A GIS-based vulnerability assessment of brine contamination to aquatic resources from oil and gas development in eastern Sheridan County, Montana

Sci Total Environ. 2014 Feb 15:472:1152-62. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.09.027. Epub 2013 Dec 21.

Abstract

Water (brine) co-produced with oil in the Williston Basin is some of the most saline in the nation. The Prairie Pothole Region (PPR), characterized by glacial sediments and numerous wetlands, covers the northern and eastern portion of the Williston Basin. Sheridan County, Montana, lies within the PPR and has a documented history of brine contamination. Surface water and shallow groundwater in the PPR are saline and sulfate dominated while the deeper brines are much more saline and chloride dominated. A Contamination Index (CI), defined as the ratio of chloride concentration to specific conductance in a water sample, was developed by the Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology to delineate the magnitude of brine contamination in Sheridan County. Values >0.035 indicate contamination. Recently, the U.S. Geological Survey completed a county level geographic information system (GIS)-based vulnerability assessment of brine contamination to aquatic resources in the PPR of the Williston Basin based on the age and density of oil wells, number of wetlands, and stream length per county. To validate and better define this assessment, a similar approach was applied in eastern Sheridan County at a greater level of detail (the 2.59 km(2) Public Land Survey System section grid) and included surficial geology. Vulnerability assessment scores were calculated for the 780 modeled sections and these scores were divided into ten equal interval bins representing similar probabilities of contamination. Two surface water and two groundwater samples were collected from the section with the greatest acreage of Federal land in each bin. Nineteen of the forty water samples, and at least one water sample from seven of the ten selected sections, had CI values indicating contamination. Additionally, CI values generally increased with increasing vulnerability assessment score, with a stronger correlation for groundwater samples (R(2)=0.78) than surface water samples (R(2)=0.53).

Keywords: CI; Contamination Index (ratio of chloride (mg/L) to specific conductance (μS/cm)); DS; Dissolved Solids; Energy development; GIS; Geographic Information System; IC; Ion Chromatography; NHD; NWI; National Hydrography Dataset; National Wetlands Inventory Dataset; PLSS; PPR; Prairie Pothole Region; Public Land Survey System; SSURGO; STEPPE; Saline contamination; Science Team about Energy in Prairie Pothole Environments; Soil Survey Geographic Database; Vulnerability assessment; WPA; Water quality; Waterfowl Production Area; Williston Basin.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Environmental Monitoring*
  • Extraction and Processing Industry
  • Fresh Water / chemistry*
  • Geographic Information Systems
  • Groundwater / chemistry
  • Industrial Waste / analysis
  • Montana
  • Salts / analysis*
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical / analysis*

Substances

  • Industrial Waste
  • Salts
  • Water Pollutants, Chemical
  • brine