Big Groundwater Data Sets Reveal Possible Rare Contamination Amid Otherwise Improved Water Quality for Some Analytes in a Region of Marcellus Shale Development
- Tao Wen*Tao Wen*Phone: 734-730-8814. E-mail: [email protected].Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United StatesMore by Tao Wen
- Xianzeng NiuXianzeng NiuEarth and Environmental Systems Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United StatesMore by Xianzeng Niu
- Matthew GonzalesMatthew GonzalesEarth and Environmental Systems Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United StatesMore by Matthew Gonzales
- Guanjie ZhengGuanjie ZhengCollege of Information Sciences and Technology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United StatesMore by Guanjie Zheng
- Zhenhui LiZhenhui LiCollege of Information Sciences and Technology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United StatesMore by Zhenhui Li
- Susan L. BrantleySusan L. BrantleyEarth and Environmental Systems Institute, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United StatesMore by Susan L. Brantley
Abstract

Eleven thousand groundwater samples collected in the 2010s in an area of Marcellus shale-gas development are analyzed to assess spatial and temporal patterns of water quality. Using a new data mining technique, we confirm previous observations that methane concentrations in groundwater tend to be naturally elevated in valleys and near faults, but we also show that methane is also more concentrated near an anticline. Data mining also highlights waters with elevated methane that are not otherwise explained by geologic features. These slightly elevated concentrations occur near 7 out of the 1,385 shale-gas wells and near some conventional gas wells in the study area. For ten analytes for which uncensored data are abundant in this 3,000 km2 rural region, concentrations are unchanged or improved as compared to samples analyzed prior to 1990. Specifically, TDS, Fe, Mn, sulfate, and pH show small but statistically significant improvement, and As, Pb, Ba, Cl, and Na show no change. Evidence from this rural area could document improved groundwater quality caused by decreased acid rain (pH, sulfate) since the imposition of the Clean Air Act or decreased steel production (Fe, Mn). Such improvements have not been reported in groundwater in more developed areas of the U.S.
Cited By
This article is cited by 2 publications.
- Tao Wen, Josh Woda, Virginia Marcon, Xianzeng Niu, Zhenhui Li, Susan L. Brantley. Exploring How to Use Groundwater Chemistry to Identify Migration of Methane near Shale Gas Wells in the Appalachian Basin. Environmental Science & Technology 2019, 53 (15) , 9317-9327. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b02290.
- Peter B. McMahon, Bruce D. Lindsey, Matthew D. Conlon, Andrew G. Hunt, Kenneth Belitz, Bryant C. Jurgens, Brian A. Varela. Hydrocarbons in Upland Groundwater, Marcellus Shale Region, Northeastern Pennsylvania and Southern New York, U.S.A.. Environmental Science & Technology 2019, 53 (14) , 8027-8035. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b01440.



