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Article: Compartmentalisation and groundwater–surface water interactions in a prospective shale gas basin: Assessment using variance analysis and multivariate statistics on water quality data

Wilson, Miles P / Worrall, Fred / Clancy, Sarah A / Ottley, Chris J / Hart, Alwyn / Davies, Richard J

Hydrological processes. 2020 July 15, v. 34, no. 15

2020  

Abstract: An environmental concern with hydraulic fracturing for shale gas is the risk of groundwater and surface water contamination. Assessing this risk partly involves the identification and understanding of groundwater–surface water interactions because ... ...

Abstract An environmental concern with hydraulic fracturing for shale gas is the risk of groundwater and surface water contamination. Assessing this risk partly involves the identification and understanding of groundwater–surface water interactions because potentially contaminating fluids could move from one water body to the other along hydraulic pathways. In this study, we use water quality data from a prospective shale gas basin to determine: if surface water sampling could identify groundwater compartmentalisation by low‐permeability faults; and if surface waters interact with groundwater in underlying bedrock formations, thereby indicating hydraulic pathways. Variance analysis showed that bedrock geology was a significant factor influencing surface water quality, indicating regional‐scale groundwater–surface water interactions despite the presence of an overlying region‐wide layer of superficial deposits averaging 30–40 m thickness. We propose that surface waters interact with a weathered bedrock layer through the complex distribution of glaciofluvial sands and gravels. Principal component analysis showed that surface water compositions were constrained within groundwater end‐member compositions. Surface water quality data showed no relationship with groundwater compartmentalisation known to be caused by a major basin fault. Therefore, there was no chemical evidence to suggest that deeper groundwater in this particular area of the prospective basin was reaching the surface in response to compartmentalisation. Consequently, in this case compartmentalisation does not appear to increase the risk of fracking‐related contaminants reaching surface waters, although this may differ under different hydrogeological scenarios.
Keywords basins ; bedrock ; groundwater ; multivariate analysis ; principal component analysis ; risk ; shale gas ; surface water ; variance ; water pollution ; water quality
Language English
Dates of publication 2020-0715
Size p. 3271-3294.
Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Document type Article
Note NAL-AP-2-clean ; JOURNAL ARTICLE
ZDB-ID 1479953-4
ISSN 1099-1085 ; 0885-6087
ISSN (online) 1099-1085
ISSN 0885-6087
DOI 10.1002/hyp.13795
Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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