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Microbial Methane Formation from Hard Coal and Timber in an Abandoned Coal Mine

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About 7% of the global annual methane emissions originate from coal mining. Also, mine gas has come into focus of the power industry and is being used increasingly for heat and power production. In many coal deposits worldwide, stable carbon and hydrogen isotopic signatures of methane indicate a mixed thermogenic and biogenic origin. In this study, we have measured in an abandoned coal mine methane fluxes and isotopic signatures of methane and carbon dioxide, and collected samples for microbiological and phylogenetic investigations. Mine timber and hard coal showed an in-situ production of methane with isotopic signatures similar to those of the methane in the mine atmosphere. Enrichment cultures amended with mine timber or hard coal as sole carbon sources formed methane over a period of nine months. Predominantly, acetoclastic methanogenesis was stimulated in enrichments containing acetate or hydrogen/carbon dioxide. Molecular techniques revealed that the archaeal community in enrichment cultures and unamended samples was dominated by members of the Methanosarcinales. The combined geochemical and microbiological investigations identify microbial methanogenesis as a recent source of methane in abandoned coal mines.

Keywords: Coal mine gas; DGGE; diversity; hydrocarbon degradation; methanogenic Archaea; stable isotope fractionation

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR), Stilleweg 2, Hannover, Germany 2: ICBM, University Oldenburg, Oldenburg, Germany

Publication date: 01 September 2008

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