“…These elevated gas concentrations may pose a threat to public safety from explosions, groundwater contamination, and impaired air quality (Chilingar & Endres, ; Eltschlager et al, ; Vidic et al, ). Sources of methane in groundwater commonly include the accumulation of methane from in situ microbial production, for example, (Beeman & Suflita, ; Humez, Mayer, Nightingale, et al, ) or the migration of thermogenic oil field gases toward the surface along faults or as a result of well‐integrity failure in poorly completed or abandoned oil wells, for example (Breen et al, ). Incidents related to gas seeps and gas migration from oil field operations or storage facilities have resulted in methane gas release, explosions, loss of life, and extensive damage to property, including the 24 March 1985 Ross Department Store explosion in the Fairfax district of Los Angeles California (Chilingar & Endres, ; Jenden, ; Schoell et al, ) and the 17 January 2001 explosion and fires that destroyed most of downtown Hutchinson Kansas (Allison, ), and in 2013, a water well in Hawthorne, CA, began leaking water and methane, requiring the evacuation of 37 nearby homes, and the shutdown of the surrounding freeways, before it was plugged (Jennings, ).…”