Skip to Main Content
Skip Nav Destination
GEOREF RECORD

The rise and fall of early oil field technology; the torsion balance gradiometer

Robin E. Bell and R. O. Hansen
The rise and fall of early oil field technology; the torsion balance gradiometer
Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK) (January 1998) 17 (1): 81-83

Abstract

Today elementary, physics students take for granted such quantities as "big G," the universal gravitational constant. In fact in the late 1700s the value of this quantity was unknown, and the quest to determine it led to some of the earliest geophysical instrumentation. Just after the Revolutionary War in the United States, Cavendish developed the first system to measure the universal gravitational constant, the familiar "big G." Unfortunately, for geologists (at this time still mostly "gentlemen scientists"), this apparatus produced data which were difficult to interpret geologically, and it was far too large and cumbersome for field use. The geologic limitation was that the system only measured the horizontal derivative of a horizontal component of the gravity field, a quantity which by itself is difficult to interpret. Thus no applications of this elegant yet laboratory-bound instrument emerged.


ISSN: 1070-485X
EISSN: 1938-3789
Serial Title: Leading Edge (Tulsa, OK)
Serial Volume: 17
Serial Issue: 1
Title: The rise and fall of early oil field technology; the torsion balance gradiometer
Affiliation: Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, NY, United States
Pages: 81-83
Published: 199801
Text Language: English
Publisher: Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Accession Number: 1998-020719
Categories: Economic geology, geology of energy sourcesApplied geophysics
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sketch map
Secondary Affiliation: Pearson, deRidder and Johnson, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by Society of Exploration Geophysicists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Update Code: 199808
Close Modal

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal