--> Abstract: Migration Pathways of Saline Oil Field Wastes at a Surface Storage and Disposal Site in South Louisiana, by J. S. Hanor; #90932 (1998).

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Abstract: Migration Pathways of Saline Oil Field Wastes at a Surface Storage and Disposal Site in South Louisiana

HANOR, Jeffrey S.
Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA

Release of saline wastes into shallow fresh groundwaters at a now-closed commercial oil field waste disposal site in south Louisiana has prompted an investigation into potential engineering problems and geologic features which permitted contaminant transport to occur. Within a few years after the site began operations in 1980-81, salt water contamination was noted in shallow monitoring wells surrounding the disposal units and storage pits. The groundwaters had not only elevated levels of chloride, but also locally high levels of dissolved barium and arsenic. Site operations which appear to have contributed to the release of wastes include the breaching of a brine pit liner during drag-line work and the disposal of some wastes in unlined pits. Once released into the ambient sediments, some contaminated waters travelled laterally outward along the interface between the phreatic and vadose zones and/or vertically downward through jointed clay beds. Other wastes may have travelled down improperly sealed monitoring well boreholes. Observed rates of waste migration have been significantly higher than those predicted from conventional Darcy calculations using measured water levels and assumed average sediment permeabilities. The hydrodynamics of a variablesalinity fluid system cannot be adequately characterized using water level alone as a proxy for hydraulic force.

As a further complexity, data from two independent deep subsurface studies support the conclusion this waste disposal site is situated on an active growth fault. Although present rates of movement on this fault cannot be determined from currently available shallow geologic information, the possibility of fault activity significantly reduces the geologic suitability of this site for surface waste disposal because of the potential for disruption of engineered waste barriers and enhancement of vertical sediment permeability through extension.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90932©1998 GCAGS/GCS-SEPM Meeting, Corpus Christi, Texas