Bulletin 163 Methods of Shutting Off Water in Oil and Gas Wells

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 136
- File Size:
- 88154 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1918
Abstract
This bulletin deals with a topic that is exceedingly wide, and will
doubtl~ be under consideration and discussion so long as there are
enough known deposits of oil and gas remaining in the earth to
make their revelopment profitable. The Bureau of Mines has repeatedly
called attention to the importance of protecting oil or gas
sands from the encroachment of water, and the purpose of this paper
is to summarize existing knowledge of methods and devices.
Water may gain access to an oil-bearing formation from several
sources-from water sands above or below those. containing the oil,
or by encroaching through the oil sands as the oil is withdrawn. In
short, it may enter a well from the "top, bottom, or side." Such ingress
of water is a most serious detriment to the recovery of oil from
the ground.
As the art of drilling and developing oil properties has progressed,
increasing thought, labor, and money have been expended on various
methods, devices, and equipment for arresting the migration of water
from its normal subsurface position into the porous strata containing
valuable oil or gas accumulations.
At an early stage in the oil-field development of California, it became
evident that considerable modification of accepted drilling
practices was necessary in order to meet the conditions imposed by
the poorly consolidated shale, clay, sand, and bowlder beds penetrated,
as well as the hard layers of sandstone and calcareous shale,
which vary greatly in thickness, hardness, and frequency. These
hard streaks are commonly called " shell," and are so reported in the
well logs. As deeper and deeper territory was prospected, drillers
from the older fields of the Ea,st, as well as from Texas and Louisiana
fields, took part in the operations. Xhe practice evolved was thus
based on the wide experience of a most cosmopolitan group of men
who, considered as a group, were not hampered by being limited to
the knowledge of the practice at any one locality.
Citation
APA:
(1918) Bulletin 163 Methods of Shutting Off Water in Oil and Gas WellsMLA: Bulletin 163 Methods of Shutting Off Water in Oil and Gas Wells. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1918.