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Huntington Beach Field

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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1956
AAPG Bulletin (1956) 40 (2): 433.
...Robin B. Willis ABSTRACT Beginning in January of this year and lasting into the summer, the City of Huntington Beach saw a flurry of townlot drilling much like the early townlot booms of Signal Hill and Huntington Beach. Wells were drilled on leases consisting of one or more 25 × 117-foot lots...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1924
AAPG Bulletin (1924) 8 (1): 41–46.
..., 1923, from 1,520 acres, including Bolsa and Ashton zones, is 23,300 barrels per acre. It is estimated that the 4,570 acres will have an average ultimate production of 50,000 barrels per acre. The origin of most of the oil in the Huntington Beach field is undoubtedly the Puente shales underlying...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1934
AAPG Bulletin (1934) 18 (3): 327–342.
...Hoyt S. Gale ABSTRACT Review of the several reports on current developments in the Huntington Beach oil field suggests a somewhat closer coordination than is generally given of the oil zones of the various areas into which the field has been subdivided, for the purpose of tracing the probable paths...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1967
AAPG Bulletin (1967) 51 (3): 476.
... Huntington Beach oil field. Parcels 14 and 20A are located on the west-plunging nose of a large east-west-trending asymmetrical anticline. Oil is produced from upper Miocene division “C” sandstones, defined as the Upper Main (UM) and Main No. 1 (M-1) zones. Both of these productive sandstone zones thin...
Image
APPROXIMATE YEARLY PRODUCTION IN <span class="search-highlight">HUNTINGTON</span> <span class="search-highlight">BEACH</span> <span class="search-highlight">FIELD</span>
Published: 01 January 1924
APPROXIMATE YEARLY PRODUCTION IN HUNTINGTON BEACH FIELD
Series: AAPG Memoir
Published: 01 January 1991
DOI: 10.1306/M52531C6
EISBN: 9781629811147
... fields, especially the giant Wilmington and Huntington Beach fields. Oil quality within the basin varies geographically, with higher quality (high API gravity, low sulfur content) oils in the northeast of the basin and lower quality oils in the west and south of the basin. The variation in oil quality...
Image
—Cross section across <span class="search-highlight">Huntington</span> <span class="search-highlight">Beach</span> oil <span class="search-highlight">field</span> (after  Hazenbush and Alle...
Published: 01 January 1973
Fig. 3. —Cross section across Huntington Beach oil field (after Hazenbush and Allen, 1958 ). Northeast block (right) relative to southwest block is thinner in middle Pico, is about same at fault in lower Pico, is thicker and much sandier in Repetto, and is thinner again in upper Miocene section
Image
—<span class="search-highlight">Huntington</span> <span class="search-highlight">Beach</span> oil <span class="search-highlight">field</span> structure (after  Hazenbush and Allen, 1958 ). ...
Published: 01 January 1973
Fig. 4. —Huntington Beach oil field structure (after Hazenbush and Allen, 1958 ). Strike-slip movements far exceed inconsistent apparent vertical separations. Contour configurations suggest that on northeast side of Newport-Inglewood fault zone, fold crest has been displaced 2,000 ft relatively
Image
—Generalized stratigraphic section of <span class="search-highlight">Huntington</span> <span class="search-highlight">Beach</span> on <span class="search-highlight">field</span>, after Geor...
Published: 01 March 1934
Fig. 2. —Generalized stratigraphic section of Huntington Beach on field, after George H. Doane.
Image
—<span class="search-highlight">Huntington</span> <span class="search-highlight">Beach</span> oil <span class="search-highlight">field</span>, recent survey by United States Geological Surv...
Published: 01 March 1934
Fig. 3. —Huntington Beach oil field, recent survey by United States Geological Survey, with addition of major structural features and other details.
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—Map of <span class="search-highlight">Huntington</span> <span class="search-highlight">Beach</span>. The main <span class="search-highlight">field</span> and Barley Flat were productive in...
Published: 01 June 1928
Fig. 8. —Map of Huntington Beach. The main field and Barley Flat were productive in 1923.
Image
<span class="search-highlight">HUNTINGTON</span> <span class="search-highlight">BEACH</span> OIL <span class="search-highlight">FIELD</span>
Published: 01 January 1924
Fig. 1 HUNTINGTON BEACH OIL FIELD
Series: Guidebook
Published: 01 January 1987
DOI: 10.32375/1987-GB58.1
EISBN: 9781970168518
... on land and in tidelands. Beta Field was discovered on San Pedro Shelf in Federal Waters. Twelve have produced between 100 million and 1 billion barrels of oil, and two have produced over 1 billion barrels of oil ( Table 1 ). The Huntington Beach Field is second largest having produced approximately...
FIGURES | View All (17)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1928
AAPG Bulletin (1928) 12 (6): 625–650.
...Fig. 8. —Map of Huntington Beach. The main field and Barley Flat were productive in 1923. ...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1928
AAPG Bulletin (1928) 12 (6): 651–658.
... further discusses the important production and geological features of the new developments in California. The Huntington Beach and Seal Beach fields, in addition to the volume shut in, were the principal factors influencing total production in 1927. Long Beach is likely to be the major factor in 1928. New...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1924
AAPG Bulletin (1924) 8 (1): 1–20.
... is now produced in the newer fields. These conclusions are based upon a study of conditions in all of the fields. Because the Santa Fe Springs, Signal Hill, and Huntington Beach fields are of more interest at present, they will be discussed more fully. The production of the older fields in this state...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1921
AAPG Bulletin (1921) 5 (5): 623–625.
...: The fields which have received the most publicity during the recent months are the Elk Hills, Huntington Beach and Montebello. The Elk Hills field is in a range where the anticlinal structure is clearly observed and the proximity of the hills to the previously developed Midway field has long indicated...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (1): 117–135.
... are quite diverse. Sunset Beach, Huntington Beach, and West Newport oil fields within the zone and Wilmington oil field west of it are characterized by north-trending normal faults with no movement younger than early Pliocene. Dominguez, Rosecrans, and Howard Townsite oil fields are characterized by west...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1922
AAPG Bulletin (1922) 6 (4): 303–316.
... at Santa Fe Springs, and (3) the Beach group including Huntington Beach, Long Beach and Redondo. Genetically speaking, the Beverly Hills field lies on the same structural line as the beach fields, but for all practical purposes it is best described with the Los Angeles fields. The Montebello...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1924
AAPG Bulletin (1924) 8 (2): 135–151.
... interesting reports of how the first core sample was taken by various companies, are current. One company operating in the Huntington Beach field was drilling at a depth where, by correlation of well logs, it had been estimated the oil should be encountered. Drilling was being done only during daylight...