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GEOREF RECORD

Developments in North and west-central Texas in 1947

John H. Stovall, Leslie W. Dorbandt and Walter L. Ammon
Developments in North and west-central Texas in 1947
Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (June 1948) 32 (6): 988-996

Abstract

The North and West-Central Texas district reported 144 discoveries during 1947, including 50 new-field wildcats, 39 new-pool wildcats, 25 extensions, 24 deeper pool tests, and 6 shallower pay tests. This is comparable with a total of 102 discoveries reported during the preceding year. In 1947, 2,979 wells were drilled, of which 835 were classified as exploratory. This is comparable with a total of 3,007 wells drilled during 1946, of which 653 were exploratory. A total of 62,127,399 barrels of oil were produced in the district during 1947, as compared with a total of 57,840,000 barrels for 1946. This is an increase of 4,287,399 barrels. Wichita County continued as leading producer, although its production dropped to 10,894,984 barrels in 1947 from a total of 11,946,000 barrels in 1946. The more important discoveries and developments of 1947 were: (1) continued discovery of new Caddo and Mississippian fields in Throckmorton and southern Young counties by subsurface geology and the seismograph, (2) the Acme or Mobley field in west-central Clay County, (3) the Bryant-Simpson field and Joy field extensions in Clay County, (4) the North Chalk Hills field in central Archer County, (5) the Lewis-Stuart field in Montague County, (6) the Standard of Texas' Covey-Bates No. 1 Strawn discovery in Grayson County, (7) the Cities Service's B. O. Manning No. 1 in northeastern Wise County, (8) Ellenburger fields in Callahan County, (9) the Round Top field in northeastern Fisher County, (10) Cisco production in Jones and Taylor counties, (11) renewed activity in the Bolivar field area in northwestern Denton County, (12) The Texas Company's Benson No. 1 and Continental's Gronow No. 1 Strawn discoveries in Montague County. The 144 discoveries and extensions were as follows: 2 from the Permian, 25 from the Cisco, 8 from the Canyon, 69 from the Strawn, 16 from the Bend, 13 from the Mississippian, and 11 from the Ordovician. The most successful exploratory methods in this district continued to be subsurface and the seismograph, or the combined use of these two methods.


ISSN: 0883-9247
Serial Title: Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists
Serial Volume: 32
Serial Issue: 6
Title: Developments in North and west-central Texas in 1947
Pages: 988-996
Published: 19480601
Text Language: English
Publisher: American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Accession Number: 2020-011441
Categories: Economic geology, geology of energy sources
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
N25°45'00" - N36°30'00", W106°30'00" - W93°30'00"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2020, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa, OK, United States
Update Code: 2020
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