Production Engineering - Core Studies of the Bradford Sand from the Bradford Field, Pennsylvania (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles H. Fettke
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
19
File Size:
1118 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1929

Abstract

The Bradford field of northwestern Pennsylvania and adjacent portions of New York state has attracted world-wide attention in recent years on account of the remarkable success that has been attained in the application of water-flooding as a means of increasing the extraction of oil from a pool that had almost reached the economic limit by ordinary production methods. It is one of the few large oil fields in which artificially conducted water drives have thus far proved successful, although many attempts have been made to apply them elsewhere. As detailed a knowledge as possible of the character of the producing sand in this field is therefore of considerable interest, not only from a scientific but also from a practical standpoint. Outside the Bradford field, such knowledge should aid operators in determining whether or not their sands are amenable to flooding. In the Bradford field itself flooding operations are not uniformly successful over the approximately 85,000 acres of productive area, due in many instances primarily to variations in sand conditions. A knowledge of just what these variations are would often be a great aid in overcoming the difficulties, or else would save considerable sums of money which might otherwise be wasted in experimenting in areas where the chances of success are very small. Realizing that more precise information in regard to the nature of the reservoir rock was essential to improvements in the methods of oil recovery, the Northwestern Pennsylvania Oil Producers Assn., by private subscription of its members, took a core of the Bradford sand from a well 1/2 mile west of Custer City, Pa., during the spring of 1925. The Forest Oil Co. also took a core of the same sand from a well about 8 miles east of Bradford at that time. The cores were submitted to the United States Geological Survey for study and A. F. Melcherl has published the results of porosity determinations on the Custer City core.
Citation

APA: Charles H. Fettke  (1929)  Production Engineering - Core Studies of the Bradford Sand from the Bradford Field, Pennsylvania (With Discussion)

MLA: Charles H. Fettke Production Engineering - Core Studies of the Bradford Sand from the Bradford Field, Pennsylvania (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1929.

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