RI 3906 History of Water Flooding of Oil Sands in North TX

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Peter Grandstone D. A. Jessup D. B. Taliaferro
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
160
File Size:
9417 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 1, 1946

Abstract

"INTRODUCTION Water flooding of oil sands in Texas as a means of secondary recovery of oil has been practiced mainly in the north-central part of the State, which includes the old shallow fields in eight counties, extending south through Wichita and Clay Counties on the Red River into Brown County.The Texas Railroad Commission, is empowered ""to promote conservation and prevent waste in the drilling, completion, operation, and abandonment of oil wells"" and ""to issue regulations necessary for fulfillment of these ends,"" granted The Texas Co. the first permit to inject water into the oil-bearing sand on December 7, 1935. The permit was granted after the Commission had conducted a number of hearings, which were attended by many operators interested in that method of secondary recovery. Through December 31, 1944, the Commission had granted 50 permits for water flooding. Of that number, 45 permits were issued for projects in north Texas, the remaining 14 being distributed throughout west and south Texas. By the end of 1944, there were 33 active and 5 abandoned water-flooding projects in the North Texas area, as is in figure I.Oil production in the North Texas area started in 1904 from the shallow sands (ranging from 100 feet to 800 feet in depth) of the Petrolia (or Henrietta) field in northern Clay County. Development was rapid and unrestricted during the boom period from about 1911 to 1918, and considerable waste of both produced oil and reservoir energy resulted."
Citation

APA: Peter Grandstone D. A. Jessup D. B. Taliaferro  (1946)  RI 3906 History of Water Flooding of Oil Sands in North TX

MLA: Peter Grandstone D. A. Jessup D. B. Taliaferro RI 3906 History of Water Flooding of Oil Sands in North TX. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1946.

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