water Wells Unrelated
to
Hydraulic
Fracturing
Hydraulic
Fracturing
GSI Environmental Inc.
Houston, TX
New data demonstrate
that
hydraulic
fracturing
of the Marcellus Shale has
not resulted in deep shale gas
impacts on water wells in
northeastern Pennsylvania,
as previously asserted. Rather,
it appears that elevated
methane concentrations in
water wells originate from
shallower thermogenic or
biogenic gas deposits
penetrated by local water
and gas wells.
Test results from over 1700
water wells sampled prior to
drilling or
hydraulic
fracturing
operations show that methane is
ubiquitous in water wells throughout this region, with no
statistically significant difference between gas production areas —
defined as the area within 1 km of an active gas well — vs. non-gas
production areas. Higher concentrations are observed in
topographic lows, which indicates that on a regional scale, elevated
methane concentrations are best correlated to hydrogeologic
features rather than shale gas
fracturing
. In addition, isotope
analyses show the dissolved methane in these water wells to be
primarily consistent either with thermogenic gas from the Upper
and Middle Devonian formations overlying the Marcellus Shale or
with biogenic gas from the shallow alluvium, and not indicative of
impacts by Marcellus Shale gas. Historical records confirm that
many shallow water and gas wells have encountered
natural
gas
from these same horizons long before the implementation of
hydraulic
fracturing
in the area.
Consequently, any allegation that
hydraulic
fracturing
of the
Marcellus Shale has contributed to widespread water well impacts
by deep formation gas is unfounded. This apparent
misapprehension underscores the need for a multiple lines-of-evidence approach during the investigation of stray gas incidents
that considers relevant geologic, historical, well construction, and
isotopic data.