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Dive into the research topics where Colin J. Whyte is active.

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Featured researches published by Colin J. Whyte.


Ground Water | 2018

Pre-drill Groundwater Geochemistry in the Karoo Basin, South Africa

Jennifer S. Harkness; Kelley Swana; William K. Eymold; Jodie A. Miller; Ricky Murray; Siep Talma; Colin J. Whyte; Myles T. Moore; Erica Lynn Maletic; Avner Vengosh; Thomas H. Darrah

Enhanced production of unconventional hydrocarbons in the United States has driven interest in natural gas development globally, but simultaneously raised concerns regarding water quantity and quality impacts associated with hydrocarbon extraction. We conducted a pre-development assessment of groundwater geochemistry in the critically water-restricted Karoo Basin, South Africa. Twenty-two springs and groundwater samples were analyzed for major dissolved ions, trace elements, water stable isotopes, strontium and boron isotopes, hydrocarbons and helium composition. The data revealed three end-members: a deep, saline groundwater with a sodium-chloride composition, an old, deep freshwater with a sodium-bicarbonate-chloride composition and a shallow, calcium-bicarbonate freshwater. In a few cases, we identified direct mixing of the deep saline water and shallow groundwater. Stable water isotopes indicate that the shallow groundwater was controlled by evaporation in arid conditions, while the saline waters were diluted by apparently fossil meteoric water originated under wetter climatic conditions. These geochemical and isotopic data, in combination with elevated helium levels, suggest that exogenous fluids are the source of the saline groundwater and originated from remnant seawater prior to dilution by old meteoric water combined with further modification by water-rock interactions. Samples with elevated methane concentrations (>14 ccSTP/kg) were strongly associated with the sodium-chloride water located near dolerite intrusions, which likely provide a preferential pathway for vertical migration of deeply sourced hydrocarbon-rich saline waters to the surface. This pre-drill evaluation indicates that the natural migration of methane- and salt-rich waters provides a source of geogenic contamination to shallow aquifers prior to shale gas development in the Karoo Basin.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Naturally Occurring versus Anthropogenic Sources of Elevated Molybdenum in Groundwater: Evidence for Geogenic Contamination from Southeast Wisconsin, United States

Jennifer S. Harkness; Thomas H. Darrah; Myles T. Moore; Colin J. Whyte; Paul D. Mathewson; Tyson Cook; Avner Vengosh

Molybdenum (Mo) is an essential trace nutrient but has negative health effects at high concentrations. Groundwater typically has low Mo (<2 μg/L), and elevated levels are associated with anthropogenic contamination, although geogenic sources have also been reported. Coal combustion residues (CCRs) are enriched in Mo, and thus present a potential anthropogenic contamination source. Here, we use diagnostic geochemical tracers combined with groundwater residence time indicators to investigate the sources of Mo in drinking-water wells from shallow aquifers in a region of widespread CCR disposal in southeastern Wisconsin. Samples from drinking-water wells were collected in areas near and away from known CCR disposal sites, and analyzed for Mo and inorganic geochemistry indicators, including boron and strontium isotope ratios, along with groundwater tritium-helium and radiogenic 4He in-growth age-dating techniques. Mo concentrations ranged from <1 to 149 μg/L. Concentrations exceeding the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency health advisory of 40 μg/L were found in deeper, older groundwater (mean residence time >300 y). The B (δ11B = 22.9 ± 3.5‰) and Sr (87Sr/86Sr = 0.70923 ± 0.00024) isotope ratios were not consistent with the expected isotope fingerprints of CCRs, but rather mimic the compositions of local lithologies. The isotope signatures combined with mean groundwater residence times of more than 300 years for groundwater with high Mo concentrations support a geogenic source of Mo to the groundwater, rather than CCR-induced contamination. This study demonstrates the utility of a multi-isotope approach to distinguish between fossil fuel-related and natural sources of groundwater contamination.


Ground Water | 2018

Hydrocarbon-Rich Groundwater above Shale-Gas Formations: A Karoo Basin Case Study

William K. Eymold; Kelley Swana; Myles T. Moore; Colin J. Whyte; Jennifer S. Harkness; Siep Talma; Ricky Murray; Joachim Moortgat; Jodie A. Miller; Avner Vengosh; Thomas H. Darrah

Horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing have enhanced unconventional hydrocarbon recovery but raised environmental concerns related to water quality. Because most basins targeted for shale-gas development in the USA have histories of both active and legacy petroleum extraction, confusion about the hydrogeological context of naturally occurring methane in shallow aquifers overlying shales remains. The Karoo Basin, located in South Africa, provides a near-pristine setting to evaluate these processes, without a history of conventional or unconventional energy extraction. We conducted a comprehensive pre-industrial evaluation of water quality and gas geochemistry in 22 groundwater samples across the Karoo Basin, including dissolved ions, water isotopes, hydrocarbon molecular and isotopic composition, and noble gases. Methane-rich samples were associated with high-salinity, NaCl-type groundwater and elevated levels of ethane, 4 He, and other noble gases produced by radioactive decay. This endmember displayed less negative δ13 C-CH4 and evidence of mixing between thermogenic natural gases and hydrogenotrophic methane. Atmospheric noble gases in the methane-rich samples record a history of fractionation during gas-phase migration from source rocks to shallow aquifers. Conversely, methane-poor samples have a paucity of ethane and 4 He, near saturation levels of atmospheric noble gases, and more negative δ13 C-CH4 ; methane in these samples is biogenic and produced by a mixture of hydrogenotrophic and acetoclastic sources. These geochemical observations are consistent with other basins targeted for unconventional energy extraction in the USA and contribute to a growing data base of naturally occurring methane in shallow aquifers globally, which provide a framework for evaluating environmental concerns related to unconventional energy development (e.g., stray gas).


Ground Water | 2018

Structural and Hydrogeological Controls on Hydrocarbon and Brine Migration into Drinking Water Aquifers in Southern New York

Rebecca L. Kreuzer; Thomas H. Darrah; Benjamin S. Grove; Myles T. Moore; Nathaniel R. Warner; William K. Eymold; Colin J. Whyte; Gautam Mitra; Robert B. Jackson; Avner Vengosh; Robert J. Poreda

Environmental concerns regarding the potential for drinking water contamination in shallow aquifers have accompanied unconventional energy development in the northern Appalachian Basin. These activities have also raised several critical questions about the hydrogeological parameters that control the naturally occurring presence and migration of hydrocarbon gases in shallow aquifers within petroliferous basins. To interrogate these factors, we analyzed the noble gas, dissolved ion, and hydrocarbon gas (molecular and isotopic composition) geochemistry of 98 groundwater samples from south-central New York. All samples were collected ≫1km from unconventional drilling activities and sample locations were intentionally targeted based on their proximity to various types of documented fault systems. In agreement with studies from other petroliferous basins, our results show significant correlations between elevated levels of radiogenic [4 He], thermogenic [CH4 ], and dissolved ions (e.g., Cl, Br, Sr, Ba). In combination, our data suggest that faults have facilitated the transport of exogenous hydrocarbon-rich brines from Devonian source rocks into overlying Upper Devonian aquifer lithologies over geologic time. These data conflict with previous reports, which conclude that hydrodynamic focusing regulates the occurrence of methane and salt in shallow aquifers and leads to elevated levels of these species in restricted flow zones within valley bottoms. Instead, our data suggest that faults in Paleozoic rocks play a fundamental role in gas and brine transport from depth, regulate the distribution of their occurrence in shallow aquifers, and influence the geochemistry of shallow groundwater in this petroliferous basin.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2015

The evolution of Devonian hydrocarbon gases in shallow aquifers of the northern Appalachian Basin: Insights from integrating noble gas and hydrocarbon geochemistry

Thomas H. Darrah; Robert B. Jackson; Avner Vengosh; Nathaniel R. Warner; Colin J. Whyte; Talor B. Walsh; Andrew Kondash; Robert J. Poreda


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2017

The geochemistry of naturally occurring methane and saline groundwater in an area of unconventional shale gas development

Jennifer S. Harkness; Thomas H. Darrah; Nathaniel R. Warner; Colin J. Whyte; Myles T. Moore; Romain Millot; Wolfram Kloppmann; Robert B. Jackson; Avner Vengosh


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2018

Differentiating between biogenic and thermogenic sources of natural gas in coalbed methane reservoirs from the Illinois Basin using noble gas and hydrocarbon geochemistry

Myles T. Moore; David S. Vinson; Colin J. Whyte; William K. Eymold; Talor B. Walsh; Thomas H. Darrah


Archive | 2018

A COMPARISON OF GEOCHEMICAL AND HELIUM ISOTOPE SIGNATURE OF THERMAL FLUIDS, RICO AND DUNTON SPRINGS, SAN JUAN MOUNTAINS, COLORADO

Sara J. Burch; David A. Gonzales; Benjamin D. Holt; Laura J. Crossey; Colin J. Whyte; Karl Karlstrom; Thomas H. Darrah


Archive | 2018

MANTLE-TO-SURFACE NEOTECTONIC CONNECTIONS IN THE SAN JUAN MOUNTAINS DOCUMENTED BY 3HE/4HE, CO2 FLUX MEASUREMENTS, AND HYDROCHEMICAL ANALYSES OF THE GEOTHERMAL SYSTEM

Benjamin D. Holt; Karl Karlstrom; Laura J. Crossey; Thomas H. Darrah; Colin J. Whyte; David A. Gonzales; Sara J. Burch; Jon K. Golla


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Corrigendum to “A reconnaissance analysis of groundwater quality in the Eagle Ford shale region reveals two distinct bromide/chloride populations” [Sci. Total Environ. 575 (2017) 672–680]

Zacariah L. Hildenbrand; Doug D. Carlton; Jesse M. Meik; Josh T. Taylor; Brian E. Fontenot; Jayme L. Walton; Drew Henderson; Jonathan B. Thacker; Stephanie Korlie; Colin J. Whyte; Paul F. Hudak; Kevin A. Schug

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Nathaniel R. Warner

Pennsylvania State University

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Ricky Murray

Defense Information Systems Agency

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