Repository for Oil and Gas Energy Research (ROGER)

The Repository for Oil and Gas Energy Research, or ROGER, is a near-exhaustive collection of bibliographic information, abstracts, and links to many of journal articles that pertain to shale and tight gas development. The goal of this project is to create a single repository for unconventional oil and gas-related research as a resource for academic, scientific, and citizen researchers.

ROGER currently includes 2303 studies.
Last updated: September 01, 2024

ROGER

Search ROGER

Use keywords or categories (e.g., air quality, climate, health) to identify peer-reviewed studies and view study abstracts.

Initial study of potential surface water quality impacts of horizontal drilling in the Marcellus shale
Hopkinson et al., March 2016
Effect of Different Sampling Methodologies on Measured Methane Concentrations in Groundwater Samples
Molofsky et al., March 2016
Elucidating hydraulic fracturing impacts on groundwater quality using a regional geospatial statistical modeling approach
Burton et al., March 2016
The impact of commercially treated oil and gas produced water discharges on bromide concentrations and modeled brominated trihalomethane disinfection byproducts at two downstream municipal drinking water plants in the upper Allegheny River, Pennsylvania, USA
Landis et al., January 2016
Occurrence and origin of methane in groundwater in Alberta (Canada): Gas geochemical and isotopic approaches
Humez et al., January 2016
Potential influence of drill cuttings landfill on groundwater quality—comparison of leaching tests results and groundwater composition
Kujawska et al., January 2016
An analysis of the challenges for groundwater governance during shale gas development in South Africa
Pietersen et al., January 2016
Methane occurrence is associated with sodium-rich valley waters in domestic wells overlying the Marcellus shale in New York State
Christian et al., January 2016
A review on risk assessment techniques for hydraulic fracturing water and produced water management implemented in onshore unconventional oil and gas production
Torres et al., January 2016
Concurrence of aqueous and gas phase contamination of groundwater in the Wattenberg oil and gas field of northern Colorado
Li et al., January 2016
Shifts in microbial community structure and function in surface waters impacted by unconventional oil and gas wastewater revealed by metagenomics
Fahrenfeld et al., September 2024
Fractured knowledge: Mapping the gaps in public and private water monitoring efforts in areas affected by shale gas development
Kinchy et al., December 2015
Baseline groundwater quality in unconventional oil and gas fields
Audrey D. Levine and Mark J. Benotti, December 2015
The evolution of Devonian hydrocarbon gases in shallow aquifers of the northern Appalachian Basin: Insights from integrating noble gas and hydrocarbon geochemistry
Darrah et al., December 2015
Pre-drilling water-quality data of groundwater prior to shale gas drilling in the Appalachian Basin: Analysis of the Chesapeake Energy Corporation dataset
Siegel et al., December 2015
Impacts of hydraulic fracturing on water quality: a review of literature, regulatory frameworks and an analysis of information gaps
Gagnon et al., November 2015
The relationship between methane migration and shale-gas well operations near Dimock, Pennsylvania, USA
Patrick A. Hammond, November 2015
Metal content in the waters of the upper Sanna River catchment (SE Poland): condition associated with drilling of a shale gas exploration wellbore
Chabudzinski et al., November 2015
Numerical simulations of vertical growth of hydraulic fractures and brine migration in geological formations above the Marcellus shale
Myshakin et al., November 2015
Elevated levels of diesel range organic compounds in groundwater near Marcellus gas operations are derived from surface activities
Drollette et al., October 2015
Stream primary producers relate positively to watershed natural gas measures in north-central Arkansas streams
Austin et al., October 2015
Application of ICP-OES for evaluating energy extraction and production wastewater discharge impacts on surface waters in Western Pennsylvania
Pancras et al., October 2015
Stream Vulnerability to Widespread and Emergent Stressors: A Focus on Unconventional Oil and Gas
Entrekin et al., September 2015
Hydraulic fracturing fluid migration in the subsurface: A review and expanded modeling results
Birdsell et al., September 2015
Establishing baseline water quality for household wells within the Marcellus Shale gas region, Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Amy L. Rhodes and Nicholas J. Horton, September 2015
Iodine as a sensitive tracer for detecting influence of organic-rich shale in shallow groundwater
Lu et al., September 2015
Identification and quantification of regional brine and road salt sources in watersheds along the New York/Pennsylvania border, USA
Johnson et al., September 2015
Pre-drilling background groundwater quality in the Deep River Triassic Basin of central North Carolina, USA
Down et al., September 2015
Modeling of Methane Migration in Shallow Aquifers from Shale Gas Well Drilling
Liwei Zhang and Daniel J. Soeder, August 2015
The Depths of Hydraulic Fracturing and Accompanying Water Use Across the United States
Jackson et al., July 2015
Detection of water contamination from hydraulic fracturing wastewater: a μPAD for bromide analysis in natural waters
Loh et al., July 2015
Shale gas operator violations in the Marcellus and what they tell us about water resource risks
Rahm et al., July 2015
A Comprehensive Analysis of Groundwater Quality in The Barnett Shale Region
Hildenbrand et al., June 2015
Stream macroinvertebrate communities across a gradient of natural gas development in the Fayetteville Shale
Johnson et al., June 2015
Numerical investigation of methane and formation fluid leakage along the casing of a decommissioned shale gas well
Nowamooz et al., June 2015
Identification of local groundwater pollution in northeastern Pennsylvania: Marcellus flowback or not?
Reilly et al., June 2015
Evaluating a groundwater supply contamination incident attributed to Marcellus Shale gas development
Llewellyn et al., May 2015
Soil disturbance as a driver of increased stream salinity in a semiarid watershed undergoing energy development
Bern et al., May 2015
Effective Permeabilities of Abandoned Oil and Gas Wells: Analysis of Data from Pennsylvania
Kang et al., April 2015
Stream Measurements Locate Thermogenic Methane Fluxes in Groundwater Discharge in an Area of Shale-Gas Development
Heilweil et al., April 2015
Numerical simulation of the environmental impact of hydraulic fracturing of tight/shale gas reservoirs on near-surface groundwater: Background, base cases, shallow reservoirs, short-term gas, and water transport
Reagan et al., April 2015
Monitoring radionuclides in subsurface drinking water sources near unconventional drilling operations: a pilot study
Nelson et al., April 2015
Methane Concentrations in Water Wells Unrelated to Proximity to Existing Oil and Gas Wells in Northeastern Pennsylvania
Siegel et al., March 2015
Methane baseline concentrations and sources in shallow aquifers from the shale gas-prone region of the St. Lawrence Lowlands (Quebec, Canada)
Moritz et al., March 2015
Well water contamination in a rural community in southwestern Pennsylvania near unconventional shale gas extraction
Alawattegama et al., March 2015
Marcellus and mercury: Assessing potential impacts of unconventional natural gas extraction on aquatic ecosystems in northwestern Pennsylvania
Grant et al., March 2015
Groundwater protection in shale gas exploration areas - a Polish perspective
E. Krogulec and K. Sawicka, March 2015
The effect of long-term regional pumping on hydrochemistry and dissolved gas content in an undeveloped shale-gas-bearing aquifer in southwestern Ontario, Canada
Hamilton et al., February 2015
Drinking water while fracking: now and in the future
Susan L. Brantley, January 1970
Assessment of surface water chloride and conductivity trends in areas of unconventional oil and gas development—Why existing national data sets cannot tell us what we would like to know
Bowen et al., January 2015

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