ABSTRACT
Exploratory drilling increased 12% and field well drilling increased by 27% during 1954. The increase in field well drilling was due to the rapid development of several important discoveries made during 1953.
Twenty-three discoveries were made: 14 of these were new-field wildcats, 3 shallower-pool, and 6 deeper-pool. Of this total, 14 were completed as oil wells and 9 as gas wells.
New production was limited to the Cretaceous section. New-pool discoveries were made in the Neches, Cornersville, Red Lake, Elkhart, Kildare, Willow Springs, Ham-Gossett, South Dome-Buffalo, and East Texas fields.
Geophysical exploration decreased by 2% over the previous year. Seismic, gravity, magnetometer, and core-drill work accounted for 1,398 crew-weeks.
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