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no indication of oil or gas on this property. The entire crew was hot and tired. How
could there be 6 operating wells on this property without any indication from the
readings we were collecting? I personally looked inside each of the six oil tanks and
saw my reflection in the crude oil. What was wrong? We were being paid to report
what we found and I was very nervous about what I saw.
I knew from thousands of hours with this equipment that it did not lie. I
decided to make my report on the data we collected. The land owner and lease holders
were furious. They were relying upon our results to sell another investment group
another well site on this farm. I stood by my report. There was no oil indicated on
this property. Reluctantly our clients paid, and we left. About ten days later I was
recounting this experience with a local geologist. He laughed and expressed his
confidence in out equipment. He informed me that those wells were all fakes. They did
not even have pumps on the end of the steel. The holes on that farm were only about
50 feet deep. The entire scene was fabricated to entice foreigners to invest in drilling
another hole, which of course would be dry. I breathed a long sigh of relief and learned
to believe what I saw in the spectra.
After locating another seven wells in the Coniferous, Warsaw, and Cyprus
formations of Kentucky ranging from 480 to about 1250 feet deep, we accepted
contracts to go exploring in the San Marcus, Texas area. The formations in this
region are volcanic chimneys which are very difficult to locate with seismographic
methods. The sites we examined had many holes where dynamite had been used to set
up shock waves which echo back to geophones. These vibrations can be mapped to
reveal cavities in the substrata. Sometimes these cavities contain oil or gas. These
petroliferous chimneys sometimes are only a few yards in diameter and practically
vertical. This type of formation does not respond well to seismic mapping. We
scanned thousands of acres for about three weeks. The only formation we located had
already been tapped about thirty years prior and exhausted. The explanation 1 offered
the lease holders was. "The oil is where we find it."
The next challenge came in the overthrust area of Wyoming outside
Evanston. The exploration site covered land outside a national park. Our
environmental friendliness allows us to explore anywhere that will allow a 4 wheeler
with a spark arrester. We discouraged this particular oil company from drilling. They
took our advice, and I believe they saved a million dollars. The other well we
examined was a hole being drilled by Quazar. The rig was already seventeen thousand
feet down. This type of rig uses various weights of drill mud to contain high pressure
subterranean releases and carry the cuttings to the surface. Drilling mud is pumped
through the drill steel and is forced to the surface along the clearance between the drill
pipe and the edge of the hole. This mud is closely analyzed by mudloggers who chart
the structures and discoveries. Hydrogen Sulfide alarms set up around the Kelly - the
unit that turns the drill pipe - protect the crew from sudden exposure.
This was the first time the technology had been tested on formations that
deep. We spent one day scanning the site. We spent another day preparing a radio
tomographical map of the strata below their drill rig, Our results were compared to the
mud log. Although we were not allowed to keep a copy of the log, as it did cost the