Geochemical indicators of the origins and evolution of methane in groundwater: Gippsland Basin, Australia.

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, Lucas Heights, NSW, Australia.

Published: May 2017

Recent expansion of shale and coal seam gas production worldwide has increased the need for geochemical studies in aquifers near gas deposits, to determine processes impacting groundwater quality and better understand the origins and behavior of dissolved hydrocarbons. We determined dissolved methane concentrations (n = 36) and δC and δH values (n = 31) in methane and groundwater from the 46,000-km Gippsland Basin in southeast Australia. The basin contains important water supply aquifers and is a potential target for future unconventional gas development. Dissolved methane concentrations ranged from 0.0035 to 30 mg/L (median = 8.3 mg/L) and were significantly higher in the deep Lower Tertiary Aquifer (median = 19 mg/L) than the shallower Upper Tertiary Aquifer (median = 3.45 mg/L). Groundwater δC values ranged from -26.4 to -0.4 ‰ and were generally higher in groundwater with high methane concentrations (mean δC = -9.5 ‰ for samples with >3 mg/L CH vs. -16.2 ‰ in all others), which is consistent with bacterial methanogenesis. Methane had δC values of -97.5 to -31.8 ‰ and δH values of -391 to -204 ‰ that were also consistent with bacterial methane, excluding one site with δC values of -31.8 to -37.9 ‰, where methane may have been thermogenic. Methane from different regions and aquifers had distinctive stable isotope values, indicating differences in the substrate and/or methanogenesis mechanism. Methane in the Upper Tertiary Aquifer in Central Gippsland had lower δC (-83.7 to -97.5 ‰) and δH (-236 to -391 ‰) values than in the deeper Lower Tertiary Aquifer (δC = -45.8 to -66.2 ‰ and δH = -204 to -311 ‰). The particularly low δC values in the former group may indicate methanogenesis at least partly through carbonate reduction. In deeper groundwater, isotopic values were more consistent with acetate fermentation. Not all methane at a given depth and location is interpreted as being necessarily produced in situ. We propose that high dissolved sulphate concentrations in combination with high methane concentrations can indicate gas resulting from contamination and/or rapid migration as opposed to in situ bacterial production or long-term migration. Isotopes of methane and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) serve as further lines of evidence to distinguish methane sources. The study demonstrates the value of isotopic characterisation of groundwater including dissolved gases in basins containing hydrocarbons.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-016-7290-0DOI Listing

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