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Raccoon Bend oil field

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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.
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)
Image
Map of <span class="search-highlight">Raccoon</span> <span class="search-highlight">Bend</span> <span class="search-highlight">field</span> showing areas of similar <span class="search-highlight">oil</span> 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 <span class="search-highlight">oil</span> wells.
Published: 01 December 1933
Fig. 7.— Map of Raccoon Bend field showing producing zones of oil wells.
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1946
AAPG Bulletin (1946) 30 (8): 1306–1307.
... Pass, Plaquemines Parish, top of salt 9,758 feet. 3 L. P. Teas and Charis R. Miller, “Raccoon Bend Oil Field,” Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. , Vol. 17, No. 12 (December, 1933), p. 1459-91. 4 T. E. Morrison, “First Authentic Cretaceous Formation Found on Gulf Coast Salt Domes...
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 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...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1934
AAPG Bulletin (1934) 18 (4): 500–518.
... important oil field thus far discovered in the Gulf Coast. Conroe, found early in 1932 on the Raccoon Bend trend (now called the Conroe trend), has two producing sands, both in the Cockfield formation ( Fig. 10 ). The so-called “Upper Cockfield sand,” 30 feet below the top of the Cockfield, is 20-25...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1940
AAPG Bulletin (1940) 24 (2): 376–382.
...., and MILLER, C. R., “Raccoon Bend Oil Field, Austin County, Texas,” Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. , Vol. 17, p. 1465. Apparently regards the “Frio” as a vertical and lateral variation of the Vicksburg. Use of “Frio” seems to be close to that of Bailey. 1939. MEYER, WILLIS G., “Stratigraphy...
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 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.
.... —Hypothetical cross section of rift valley showing graben-and-horst structure in uplift associated with igneous intrusion. 4 L. P. Teas and Charis R. Miller, “Raccoon Bend Oil Field, Austin County, Texas,” ibid ., Vol. 17, No. 12 (December, 1933), p. 1471. 5 Alexander Deussen and E. W. K...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1940
AAPG Bulletin (1940) 24 (8): 1400–1433.
... in the case of unfavorably located wells. The writer has discussed this phenomenon previously, 22 and has little more to add at present, except to call attention to the previous observation and description of an indurated sandstone at a shallow depth over the Raccoon Bend oil field. 23...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (9): 2076–2086.
... been drilled within the developed area, the Humble Oil and Gas Company’s P. H. McKnight well No. 1, located north of the map limit, encountered salt at the dept of 14,411 feet, and there is gravity evidence to indicate that the field overlies a deep salt mass. These considerations and the observed...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1933
AAPG Bulletin (1933) 17 (5): 558–561.
... discoveries of oil and gas. The two outstanding achievements in the Gulf Coast were the development of Rabb Ridge, Fort Bend County, and the Conroe field, Montgomery County. The former, discovered in May, 1931, has produced through December 31, 1932, more than 5,000,000 barrels and the latter, discovered...
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...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1941
AAPG Bulletin (1941) 25 (4): 561–592.
... are shown in Figure 19 . The close similarity between type XX, based on the patterns from two sands at Raccoon Bend and two sands at Humble has already been referred to and is shown on Figure 16 . This suggests a possible migration of Marginulina -Frio oil into the Jackson formation. The Tomball...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1947
AAPG Bulletin (1947) 31 (6): 1071–1077.
... has been completed in each field. Two interesting deeper-pool tests were drilled during the year. Both tested pronounced structures for Wilcox production. At Raccoon Bend in Austin County, the Humble Oil and Refining Company’s L. R. Sherrod No. Y-16, near the crest of the dome, was drilled...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1975
AAPG Bulletin (1975) 59 (1): 69–84.
.... , v. 54 , no. 5 , p. 871 . Teas , L. P. , and C. R. Miller , 1933 , Raccoon Bend oil field, Austin County, Texas : AAPG Bull. , v. 17 , no. 12 , p. 1459 – 1491 . Tissot , B. P. , B. Durand , and J. Espitalie , 1973 , Influence of nature and diagenesis...
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