Cores Got to Root Of Kansas Problem

Explosion in Downtown Hutchinson, Kansas

Everyone in downtown Hutchinson, a city of 40,000 in central Kansas, heard or felt the explosion Wednesday morning, Jan. 17, 2001. Natural gas burst from the ground under Woody's Appliance Store and the adjacent Décor Shop, blowing out windows in nearby buildings. Within minutes, the two businesses were ablaze.

That evening, geyser-like fountains of natural gas and brine, some reaching heights of 30 feet, began bubbling up three miles east of the downtown fires. The next day, natural gas, migrating up a long-forgotten brine well, exploded under a mobile home and killed two people.

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Everyone in downtown Hutchinson, a city of 40,000 in central Kansas, heard or felt the explosion Wednesday morning, Jan. 17, 2001. Natural gas burst from the ground under Woody's Appliance Store and the adjacent Décor Shop, blowing out windows in nearby buildings. Within minutes, the two businesses were ablaze.

That evening, geyser-like fountains of natural gas and brine, some reaching heights of 30 feet, began bubbling up three miles east of the downtown fires. The next day, natural gas, migrating up a long-forgotten brine well, exploded under a mobile home and killed two people.

The city ordered hundreds of residents to evacuate homes and businesses, many of whom would not be able to return until the end of March.

The Kansas Geological Survey (KGS) stepped into a situation where demand for answers was great, but information was in short supply. Fortunately, the KGS had cores preserved in its repository from a project the Atomic Energy Commission had conducted in the 1960s to investigate the geology of localities being considered for nuclear storage.

Practically unused for more than 30 years, these cores contained information that could be obtained rapidly — and without the time or risk of drilling into another unknown gas pocket.

Geologists examined these and other cores and samples from wells drilled in the area to get a sense of the potential paths for gas flow through the rock.

Armed with this information, obtained using geoscience data and collections, the KGS gathered new seismic data around the city, from which two anomalous zones of potential high gas pressure were identified. The gas had migrated eight miles from a leaking salt cavern used as an underground natural gas storage facility. This gas was then safely vented.

Over the next two months the Kansas Gas Service consulted with the KGS about possible vent-well locations and additional vent wells were drilled to release pressure. Hutchinson was safe from further gas geysers and gas explosions — and the displaced residents finally could return safely to their homes.

Understanding of the situation was initiated through the KGS' fast action — action that began with core that had been collected for another purpose many years earlier. Having immediate access to critical geoscience data and information played a crucial role in facilitating rapid response to a local crisis.

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