shale gas Article

shale gas summary

Learn about sources of shale gas and its importance to the U.S. natural gas industry

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shale gas, Natural gas obtained from sheetlike formations of sedimentary shale rocks, frequently at depths exceeding 1,500 m (5,000 ft). Over long stretches of geologic time, gas generated from organic matter in the shales migrated into more-permeable rock layers, forming today’s so-called conventional reservoirs—gas deposits that are easily tapped through conventional drilling. However, much gas is still contained in the shale “source rocks,” where it diffuses at an extremely slow rate and must be extracted through unconventional means. The most productive method is usually horizontal drilling through the shale seam, followed by hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, of the rock by the injecting of fluid at extremely high pressure. Horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing of shale gas formations began to be applied to great effect in the U.S. during the 1990s, and these methods radically changed the natural gas market in that country.