[1] Veil, John A. et al. 2004. A White Paper Describing Produced Water From Production of Crude Oil, Natural Gas, and Coal Bed Methane. Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago, IL
[2] Gleick, Peter H. 2014. The world’s water: the biennial report on freshwater resources. Volume Eight. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
[3] Coman, Hannah. 2012. Balancing the need for energy and clean water: the case for applying strict liability in hydraulic fracturing suits. Boston College Environmental Law Review 39: 131-160.
[4] Howarth, Robert W., Anthony Ingraffe, and Terry Engelder. 2011. Natural gas: should
fracking stop? Nature 477(7364): 271-275.
[5] Holzman, David C. 2011. Methane found in well water near fracking site Environmental Health Perspectives 119(7): a289.
[6] Hull, Bruce R. 2014. Navigating Wicked Sustainability Conundrums: Pluralism and Boundary Spanning for Wicked Adaptive Problems. Virginia Tech.
[7] Hefner, R.A. III. 2014. The United States of Gas: Why the shale revolution could have happened only in America. Council on Foreign Relations.
[8] Slatin, Craig, Levenstein, Charles. 2013. An Energy Policy that Provides Clean and Green Power. New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy
[9] Drouin, Roger Real. 2014. On Fracking Front, A Push To Reduce Leaks of Methane. Environment 360. Yale University
[10] Biello, David. 2010. Green Energy’s Big Challenge: The Daunting Task of Scaling Up. Yale Environment 360.
[11] Finewood, Michael H. and Laura J. Stroup. 2012. Fracking and the neoliberaliztion of the hydro-social cycle in Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale. Journal of Contemporary Water Research and Education 147(1): 72-79.
[12] Comparing electricity generation systems (for coal vs. natural gas section)
Gagnon, L., C. Bélanger, and Y. Uchiyama. 2002. Life-cycle assessment of electricity generation options: the status of research in year 2001. Energy Policy 30(14):1267-1278.
[13] Finkel, Madelon L. and Adam Law. 2011. The rush to drill for natural gas: a public health cautionary tale. American Journal of Public Health. 101(5):784-785.
[14] Cooley, Heather and Kristina Donnelly. 2012. Hydraulic Fracturing and Water Resources: Separating the Frack from the Fiction. Pacific Institute, Oakland, California.
[15] International Energy Agency. 2014. About coal.
[16] Christopherson, Susan and Ned Rightor. 2011. How Should We Think About the Economic Consequences of Shale Gas Drilling? Working Paper Series: Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
[17] Hughes, J. D. 2012. Shale Gas and Tight Oil; a Panacea for the Energy Woes of America? American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2012
[18] Riley, Alan. 2012. The Shale Revolution's Shifting Geopolitics. The New York Times, New York, New York
[19] Pierce, Richard J. Jr. 2013. Natural Gas Fracking Addresses All of Our Major Problems. Journal of Energy and Environmental Law
[20] Olsen, Lise. 2014. As fracking grows, so does the number of oil-field worker deaths. The Houston Chronicle.
[21] Jackson, Robert B., Avner Vengosh, Thomas H. Darrah, Nathaniel R. Warner, Adriad Down, Robert J. Poreda, Stephen G. Osborn, Kaiguang Zhao, and Jonathan D. Karr. 2013. Increased stray gas abundance in a subset of drinking water wells near Marcellus shale gas extraction. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110(28): 11250-11255.
[22] America's Power. 2014. American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity.
[23] Rafferty, Margaret A. and Elena Limonik. 2013. Is shale gas drilling an energy solution or public health crisis? Public Health Nursing 30(5): 454-462.
[24] Nicot, Jean-Phillipe and Bridget R. Scanlon. 2012. Water use for shale-gas production in Texas, U.S. Environmental Science Technology 46(6): 3580-3586
[25] Lomborg, Bjørn. 2012. A Fracking Good Story. Project Syndicate.
[26] Ruskin, A. William. Shale oil and gas development: the stakeholder perspective. Epstein Becker and Green, P.C. New York, New York.
[27] Brown, Jason P. 2014. Production of Natural Gas from Shale in Local Economies: A Resource Blessing or Curse?. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Review
[28] Boudet, Hilary, et al. 2014. Fracking" Controversy and Communication: Using National Survey Data to Understand Public Perceptions of Hydraulic Fracturing. Energy Policy 65
[29] Hughes, J. D. 2012. Shale Gas and Tight Oil; a Panacea for the Energy Woes of America?. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2012
[29] Christopherson, Susan, Rightor Ned. 2011. How Should We Think About the Economic
Consequences of Shale Gas Drilling?. Working Paper Series. Cornell University
[30] Deller, Steven C., Schreiber, Andrew. 2012. Frac Sand Mining and Community Economic Development. University of Wisconsin, Agricultural and Applied Economics, Staff Paper Series
[31] Halliburton. 2014. Hydraulic Fracturing 101.
[32] America’s Natural Gas Alliance. 2014. Think About It.
[2] Gleick, Peter H. 2014. The world’s water: the biennial report on freshwater resources. Volume Eight. Island Press, Washington, D.C.
[3] Coman, Hannah. 2012. Balancing the need for energy and clean water: the case for applying strict liability in hydraulic fracturing suits. Boston College Environmental Law Review 39: 131-160.
[4] Howarth, Robert W., Anthony Ingraffe, and Terry Engelder. 2011. Natural gas: should
fracking stop? Nature 477(7364): 271-275.
[5] Holzman, David C. 2011. Methane found in well water near fracking site Environmental Health Perspectives 119(7): a289.
[6] Hull, Bruce R. 2014. Navigating Wicked Sustainability Conundrums: Pluralism and Boundary Spanning for Wicked Adaptive Problems. Virginia Tech.
[7] Hefner, R.A. III. 2014. The United States of Gas: Why the shale revolution could have happened only in America. Council on Foreign Relations.
[8] Slatin, Craig, Levenstein, Charles. 2013. An Energy Policy that Provides Clean and Green Power. New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy
[9] Drouin, Roger Real. 2014. On Fracking Front, A Push To Reduce Leaks of Methane. Environment 360. Yale University
[10] Biello, David. 2010. Green Energy’s Big Challenge: The Daunting Task of Scaling Up. Yale Environment 360.
[11] Finewood, Michael H. and Laura J. Stroup. 2012. Fracking and the neoliberaliztion of the hydro-social cycle in Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale. Journal of Contemporary Water Research and Education 147(1): 72-79.
[12] Comparing electricity generation systems (for coal vs. natural gas section)
Gagnon, L., C. Bélanger, and Y. Uchiyama. 2002. Life-cycle assessment of electricity generation options: the status of research in year 2001. Energy Policy 30(14):1267-1278.
[13] Finkel, Madelon L. and Adam Law. 2011. The rush to drill for natural gas: a public health cautionary tale. American Journal of Public Health. 101(5):784-785.
[14] Cooley, Heather and Kristina Donnelly. 2012. Hydraulic Fracturing and Water Resources: Separating the Frack from the Fiction. Pacific Institute, Oakland, California.
[15] International Energy Agency. 2014. About coal.
[16] Christopherson, Susan and Ned Rightor. 2011. How Should We Think About the Economic Consequences of Shale Gas Drilling? Working Paper Series: Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
[17] Hughes, J. D. 2012. Shale Gas and Tight Oil; a Panacea for the Energy Woes of America? American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2012
[18] Riley, Alan. 2012. The Shale Revolution's Shifting Geopolitics. The New York Times, New York, New York
[19] Pierce, Richard J. Jr. 2013. Natural Gas Fracking Addresses All of Our Major Problems. Journal of Energy and Environmental Law
[20] Olsen, Lise. 2014. As fracking grows, so does the number of oil-field worker deaths. The Houston Chronicle.
[21] Jackson, Robert B., Avner Vengosh, Thomas H. Darrah, Nathaniel R. Warner, Adriad Down, Robert J. Poreda, Stephen G. Osborn, Kaiguang Zhao, and Jonathan D. Karr. 2013. Increased stray gas abundance in a subset of drinking water wells near Marcellus shale gas extraction. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110(28): 11250-11255.
[22] America's Power. 2014. American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity.
[23] Rafferty, Margaret A. and Elena Limonik. 2013. Is shale gas drilling an energy solution or public health crisis? Public Health Nursing 30(5): 454-462.
[24] Nicot, Jean-Phillipe and Bridget R. Scanlon. 2012. Water use for shale-gas production in Texas, U.S. Environmental Science Technology 46(6): 3580-3586
[25] Lomborg, Bjørn. 2012. A Fracking Good Story. Project Syndicate.
[26] Ruskin, A. William. Shale oil and gas development: the stakeholder perspective. Epstein Becker and Green, P.C. New York, New York.
[27] Brown, Jason P. 2014. Production of Natural Gas from Shale in Local Economies: A Resource Blessing or Curse?. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Review
[28] Boudet, Hilary, et al. 2014. Fracking" Controversy and Communication: Using National Survey Data to Understand Public Perceptions of Hydraulic Fracturing. Energy Policy 65
[29] Hughes, J. D. 2012. Shale Gas and Tight Oil; a Panacea for the Energy Woes of America?. American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2012
[29] Christopherson, Susan, Rightor Ned. 2011. How Should We Think About the Economic
Consequences of Shale Gas Drilling?. Working Paper Series. Cornell University
[30] Deller, Steven C., Schreiber, Andrew. 2012. Frac Sand Mining and Community Economic Development. University of Wisconsin, Agricultural and Applied Economics, Staff Paper Series
[31] Halliburton. 2014. Hydraulic Fracturing 101.
[32] America’s Natural Gas Alliance. 2014. Think About It.