Friday 8:30 Oct 18th
Two more oil tankers go out at 8:30 this am...:)
im not around all day or each day.. but so far at least one or two a day...
Not as many as that one day .. early this week...
Mike
Tags:
HI,, wow. those maps got me lost.... sorry I cant help you. maybe one of the other guys on this site can...
Philip who posts the Platt maps maybe can.... im just not good at reading squiggly lines...
I do know there is a Platt map on this site and the platt maps give GPS co ordinates...
Good luck...
Mike
What are the green dots ? they don't match the EQT sites ?
Is the "fault" line something that is good for oil/gas ??
like maybe a big "crack" full of oil/gas :)
thanks, Mike
which line is the fault line.. blue.. horizontal or the other line...
the EQT wells would be in a "line" from left.. west.. to right.. east...
OH ok.. Kimbolton is miles north of me...
Just so hard to make heads and tails out of this stuff...
I don't mind trying to help people out.. but my skills are pretty limited..:)
Don't worry Mike you are doing fine; great help and encouragement to us all.
love you're post
Dave
With all this drilling going on ....
I cant sleep at nite.....
all I can hear is.....
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
:)
Here is a Google Earth map layer of the Updated Precambrian Unconformity Map for Guernsey co. I also included the Clark, Dobeck and NCD3 well units. It is very interesting that the 3 wells are next and on top of the fault line. You will need Google Earth installed on your computer to view the maps.
You can download Google Earth here if you don't have it installed:http://www.google.com/earth/download/ge/agree.html
Attachments:
Reliable sources indicate the Spencer well approximately 3 miles west of the Clark wells is also producing oil in good quantity. This would be west of the red dashed fault line.
I have kept this Cambridge fault line in mind for a long time. I once asked a drilling engineer about drilling into faults. The reply was, sometimes after drilling through a fault, we re-direct and veer (up) to find and reenter the pay zone on the opposite side of the fault. Depending on the production company directives, sometimes we stop and the well is completed from that point. This conversation / information is over one year old.
Perhaps others can share information regarding the fault and related issues. Some geologists hold that a fault can be a migration point or passage way for the hydrocarbons in some faults/formations.
I'm thinking there is one company out here getting a handle on producing oil from the subject under pressured reservoir. The question is, can the technique sustain production adequately?
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