Production - Foreign - Search for Oil in Great Britain - by D’Arcy Exploration Company Ltd. - Received through the courtesy of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., Ltd., London, England. Manuscript received at the office of the Institute Fe

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 315 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1937
Abstract
The D'Arcy Exploration Company Ltd. has been granted prospecting licenses in Great Britain to explore four different types of prospect. In the south of England (Dorset, Hampshire and Sussex) the objective lies in Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous beds. In an area of approximately 4470 sq. miles, covering parts of Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire and Yorkshire, the search is directed to testing Carboniferous rocks. In northeastern Yorkshire a single license covers structures in which the Permian limestone will be explored. In Scotland, southeast of Edinburgh, the company holds another single license where Lower Carboniferous horizons are the objective. Southern England Among the more important "indications" that led D'Arcy Explora-tion Company Ltd. to undertake a testing program in southern England was the discovery of sands in the Wealden (Lower Cretaceous) series of Dorset, impregnated with oil residues. Traces of oil and bitumen were also found in limestones of the Portland and Purbeck beds of the same area. In addition, traces of petroleum had been recorded from Upper and Lower Jurassic beds in borings, more especially those drilled in the course of coal exploration in Kent and Sussex, and an outcropping oil sand was known to occur in Wealden beds near Pevensey in Sussex. Besides these tangible proofs that at least some oil has been generated in this area, _the Jurassic beds, as developed at outcrop in Dorset and elsewhere, include considerable thicknesses of strata that may well be considered as possible source rocks of petroleum. A regional view suggested that these possible source rocks extended, without great thinning, beneath at least the southerly parts of the Weald of Sussex, the South Downs and still farther south beneath the English Channel. It appeared, and still appears, a reasonable conclusion that, where suitable structural conditions occur in this tract of country, an oil accumulation of commercial value may be found. Of the several possible anticlinal structures, those at Portsdown (Hampshire) and between Henfield and Steyning (Sussex) were selected as sites for the first test wells. The groups of strata which at outcrop sug-
Citation
APA: (1937) Production - Foreign - Search for Oil in Great Britain - by D’Arcy Exploration Company Ltd. - Received through the courtesy of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., Ltd., London, England. Manuscript received at the office of the Institute Fe
MLA: Production - Foreign - Search for Oil in Great Britain - by D’Arcy Exploration Company Ltd. - Received through the courtesy of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., Ltd., London, England. Manuscript received at the office of the Institute Fe. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1937.