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Raccoon Bend field

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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1933
AAPG Bulletin (1933) 17 (12): 1459–1491.
...L. P. Teas; Charis R. Miller ABSTRACT The Raccoon Bend oil field, located on the west side of Brazos River, Austin County, Texas, was discovered in 1928. There is little definite geophysical or surface geological evidence of this marked structural feature, although gas, sulphur water, and pyrite...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Series: AAPG Special Publication
Published: 01 January 1936
DOI: 10.1306/SV29337C30
EISBN: 9781629812540
... Abstract The Raccoon Bend oil field, located on the west side of Brazos River, Austin County, Texas, was discovered in 1928. There is little definite geophysical or surface geological evidence of this marked structural feature, although gas, sulphur water, and pyrite in shallow water wells...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1933
AAPG Bulletin (1933) 17 (12): 1459–1491.
Image
Geologic column encountered in <span class="search-highlight">Raccoon</span> <span class="search-highlight">Bend</span> <span class="search-highlight">field</span>.
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 1.— Geologic column encountered in Raccoon Bend field.
Image
Geologic cross section through <span class="search-highlight">Raccoon</span> <span class="search-highlight">Bend</span> <span class="search-highlight">field</span> from southwest to northea...
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 4.— Geologic cross section through Raccoon Bend field from southwest to northeast along line A - A ′ in Figure 3 .
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Map of <span class="search-highlight">Raccoon</span> <span class="search-highlight">Bend</span> <span class="search-highlight">field</span> showing areas of similar oil gravities in the Gut...
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 6.— Map of Raccoon Bend field showing areas of similar oil gravities in the Gutoskey sand.
Image
Map of <span class="search-highlight">Raccoon</span> <span class="search-highlight">Bend</span> <span class="search-highlight">field</span> showing producing zones of oil wells.
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 7.— Map of Raccoon Bend field showing producing zones of oil wells.
Image
Geologic structure map contoured on top of 1,000-foot (Oakville) gas sand, ...
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 2.— Geologic structure map contoured on top of 1,000-foot (Oakville) gas sand, Raccoon Bend field.
Image
Geologic structure map contoured on top of Gutosky (basal Whitsett formatio...
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 3.— Geologic structure map contoured on top of Gutosky (basal Whitsett formation) sand, Raccoon Bend field.
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1946
AAPG Bulletin (1946) 30 (8): 1306–1307.
... 1946 American Association of Petroleum Geologists. All rights reserved 1946 American Association of Petroleum Geologists The Raccoon Bend field, located about 60 miles northwest of Houston in the northwest corner of Austin County, Texas, was discovered in 1928. A paper 3 published in 1933...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1974
AAPG Bulletin (1974) 58 (9): 1857–1861.
... indication of progressive depth effects during overburden deposition than do the more complex or older examples whose overburden history is much more difficult to decipher. Chapman chides the writer for invoking upward migration to explain a very shallow oil accumulation—the Raccoon Bend field, Austin...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1934
AAPG Bulletin (1934) 18 (4): 500–518.
... of development followed, leading to the discovery, in 1930, of the Pettus field in Bee County. Raccoon Bend focused attention on the possibilities of the so-called “deep domes” or “deep structures.” Previous to this time the familiar Spindletop type of salt dome was still primarily the object of search...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1936
AAPG Bulletin (1936) 20 (11): 1413–1438.
... the mother salt bed; (4) distribution of anhydrite associated with the mother salt bed; and (5) distribution and competency of the overlying beds. Notice the irregular development of the syncline northwest of the Raccoon Bend oil field. Figure 9 shows a subsurface map of the Liberty-Hardin County...
FIGURES | View All (14)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (9): 2076–2086.
... in Figure 3 have been used as an aid to the interpretation of a deep dome which has not been completely explored by drilling. Fig. 3. —Model mud surface fracture pattern over deep dome. Figure 4 shows the structure of the top of the Cockfield at Raccoon Bend in Austin and Waller counties...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1930
AAPG Bulletin (1930) 14 (11): 1379–1400.
... the third-class oil fields of the Laredo district. Raccoon Bend, a good field of the second class which was discovered 3 years ago, extended the area of good production slightly inland. The Clay Creek salt-dome oil field, discovered in 1928 much farther inland, produced 841,000 barrels during 1929...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1944
AAPG Bulletin (1944) 28 (4): 541–553.
... field, Montgomery County, 3 the Raccoon Bend field, Austin and Waller counties, 4 the Tomball field, Harris and Montgomery counties, the Orange field, Orange County, all in Texas, 5 and the Cheneyville field, Rapides Parish, Louisiana. Salt has been encountered only in the Cheneyville field...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1980
AAPG Bulletin (1980) 64 (2): 145–172.
.... R. Miller , 1933 , Raccoon Bend oil field, Austin County, Texas: AAPG Bull. , v. 17 , p. 1459 – 1491 . Trenchard , J. , and J. B. Whisenant , 1936 , Government Wells oil field, Duval County, Texas, in Gulf Coast oil fields, a Symposium on the Gulf Coast Cenozoic: AAPG , p...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1933
AAPG Bulletin (1933) 17 (5): 558–561.
.... With the establishment of the Conroe field, drilling activity spread in both directions along this trend and Livingston-Sunshine and Spurger are the latest successes in this campaign. Raccoon Bend is on the trend but producing from higher sands than Yegua-Cockfield. Garwood is probably within the trend but close...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1955
AAPG Bulletin (1955) 39 (8): 1625–1631.
... source of this oil is believed to be Jurassic. 3 The writer is currently engaged on a paper on the origin of oil. As this is a detailed study, only some general statements can be made here. 4 In Texas, “… Petroleum from the Raccoon Bend field, produced from the Jackson formation...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1938
AAPG Bulletin (1938) 22 (8): 1097–1100.
... to the brilliant lights along the crests of Waynesburg, Pinhook, Washington, Bull Creek, Bradys Bend, Hickory, Wellsburg, Raccoon, and other anticlinals, and also the darkness that envelopes the intervening synclines, in which hundreds of thousands of dollars have been invested without developing a single...