Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the Roumanian Oil-Fields

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charteris A. Stewart
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
208 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1907

Abstract

The following scanty notes on the Roumanian oil-region may serve as an introduction to more detailed future study and description. The Roumanian oil-belt follows the outer edge of the sweep of the Carpathian mountains, and may, in a broad sense, be regarded as a prolongation of the Galician belt. It is distributed over a tract of country from 300 to 400 miles in length, with a width of from 15 to 20 miles, and is believed to cover an area of at least 20,000 hectares (49,420 acres). The governmerit claims that 16,000 to 17,000 hectares of its land is petroliferous. The primary deposits of petroleum arc considered to be in the Paleogene (Oligocene) and the Neogene (the salines of the Miocene) formations. Most of the other repositories, especially those of Muntenie, are only secondary, the petroleum there having been introduced by the orogenic movements which raised the Carpathian mountains. The oil-field has been divided by the Roumanian Survey into two regions, the Flysch and the Sub-carpathian, as is shown in the accompanying sketch-map, Fig. 1. So far as is yet known, practically all the seepages and productive pits and wells are situated on anticlinals. Those which outcrop in the Flysch region (called Paleogene anticlinals), as indicated in the sketch-map, Fig. 1,are : Solontz,
Citation

APA: Charteris A. Stewart  (1907)  Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the Roumanian Oil-Fields

MLA: Charteris A. Stewart Bethlehem Paper - Notes on the Roumanian Oil-Fields. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1907.

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