4.5 Article

Relating subsurface temperature changes to microbial activity at a crude oil-contaminated site

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONTAMINANT HYDROLOGY
Volume 182, Issue -, Pages 183-193

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jconhyd.2015.09.007

Keywords

Microbial biodegradation; Heat; Temperature; Groundwater; Unsaturated zone; Crude oil

Funding

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology Program
  2. National Research Program
  3. National Crude Oil Spill Fate
  4. Natural Attenuation Research Site
  5. collaborative venture of the U.S. Geological Survey
  6. Enbridge Energy Limited Partnership
  7. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
  8. Beltrami County, Minnesota

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Crude oil at a spill site near Bemidji, Minnesota has been undergoing aerobic and anaerobic biodegradation for over 30 years, creating a 150-200 m plume of primary and secondary contaminants. Microbial degradation generates heat that should be measurable under the right conditions. To measure this heat, thermistors were installed in wells in the saturated zone and in water-filled monitoring tubes in the unsaturated zone. In the saturated zone, a thermal groundwater plume originates near the residual oil body with temperatures ranging from 2.9 degrees C above background near the oil to 1.2 degrees C down gradient. Temperatures in the unsaturated zone above the oil body were up to 2.7 degrees C more than background temperatures. Previous work at this site has shown that methane produced from biodegradation of the oil migrates upward and is oxidized in a methanotrophic zone midway between the water table and the surface. Enthalpy calculations and observations demonstrate that the temperature increases primarily result from aerobic methane oxidation in the unsaturated zone above the oil. Methane oxidation rates at the site independently estimated from surface CO2 efflux data are comparable to rates estimated from the observed temperature increases. The results indicate that temperature may be useful as a lowcost measure of activity but care is required to account for the correct heat-generating reactions, other heat sources and the effects of focused recharge. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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