3-D
siesmic - A relatively new exploration technique used
in the search for oil and gas underground structures. The basic
premise behind seismic is the same as ultra sound technology
used in the medical field. Sound from a shot hole is recorded
from geophones and interpreted to give a picture of the underlying
structures within the earth. 3-D has now become a common practice
to redefine and identify known as well as unknown structures.
Many times these structures contain traps that hold oil and
gas yet to be discovered.
4-D
Seismic - The newest advances in seismic technology
which now takes into consideration a 4th dimension; which is
time. With 4-D seismic geologists are now able to monitor the
movement and the mobility of oil as it is extracted in the production
process.
Abstract
of title - A chronological history of the ownership
of a tract of land.
Acidizing
a well - Increasing the flow of oil from a well by
pumping hydrochloric acid into the well under high pressure.
This reopens and enlarges the pores in the oil-bearing limestone
formation.
Acre
- The most common of land measure in the United States. A square
210 feet on a side (44,100 sq. ft) would be a bit larger than
an acre (43,560 sq. ft). There are 640 acres in a square mile.
Acre-foot
- In the U.S., the thickness of a pay zone is measured in feet,
and the area of the reservoir is measured in acres. An acre-foot
is a volume of reservoir rock that is one acre in area and one
foot thick.
AFE
(Authorization For Expenditure) - An estimate of the
costs of drilling and completing a proposed well, which the
operator provides to each working interest owner before the
well is commenced.
Annular
space - The space between a well's casing and the wall
of the borehole.
Annulus
of a well - The space between the surface casing and
the inner, producing well-bore casing.
Anticline
- A geological term describing a fold in the earth's surface
with strata sloping downward on both sides from a common crest.
Anticlines frequently have surface manifestations like hills,
knobs, and ridges. At least 80 percent of the world's oil and
gas has been found in anticlines.
API
- American Petroleum Institute, a petroleum industry association
that sets standards for oil field equipment and operations.
API
gravity - The gravity (weight per unit of volume) of
crude oil expressed in degrees according to an American Petroleum
Institute recommended system. The higher the API gravity, the
higher the crude. High-gravity crudes are generally considered
more valuable.
Aquifer
- An underground water reservoir contained between layers of
rock, sand or gravel.
Arab
oil embargo of 1973-74 - During the Arab-Israeli conflict
in October 1973, Arab oil producers cut off shipments to the
Unites States and the Netherlands in retaliation for their support
of Israel. At the same time, they cut down production. The shortage
was felt by all oil-importing nations, with world prices moving
sharply higher. Price and allocation controls suppressed some
of this increase in the United States, but gasoline lines were
still prevalent.
Asphalt
- A solid hydrocarbon which may be deposited within
the reservoir rock, in well equipment, or in surface lines and
tanks.
Associate
gas - The gas that occurs with oil either as free gas
or in solution. When occurring alone, it is referred to as unassociated
gas.
Back-in
- A type of interest in a well or property that becomes effective
at a specified time in the future, or on the occurrence of a
specified future event.
Barrel
Standard - Unit of measurement in the petroleum industry.
One barrel of oil equals 42 U.S. gallons.
Basement
rock - Igneous or metamorphic rock lying below sedimentary
formations in the earth's crust. Basement rock does not contain
petroleum deposits.
Basin
- A depression in the earth's crust in which sedimentary materials
have accumulated. Such a basin may contain oil or gas fields.
BCF
(billion cubic feet) - The cubic foot is a standard
unit of measure for gas at atmospheric pressure.
Behind
pipe - If a well drills through several pay zones and
is completed in the deepest productive reservoir, casing is
set all the way down to the producing zone. Viewed from (a perspective)
inside the borehole, reserves in the shallower pay zones up
the hole are behind the casing.
Biomass
- Any organic material, such as wood, plants, and organic wastes,
that can be turned into fuel.
Bleeding
core - A core sample of rock so highly permeable and
saturated that oil drips from it.
Blind
pool - Refers to an oil and gas limited partnership
which has not committed to specific prospects, leases, or properties
at the time of capital formation.
Blowout
- A sudden escape of oil or gas from a well, caused by uncontrolled
high pressure. It usually occurs during drilling.
Blowout
insurance - An insurance policy that protects the insured
party (working interest owner) from liabilities which might
arise from a blowout during the drilling, completion, or production
of a well.
Blue
Sky Law - State regulations governing an offering to
sell securities within the state.
Bonus
Money - paid to a landowner or other holder of mineral
rights by the lessee for the execution of an oil and gas lease
in addition to any rental or royalty obligations specified in
the lease.
BOP
(blowout preventer) - An assembly of heavy-duty valves
attached to the top of a well casing to control pressure.
Bottom-hole
pressure - The pressure of the reservoir or formation
at the bottom of the hole. A decline in pressure indicates some
depletion of the reservoir.
Bottom-hole
pump - A compact, high-volume
pump located in the bottom of a well, not operated by sucker
rods or a surface power unit.
Bridle
- The cable link between the "horsehead" and the pump
rod on a pumping unit.
BS&W
- (basic sediment and water) Material pumped up with oil and
gas which must be separated out.
Btu
(British thermal unit) - A standard measure of heat
content in a fuel. One Btu equals the amount of energy required
to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit
at or near 39.2 degrees Fahrenheit.
Butane
- A hydrocarbon associated with petroleum. It is gaseous
at ordinary atmospheric conditions.
Cable
drilling - A method of well-drilling that employs a
reciprocating, rather than a rotary, motion to penetrate rock.
In the nineteenth century, until Drake's time, power was supplied
by men. Drake used a steam-powered cable rig. Today, cable rigs
are powered by gasoline or diesel engines.
CAOF
(calculated absolute open flow) - A figure representing
a gas well's theoretical producing capability per day.
Capital
Funds - Monies invested in a business for use in conducting
the operations of the business.
Capital
asset - An asset acquired as an investment, for the
purpose of creating a product or service intended to be used
in the activities or operations of a business.
Capital
costs (Oil & Gas Tax Usage) - For Federal income
tax purposes, the costs of capital expenditures which may be
recovered by deduction against income (through depreciation
and depletion).
Capital
expenditure - An expenditure intended to benefit the
future activities of a business, usually by adding to the assets
of a business, or by improving an existing asset.
Capitalize
- To treat certain expenditures as capital expenditures
for Federal income tax computations.
Carried
Interest - A fractional working interest in an oil
and gas lease that comes about through an arrangement between
co-owners of a working interest.
Casing
Pipe - used in oil wells to reinforce the borehole.
Sometimes several casings are used, one inside the other. The
outer casing, called the "surface pipe,' shuts out water
and serves as a foundation for subsequent drilling.
Casinghead
- The portion of the casing that protrudes above the
surface and to which control valves and flow pipes are attached.
Casinghead
gas - Natural gas produced from an oil well, as opposed
to gas produced from a gas well.
Casinghead
gasoline - Highly volatile, water-white liquid hydrocarbons
separated from casinghead gas.
Cavings
Rock - Fagments that break off from the walls of a
borehole and fall into the borehole during drilling operations.
Cement
- Fluid cement is mixed at the surface, pumped to the
bottom of a cased well, forced to flow around the lower end
of the casing and up into the space between the casing and the
borehole. When the cement solidifies (sets), it holds the casing
in place, and provides support.
Cement
squeeze - Forcing cement into the perforations, large
cracks, and fissures in the wall of a borehole to seal them
off.
Choke
- An orifice installed in a pipeline at the well surface
to control the rate of flow.
Christmas
tree - An assembly of valves, gauges, and chokes mounted
on a well casinghead to control production and the flow of oil
to the pipelines.
Circulate
- To pump drilling fluid into the borehole through
the drillpipe and back up the annulus.
Clean
oil - Crude oil containing less than 1 percent sediment
and water; "pipeline oil", oil clean enough to send
through a pipeline.
CO2
injection - A secondary recovery technique in which
carbon dioxide (CO2) is injected into wells as part of a miscible
recovery program.
Coal
gasification - The chemical conversion of coal to synthetic
gaseous fuel.
Coal
liquefaction - The chemical conversion of coal to synthetic
liquid fuel.
Cogeneration
- The combined production of electrical or mechanical energy
and usable heat energy.
Commissions
- Payments to qualified agents of the sponsor of a limited partnership,
for selling interests in it to investors. Commissions may take
the form of a percent of partnership interests sold, an oil
and gas interest, or stock in the sponsor's company.
Common
carrier - A person or company in the business of transporting
the public or goods for a fee. In the industry, a person or
company engaged in the movement of petroleum products, like
a public utility.
Completed
well - A well made ready to produce oil or natural
gas. Completion involves cleaning out the well, running steel
casing and tubing into the hole, adding permanent surface control
equipment, and perforating the casing so oil or gas can flow
into the well and be brought to the surface.
Condensate
- Liquid hydrocarbons separated from natural gas, usually by
cooling.
Confirmation
well - A well drilled to "prove"
the formation encountered by an exploratory well.
Connate
water - The water present in a petroleum reservoir
in the same zone occupied by oil and gas considered by some
to be the residue of the primal sea, connate water occurs as
a film of water around each grain of sand in granular reservoir
rock and is held in place by capillary attraction.
Conventional
energy sources - Oil, gas, coal,
and sometimes nuclear energy, in contrast to alternative energy
sources such a solar, hydroelectric and geothermal power, synfuels,
and biomass.
Conveyance
- Legal term for transferring the title of a property from one
party to another, typically by deed.
Core
- Samples of subsurface rocks taken as a well is being drilled.
The core allows geologists to examine the strata in proper sequence
and thickness.
Cracking
- The process of breaking down the larger, heavier and more
complex hydrocarbon molecules into simpler and lighter molecules,
thus increasing the gasoline yield from crude oil. Cracking
is done by application of heat and pressure, and in modern time
the use of a catalytic agent.
Crude
oil - Liquid petroleum as it comes out of the ground.
Crude oils range from very light (high in gasoline) to very
heavy (high in residual oils). Sour crude is high in sulfur
content. Sweet crude is low in sulfur and therefore often more
valuable.
Crude
oil equivalent - A measure of energy content that converts
units of different kinds of energy into the energy equivalent
of barrels of oil.
Cuttings
- Chips and small rock fragments brought to the surface by the
flow of drilling mud as it is circulated and examined by geologists
for oil content.