176-2 Stable Isotope Forensics As a Means of Differentiating Between Thermogenic and Biogenic Gases in the Wilcox Aquifer, Haynesville Shale Trend, Caddo Parish, Louisiana.
Poster Number 1601
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soils & Environmental QualitySee more from this Session: Environmental Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing, ISR U Mining, and Alternative Energy Production: Poster Session
Geosyntec proposed a program of work that involved the collection of groundwater samples for analysis of dissolved gas and abundances of the stable isotopes carbon-13 and deuterium. The program also included the collection of produced gas samples from nearby Haynesville wells. The samples of produced gas were analyzed for mole fractions of the C1 through C6+ hydrocarbon fractions, along with carbon-13 and deuterium isotope ratios. The stable isotope data illustrated conclusively that natural gas discharging from the landowner's well is not of thermogenic origin (that is, not Haynesville gas), but is a biogenic product related to a methanogenic pathway in the Wilcox by means of CO2 reduction. The role of CO2 reduction was also highlighted by the deficiency of dissolved sulfate and by reduction-oxidation potential measurements of -200 millivolts and lower in groundwater. The occurrence of methane in the water well is related to the occurrence of lignite, which as illustrated by researchers with the Louisiana Geological Survey, is common to the Wilcox aquifer of northwestern Louisiana.
See more from this Session: Environmental Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing, ISR U Mining, and Alternative Energy Production: Poster Session