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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(20): 6325-30, 2015 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25941400

ABSTRACT

High-volume hydraulic fracturing (HVHF) has revolutionized the oil and gas industry worldwide but has been accompanied by highly controversial incidents of reported water contamination. For example, groundwater contamination by stray natural gas and spillage of brine and other gas drilling-related fluids is known to occur. However, contamination of shallow potable aquifers by HVHF at depth has never been fully documented. We investigated a case where Marcellus Shale gas wells in Pennsylvania caused inundation of natural gas and foam in initially potable groundwater used by several households. With comprehensive 2D gas chromatography coupled to time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GCxGC-TOFMS), an unresolved complex mixture of organic compounds was identified in the aquifer. Similar signatures were also observed in flowback from Marcellus Shale gas wells. A compound identified in flowback, 2-n-Butoxyethanol, was also positively identified in one of the foaming drinking water wells at nanogram-per-liter concentrations. The most likely explanation of the incident is that stray natural gas and drilling or HF compounds were driven ∼ 1-3 km along shallow to intermediate depth fractures to the aquifer used as a potable water source. Part of the problem may have been wastewaters from a pit leak reported at the nearest gas well pad-the only nearby pad where wells were hydraulically fractured before the contamination incident. If samples of drilling, pit, and HVHF fluids had been available, GCxGC-TOFMS might have fingerprinted the contamination source. Such evaluations would contribute significantly to better management practices as the shale gas industry expands worldwide.


Subject(s)
Extraction and Processing Industry/methods , Groundwater/chemistry , Natural Gas/adverse effects , Water Movements , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Water Supply/analysis , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Geological Phenomena , Pennsylvania
2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 49(7): 4057-65, 2015 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25786038

ABSTRACT

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(-1) were observed, with four streams ≥ 5 µg L(-1). 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(-1) 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.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring , Groundwater/analysis , Methane/analysis , Oil and Gas Industry , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Environment , Gases/analysis , Hydrocarbons/analysis , Methane/metabolism , Models, Theoretical , Noble Gases/analysis , Oil and Gas Fields , Pennsylvania , United States , Water Resources , Water Supply , Water Wells
3.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 340(4): 1098-103, 2006 Feb 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16403439

ABSTRACT

The caseins (alphas1, alphas2, beta, and kappa) are phosphoproteins present in bovine milk that have been studied for over a century and whose structures remain obscure. Here we describe the chemical synthesis and structure elucidation of the N-terminal segment (1-44) of bovine kappa-casein, the protein which maintains the micellar structure of the caseins. kappa-Casein (1-44) was synthesised by highly optimised Boc solid-phase peptide chemistry and characterised by mass spectrometry. Structure elucidation was carried out by circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. CD analysis demonstrated that the segment was ill defined in aqueous medium but in 30% trifluoroethanol it exhibited considerable helical structure. Further, NMR analysis showed the presence of a helical segment containing 26 residues which extends from Pro8 to Arg34. This is the first report which demonstrates extensive secondary structure within the casein class of proteins.


Subject(s)
Caseins/chemistry , Caseins/ultrastructure , Models, Molecular , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Caseins/chemical synthesis , Cattle , Computer Simulation , Crystallography , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary
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