|
Anticline |
A subsurface geological structure in the
form of a dome; that is, the
formation rises to a rounded peak.
In sedimentary rocks these are good
prospects for drilling since, normally, oil & gas rises to the
highest point in the structure. |
|
Basin |
A
depression in the earth’s crust in which sedimentary materials has accumulated over millions of years. Basins may contain oil or gas reservoirs. Much of the production of gas and oil in
the |
|
Bbl Barrel |
42 |
|
Bcf |
Billion
cubic feet |
|
Boe |
Barrel
of oil equivalent converting 6 mcf of natural gas to one barrel of oil |
|
BOPD
|
Barrels
of oil per day |
|
Btu |
British
thermal unit; the amount of energy require to heat |
|
Casing |
Casing
is heavy metal pipe, which is inserted into the borehole as reinforcement. It shuts out water and rock.
|
|
Casing
Point |
The
point at which the decision is made to complete or abandon the well, after reviewing all of the information
obtained while drilling the well. |
|
Completion |
After
a well is drilled and the decision is made to complete it, a number of things must be done. The well must be
cleaned out, setting the casing and
tubing into the hole, adding surface equipment (pumps, tanks, meters)
and perforating the casing so that oil
or gas can flow into the well and be
brought to surface. Once a well is completed, it is ready to produce
oil or gas. |
|
Development |
A
well drilled within the boundaries of a known producing reservoir to increase
the production in the field. |
|
Exploratory |
A
well drilled outside the boundaries of a known reservoir. |
|
Fault |
A
structural trap, favorable for the retention of petroleum, formed by the cracking and breaking of a rock
plane. It is essential to the creation
of a trap that the facing of the
rock plane, be sealed off by against an
impervious formation. |
|
Frac
|
A
term used to refer to the method used to increase the deliverability of a
(Fracturing) production or underground storage well by pumping a liquid or
other substance into a well under pressure to crack (fracture) and prop open
the created fracture with sand to provide a conduit for the hydrocarbons to
easily travel from considerable distances out in the reservoir into the well
bore. |
|
intended
depth the operator had planned and budgeted for. Once this depth is reached,
the operator must analyze the results of the drilling and determine whether
the well is to be completed. |
|
|
Mcf |
Thousand
cubic feet (gas) |
|
MCF
|
Thousand cubic feet (gas) understood to
contain 1 million Btu's of energy. |
|
Net
Revenue |
That revenue available from the sale of oil
and gas after royalties and (NRI)
operating costs, including taxes.
|
|
Offset
Well |
This
is a type of development well that is drilled near a well that is producing
or had previously been productive. |
|
Perforation |
The
making of holes in casing and cement (if present) to allow formation fluid to enter the well bore. One common
method of perforating is by shooting
holes through the casing by means of a special gun lowered into the hole. Others use shaped charges to
penetrate the casing and up to |
|
Permeability |
A
measure of the resistance offered by rock to the movement of fluids through it. It is measured in darcies or milledarcies. |
|
Porosity |
Porosity
measures the capacity of the rock to hold oil, gas or water. It is
measured in bulk percentage of the volume of rock. |
|
Reserves |
That
portion of the identified resource (oil or gas), from which a usable mineral
and energy commodity can be economically and legally extracted at time of
determination. |
|
Royalty |
The
landowner’s or mineral owners share of production, free of expenses of
production. |
|
Seismic |
The
transmission of shock waves into the earth then measuring the returned waves
recorded by a seismograph. The shock waves are produced by exploding charges
of dynamite in shallow holes drilled for
this purpose or by trucks that vibrate the ground. Upon striking rock
formations, the waves are reflected back to the seismograph. The time lapse
is a measure of the depth of the formation. |
|
Spud |
This
term refers to the point in time at which the drill bit begins to turn into the earth and drilling actually
starts. |
|
Syncline
A U or bowl-shaped |
A
geologic structure, not favorable to the accumulation of oil or gas because
of the tendency of the latter to rise in the structure until further escape
is blocked. |
|
Tcf |
Trillion
cubic feet |
|
TD |
(Total Depth) This is the point at which the
drilling operation has reached the total |
|
Third
For A Quarter |
A
common industry approach to drilling financing wherein investors pay 3/3 of
the cost in exchange for 3/4 of the ownership. |
|
Tight
Sands |
Tight
Sands or (low permeability) Strata that holds hydrocarbons too tightly for
conventional extraction processes to bring it to the surface at economic
rates without special stimulation such as a frac program. |
|
TMD |
(Total
Measured Depth) |
|
Tubing |
A
string of pipe set into a well through which oil or gas is produced. |
|
TVD |
(Total
Verticle Depth) |
|
Wildcat
|
a
well drilled far from known production in a setting which has no conventional
prospectivity. |
|
Working
Interest |
The
ownership component, which bears all of the costs of drilling, completing and operating the well. |
RELATED LINKS
http://www.applyoilandgasjob.com
http://www.applyoilandgasemployment.com
http://www.petroleumworkers.org
http://www.trabajadorpetrolero.org
http://www.trabalhadorpetroleiro.org