Abstract
Natural gas produced from a zone of thin Upper Devonian/Lower Mississippian sands approximately 1200m above the hydraulically fractured Middle Devonian Marcellus Shale interval was monitored for evidence of gas migration. Gas samples were collected from seven vertical Upper Devonian/Lower Mississippian gas wells and two vertical Marcellus Shale gas wells 2months prior to-, during-, and 14months after the hydraulic fracturing of six horizontal Marcellus Shale gas wells at the study site. The isotopic and molecular compositions of gas from the two producing zones were distinct and remained so during the entire monitoring period. Over the time of monitoring, the molecular/isotopic signatures of gas from the Upper Devonian/Lower Mississippian field did not show any evidence of contamination from deeper Marcellus Shale gas that might have migrated upward from the hydraulically fractured interval. Our results indicate no hydrologic connectivity between the fractured interval and formations 1200m above, which means that contamination of even shallower drinking water aquifers (∼2200m above fractured interval) is unlikely at this study site. While localized consideration for geology and site development practices are extremely important, the monitoring methods used in this study are applicable when trying to understand and quantify natural gas mixing and migration trends.
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