RI 4019 Secondary-Recovery Practices and Oil Reserves in the Eastern Part of the Delaware-Childers Field, Nowata County, Okla.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Kenneth H. Johnston C. H. Riggs
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
97
File Size:
24020 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 1946

Abstract

The application of modern secondary-recovery methods has made possible the the extraction of more than 13 million barrels of crude petroleum from the eastern part of the Delaware-Childers field Nowata County, Okla., over and above the production that might have :been expected by continuing primary production methods, including the use of vacuum. Foremost among the secondary-recovery methods used in this foil was the repressuring of the Bartlesville sand with air and gas through injection wells spaced on sym-metrical patterns. Between 1925 and 1945, about 51 billion cubic feet of air and gas were injected into the producing formation, and the total recovery was increased from, 25 million to about 40 million barrels of oil. To produce as much as possible of the 28 million barrels of recoverable oil remaining in the sand will require the initiation of systematic water-flooding projects on many properties and the continuation of air and gas injection on others.
Citation

APA: Kenneth H. Johnston C. H. Riggs  (1946)  RI 4019 Secondary-Recovery Practices and Oil Reserves in the Eastern Part of the Delaware-Childers Field, Nowata County, Okla.

MLA: Kenneth H. Johnston C. H. Riggs RI 4019 Secondary-Recovery Practices and Oil Reserves in the Eastern Part of the Delaware-Childers Field, Nowata County, Okla.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1946.

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