RI 4991 Water Flooding In The Oil Fields Of Anderson, Franklin, Linn, And Miami Counties, Kans. ? Introduction And Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 147
- File Size:
- 61266 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1953
Abstract
The increased costs of exploration and drilling of new oil fields and the continued success of water flooding in nearly depleted oil fields have created a demand for information on the results obtained from individual projects. The Bureau of Mines has published several reports concerning water-flood activity in the Mid continent area and at the request of the industry has continued to collect and disseminate this information. This report was written in response to these requests. It describes in detail the water-flooding projects in Anderson, Franklin, Linn, and Miami Counties, Kans., and includes methods of water treating and the results obtained. The production histories of each county and many water-flood projects are shown graphically from the date of the first development. Maps of most of the major projects, showing their status as of January 1, 1953 are presented also. The practice of injecting water to stimulate oil production was legalized in Kansas in 1935, and the first water-flooding project authorized in this four-county area was initiated by the Texas Co. in December 1935 in Linn County, Forty-nine projects2/ initiated in the area to January 1953 are estimated to have recovered approximately 10 million barrels of oil that could not have been produced by methods used previously. About 7,900 productive acres had been, or are, flooded by these projects, and approximately 1.36 million barrels of water had been injected.
Citation
APA:
(1953) RI 4991 Water Flooding In The Oil Fields Of Anderson, Franklin, Linn, And Miami Counties, Kans. ? Introduction And SummaryMLA: RI 4991 Water Flooding In The Oil Fields Of Anderson, Franklin, Linn, And Miami Counties, Kans. ? Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1953.