Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Ten Years' Application of Compressed Air at Hamilton Corners Pa., with Core Studies of the Producing Sand (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. R. Fettke
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
15
File Size:
736 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1928

Abstract

In 1914, the officials of the Brundred Oil Corpn., faced with the problem of introducing new methods to increase production in the old and nearly depleted pools of Venango County, became interested in the Smith-Dunn (Marietta) process which was at that time being tried out in southeastern Ohio and which was already yielding very encouraging results. A license to use the process in Pennsylvania was secured from the owners of the patents. These patents were later declared invalid. The method was first used in Pennsylvania on a property consisting of about 434 acres, of which 300 are productive, at Hamilton Corners, 15 miles northwest of Oil City, in Cherry Tree and Oakland Townships, Venango County. The producing horizon is the First Sand of the Venango Group. A small oil pool was opened up in this vicinity in 1904. By July, 1916, when the compressed air was first introduced to restore pressure, the production had dropped to a point where it was no longer possible to continue profitable operation. From that time until March, 1927, over 100,000 bbl. of oil have been recovered from the tract. The property is being operated at present by the Brundred Oil Corpn. and LUX. The 1926 production, amounting to 10,650 bbl., was only 400 bbl. short of the maximum reached during any year of the 10-year period that the process has been in operation. Inasmuch as the Hamilton Corners pool is the first one in Pennsylvania in which the Marietta process was tried out, and the one in which it has been longest in continuous operation, considerable interest attaches to the results obtained. Through the courtesy of H. D. Brown and W. J. Brundred, officials of the Brundred Oil Corpn., all their data on this operation were made available to the writer in connection with an investigation of rejuvenation methods in the State for the Pennsylvania Geological Survey. Stratigraphic Position of the Producing Sand The producing sand at Hamilton Corners is encountered at depths of from 364 to 560 ft., depending on the location of the well and the topog-
Citation

APA: C. R. Fettke  (1928)  Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Ten Years' Application of Compressed Air at Hamilton Corners Pa., with Core Studies of the Producing Sand (with Discussion)

MLA: C. R. Fettke Increasing the Extraction of Oil - Ten Years' Application of Compressed Air at Hamilton Corners Pa., with Core Studies of the Producing Sand (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1928.

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