Underground Gas Storage Effects on Underground Waters

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Douglas Ball
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
17
File Size:
2145 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1960

Abstract

An underground storage field is a gas field where man, not nature, has put all or most of the gas. All but one of those in use today are in the pore spaces or "porosity" of sedimentary rocks, the most common being sandstone. The one exception, near Newcastle, England, is a gas storage in a cavern dissolved from rock salt. The tens of millions of barrels of LPG (liguified petroleum gas) now stored in salt caverns mined in shale is liquid storage, not gas storage, and in this paper I recognize the presence of these installations but do not include them in the gas storage category, Since, with the English exception, gas storages are gas fields, they can all be sorted into the categories used to describe gas fields, 95% of them once gas fields anyway, but some of the remaining 5% are the ones having the greatest effects on underground waters.
Citation

APA: Douglas Ball  (1960)  Underground Gas Storage Effects on Underground Waters

MLA: Douglas Ball Underground Gas Storage Effects on Underground Waters. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1960.

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