A Fracking First in Pennsylvania: Cattle Quarantine

FrackPop Rank:
272
Order:
64
About:
Original Publication Date:
2010-07-02
Posted:
Tue 24 Aug 2010 06.23 EDT
Re-published/Updated:
Publication Type:
Source:
ProPublica (2010)
A Fracking First in Pennsylvania: Cattle Quarantine

/app/uploads/frack_files/propublica.png

Agriculture officials have quarantined 28 beef cattle on a Pennsylvania farm after wastewater from a nearby gas well leaked into a field and came in contact with the animals.

The state Department of Agriculture said the action was its first livestock quarantine related to pollution from natural gas drilling. Although the quarantine was ordered in May, it was announced Thursday.

Carol Johnson, who along with her husband owns the farm in north-central Pennsylvania, said she noticed in early May that fluids pooling in her pasture had killed the grass. She immediately notified the well owner, East Resources Inc.

“You could smell it. The grass was dying,” she said. “Something was leaking besides ground water.”

The Johnsons’ farm sits atop the Marcellus Shale, a layer of rock that lies under swaths of West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York and Ohio. As ProPublica has reported, reports have proliferated of groundwater pollution, spills and other impacts of hydraulic fracturing, a drilling technique that injects massive amounts of water, sand and chemicals underground to break up the formations that hold the gas.

See: Appalachia | Shell (formerly East Resources)

See: ecorp USA

See: Talisman Energy USA Inc. – Home

p>See: PA Gas Rush

See: New York Land For Lease For Natural Gas Exploration

See: Heartbreaking Stories Warn New Yorkers of What May Be in Store if the State OKs Controversial Gas Drilling

See: ecorp USA

See: Talisman Energy USA Inc. – Home

Item added to cart.
0 items - $0.00