RI 4831 A Survey Of Oil Production In Oklahoma By Water Flooding Part I. Nowata, Rogers, And Craig Counties

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John P. Powell
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
199
File Size:
70284 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1952

Abstract

The increasing demands for petroleum and its products and the steadily increasing cost of discovering and developing new oil fields are factors that emphasize the importance of increasing the recovery of oil from known petroleum reserves. Water flooding is a valuable conservation measure, not only preventing premature abandonment of stripper leases but also reviving interest in many areas previously abandoned. The use of water flooding as a means for recovering additional oil from partly depleted oil-bearing formations was first tried in Oklahoma in 1931. Early water-flooding operations were confined to the area of shallow Bartlesville-sand formations in Nowata and Rogers Counties, where many of the projects were outstandingly successful. The results of these operations stimulated activities in other pools in Oklahoma, and by the end of 1949 water flooding had been tried in 25 of the 49 oil-producing counties in the State (fig. 1). Approximately 33 million barrels of oil, or 1,806 barrels per acre, had been recovered by December 31, 1949, from 18,221 productive acres included in the 162 active and abandoned projects in Oklahoma by injection of approximately 449 million barrels of water.
Citation

APA: John P. Powell  (1952)  RI 4831 A Survey Of Oil Production In Oklahoma By Water Flooding Part I. Nowata, Rogers, And Craig Counties

MLA: John P. Powell RI 4831 A Survey Of Oil Production In Oklahoma By Water Flooding Part I. Nowata, Rogers, And Craig Counties. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.

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