Oil gusher

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The Lucas Gusher at Spindletop, Texas (1901).
The Lucas Gusher at Spindletop, Texas (1901).

An oil gusher (or just gusher; also sometimes called a wild well) is an uncapped oil well connected to a reservoir of petroleum oil that is under high pressure. The oil can shoot 200 feet (60 metres) or higher into the air. [1]

In addition to oil, the output of a gusher can include sand, mud, rocks, natural gas, water, and other substances. A gusher which is primarily composed of natural gas is known as a gas gusher.

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[edit] History

Gushers were an icon of oil exploration and production during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During that era, drilling techniques such as cable-tool drilling and the lack of blowout preventers meant that drillers could not accommodate high-pressure reservoirs, and when the reservoirs were breached, the oil would shoot up the well, forcing out the drill head and creating a gusher. This event was referred to as a "blow out". A well which began as a gusher was said to have "blown in": for instance, the Lakeview Gusher blew in in 1910.

Despite being symbols of new-found wealth, gushers were dangerous and wasteful. They could kill workmen involved in drilling, destroy equipment, and coat the landscape with thousands of barrels of oil. In addition, the freely-flowing oil was in constant danger of catching fire.[2] One dramatic account of a blow out reads,

"With a roar like a hundred express trains racing across the countryside, the well blew out, spewing oil in all directions. The derrick simply evaporated. Casings wilted like lettuce out of water, as heavy machinery writhed and twisted into grotesque shapes in the blazing inferno."[3]PDF (285 KiB)

It was not until 1924 that the first successful blowout preventer, a valve affixed to the well head that is closed in the event of high pressure fluid backflow, was brought to market.[4] As the technology developed, blowout preventers became standard equipment and gushers became largely a thing of the past.

[edit] The cause of gushers

A petroleum trap.  An irregularity (the trap) in a layer of impermeable rocks (the seal) retains upward-flowing petroleum, forming a reservoir.
A petroleum trap. An irregularity (the trap) in a layer of impermeable rocks (the seal) retains upward-flowing petroleum, forming a reservoir.

Most petroleum is formed when the remains of plankton accumulate in sediments on the ocean floor. As the sediments build up, the deeper layers are subjected to increasing pressure and heat. Over millions of years, these forces transform the sediment into sedimentary rocks, and if the sediments are oxygen-poor, the plankton will decay into an organic substance known as kerogen, the precursor of petroleum.[5]

Petroleum is usually less dense than the rocks and water it is formed with, so as it is formed, it will flow upward toward the Earth's surface through fractures or pores in the rock. However, if it reaches an enclosure (known as a trap) beneath a layer of impermeable rock, the petroleum will collect into an oil reservoir.[6] When sediment layers above the reservoir build up quickly, an impermeable layer can form underneath the reservoir as well (a process known as undercompaction), sealing it off.[7] If more sediment is deposited at the surface, it presses down upon the fluid within the reservoir, creating a condition known as overpressure.[8]

The formation of petroleum itself can also contribute to overpressure, as petroleum has a larger volume than the kerogen from which it is formed.[9]PDF (991 KiB)

When a drill head pierces through the impermeable layer of rock above the reservoir, the pressure in the reservoir forces the mobile fluids up through the open pipe to the surface, forming a gusher.

[edit] Notable gushers

The Lakeview Gusher in Kern County, California of 1910 is believed to be the largest-ever U.S. gusher. At its peak, more than 100,000 barrels (16 000 m³)of oil per day flowed out, reaching as high as 200 feet (60 m) in the air. It remained uncapped for 18 months, spilling over nine million barrels (378 million gallons/1.4 million ) of oil, less than half of which was recovered.[10]

The Lucas Gusher at Spindletop in Beaumont, Texas in 1901 flowed at 100,000 barrels (16 000 m³) per day at its peak, but soon slowed and was capped within nine days. The well tripled U.S. oil production overnight and marked the start of the Texas oil industry.[11]

The Barroso 2 well in Cabimas, Venezuela in December 1922 flowed at around 100,000 barrels (16 000 m³) per day for nine days, plus a large amount of natural gas.[12]

The Wild Mary Sudik gusher in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma in 1930 flowed at a rate of 72,000 barrels (11 500 m³) per day.[13]

Baba Gurgur near Kirkuk, Iraq, an oilfield known since antiquity, erupted at a rate of 95,000 barrels (15 000 m³) a day in 1927.[14]

A short-lived gusher at Alamitos #1 in Signal Hill, California in 1921 marked the discovery of one of the most productive oil fields in the world.[15]

Masjed Soleiman, Persia in 1908 marked the first major oil strike recorded in the Middle East.[16]

The Daisy Bradford gusher in 1930 marked the discovery of the East Texas Oil Field, the largest oilfield in the contiguous United States.[17]

[edit] See also

GOOSE CREEK OILFIELD. The first offshore drilling for oil in Texas occurred along Goose Creek in southeast Harris County, twenty-one miles southeast of Houston on Galveston Bay. In 1903 John I. Gaillard noticed bubbles popping to the surface of the water at the point where the creek empties into the bay. With a match he confirmed that the bubbles were natural gas, a strong indication of oil deposits. Royal Matthews leased the Gaillard property and drilled for 2½ years but could not bring in a continuously producing well.

Not until a Houston-based syndicate, Goose Creek Production Company, drilled on the marsh of the bay was oil found, on June 2, 1908, at 1,600 feet. On June 13 the Houston syndicate sold out to Producers Oil Company, a subsidiary of the Texas Company. After drilling twenty dry holes in two years they abandoned the field. The American Petroleum Company, new holders of a lease on Gaillard's land, finally drilled close to the shore. On August 23, 1916, contractor Charles Mitchell brought in a 10,000-barrel gusher at 2,017 feet. Initially the well produced 8,000 barrels daily, a quantity indicating that Goose Creek was a large oilfield. The community changed overnight as men rushed to obtain leases, drill wells, and build derricks. Tents were everywhere, teams hauled heavy equipment, and barges brought lumber and pipe from Houston. Within two months the well leveled off to 300 barrels a day, but by December 1916 drilling along the shores of Goose Creek, Tabbs Bay, and Black Duck Bay had raised production to 5,000 barrels daily. The flow of the average well drilled in 1917 was 1,181 barrels a day. The largest well of the field was Sweet 16 of the Simms-Sinclair Company, which came in on August 4, 1917, gushing 35,000 barrels a day from a depth of 3,050 feet. This well stayed out of control for three days before the crew could close it. World War Iqv oil prices of $1.35 a barrel encouraged Humble Oil and Refining Company and Gulf Production Company to try offshore drilling. The Goose Creek field reached its peak annual production of 8,923,635 barrels with onshore and offshore drilling by 1918.

In 1917 Ross S. Sterling,qv a founder and president of Humble Oil (now Exxon, U.S.A.), bought the Southern Pipe Line Company to route oil from the field to the Houston Ship Channel.qv Two 7,000-foot lines of four-inch pipe crossed Black Duck Bay storage tanks and a wharf on Hog Island in the channel. Since Goose Creek oilfield was a prospective long-term producer, Humble constructed its major refinery, which was completed by April 21, 1921, adjacent to the field and named the plant and townsite Baytown. The Dayton-Goose Creek Railroad Company, built in 1918, connected the refinery to the Goose Creek field.

The Goose Creek field is a deep-seated salt dome with overlying beds slightly arched; its discovery spurred exploration for deep-seated domes, and led to the discovery of some of the largest oilfields in the United States. Production declined from 1918 until 1943, when it was only 388,250 barrels; 2,146,450 barrels was produced in 1965. Principal operators in the field in 1984 were Exxon, Gulf Oil, the Monsanto Company, Coastal Oil and Gas Corporation, and Enderli Oil. The total production of the field in 1983 was 366,225 barrels. The first Gaillard well and the Sims Sweet 16 were still producing in 1984. In 1990 the field's 192 wells produced 742,934 barrels. Total production of the field's lifetime stood at 140,644,377 barrels.

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