LEXICON
of TERMS
Learn
how to talk like an Oilman
Over 400 Oil & Gas and
related investment terms defined |
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Hang
the rods - To pull pump rods out of the well and hang
them in the derrick on rod hangers.
Heating
oil - Oil use for residential heating.
Heavy
oil - A type of crude petroleum characterized by high
viscosity and a high carbon-to-hydrogen ration. It is usually
difficult and costly to produce by conventional techniques.
Held
by production - Refers to an oil and gas property under
lease, in which the lease continues to be in force, because of
production from the property.
History
of a well - A written account of a well's drilling and
operation, required by law in some states.
Horizon
- A specific sedimentary layer in a cross section of
land, especially one in which a petroleum reservoir is found.
Horizontal
drilling - The newer and developing technology that makes
it possible to drill a well from the surface, vertically down
to a certain level, and then to turn at a right angle, and continue
drilling horizontally within a specified reservoir, or an interval
of a reservoir.
Horsehead
- The curved guide or head piece on the well end of a
pumping jack's walking beam. The guide holds the short loop of
cable, called the bridle, attached to the well's pump rods.
Hydraulic
fracturing - A method of stimulating production from
a low-permeability formation by creating fractures and fissures
by applying very high fluid pressure.
Hydrocarbons
- A large class of organic compound of hydrogen and carbon.
Crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas condensate are all mixtures
of various hydrocarbons, among which methane is the simplest.
Hydrometer
- An instrument that measures the specific gravity of
liquids.
Hydrostatic
head - The height of a column of liquid. The difference
in height between two points in a body of liquid.
In
situ - In its original place. Refers to methods of producing
synfuels underground, such as underground gasification of a coal
seam or heating oil shale underground to release its oil.
Independent
producer - 1. A person or corporation that produces oil
for the market, who has no pipeline system or refining. 2. An
oil entrepreneur who secures financial backing and drills his
own wells
Infill
drilling - Wells drilled to fill in between established
producing wells to increase production.
Initial
potential - Flow rate measured during the initial completion
of a well in a specific reservoir (initial daily rate of production).
Injection
well - A well employed for the introduction into an underground
stratum of water, gas or other fluid under pressure. Injection
well are employed for the disposal of salt water produced with
oil or other waste. They are also use for a variety of other purposes:
1) Pressure maintenance, to introduce a fluid into a producing
formation to maintain underground pressures which would otherwise
be reduced by virtue of the production or oil or gas, 2)Secondary
recovery operations, to introduce a fluid to decrease the viscosity
of oil, reduce its surface tension, lighted its specific gravity,
and drive oil into producing wells, resulting in greater production
of oil.
Intangible
drilling costs - Expenditures, deductible for federal
income tax purposes, incurred by an operator for labor, fuel,
repairs, hauling, and supplies used in drilling and completing
a well for production.
Investment
Tax Credit (ITC) - A credit against income taxes, usually
computed as a percent of the cost of investment in certain types
of assets.
Isopachous
map - A geological map showing the thickness and shape
of underground formations. A tool used to determine underground
oil and gas reservoirs.
J
Jack
or Unit - An oil-pumping unit. The pumping jack's walking
beam provides the up-and-down motion to the well's pump rods.
Jack-up
rig - A floating platform with legs on each corner that
can be lowered to the sea bottom to raise or jack up the platform
above the water.
Jet
fuel - See Kerosene.
Jetting
- Injecting gas into a subsurface formation for the purpose
of maintaining reservoir pressure.
Joint
- A single section of drill pipe, casing, or tubing,
usually about 30 feet long.
Joint
Operating Agreement - A detailed written agreement between
the working interest owners of a property which specifies the
terms according to which that property will be developed.
Joint
venture - A large-scale project in which two or more
parties (usually oil companies) cooperate. One supplies funds
and the other actually carries out the project. Each participant
retains control over his share, including liability and the right
to sell.
Junk
basket - A magnet used to retrieve small tools lost in
the well. A fishing instrument.
K
Kelly
bushing - Part of the drilling rig, the Kelly is a
long hollow steel bar that connects to the upper end of the
drill string.
Kerogen
- The hydrocarbon in oil shale. Scientists believe that
kerogen was the precursor of petroleum and that petroleum development
in shale was somehow prematurely arrested.
Kerosene
- The petroleum fraction containing hydrocarbons that
are slightly heavier than those found in gasoline and naphtha.
Kerosene (also spelled kerosene) was the most important petroleum
product because of its use for home and commercial lighting; in
recent years demand has risen again as a result of kerosene's
use in gas turbines and jet engines.
Keyseating
- A condition in which the drill collar of another part
of the drill string becomes wedged in a section of crooked hole.Kick
Occurs - when the pressure encountered in a formation exceeds
the pressure exerted by the column of drilling mud circulating
through the hole. If uncontrolled, a kick leads to a blowout.
Kill
a well - To overcome downhole pressure by adding weighting
elements to the drilling mud.
L
Lag
time - The time it takes for cuttings to be carried
(circulate) from the bottom of the borehole up to the surface
by the mud system.
Landman
- A self-employed individual or company employee who
secures oil and gas leases, checks legal titles, and attempts
to cure title defects so that drilling can begin.
Landowner
royalty - The share of the gross production of the oil
and gas on a property without deducting any of the cost of producing
the oil or gas. The usual landowner's royalty is one-eighth of
gross production.
Law
of capture - A legal concept on which oil and gas law
in some states is based: since petroleum is liquid, and hence
mobile, it is not owned until it is produced.
Lead
lines - The lines through which production from individual
wells is run to tanks.
Lease
(Oil and Gas) - A contract by which the owner of the
mineral rights to a property conveys to another party, the exclusive
right to explore for and develop minerals on the property, during
a specified period of time.
Lease
acquisition costs - Bonus payments.
Lease
broker - An individual engaged in obtaining leases for
speculation or resale.
Lease
hound - Someone who goes out and aggressively acquires
oil and gas leases from the landowner, and then turns around and
sells or trades them to an oil company planning to drill a well
in the area.
Lease
offering (lease sale) - An area of land offered for lease
- usually by the U.S. Department of Interior - for the exploration
for and production of specific natural resources such as oil and
gas. Such a lease conveys no title or occupancy rights apart from
the right to search for and produce petroleum or other natural
resources subject to the conditions stated in the lease.
Lease
or Sublease - Any transaction in which the owner of operating
rights in a property assigns all or a portion of these rights
to any other party.
Lifting
costs - The costs of producing oil from a well or lease;
the operating expenses.
Lignite
- A solid fuel of a grade higher than peat but lower
than bituminous coal.
Limestone
- Sedimentary rock largely consisting of calcite. On
a world-wide scale, limestone reservoirs probably contain more
oil and gas reserves than all other types of reservoir rock combined.
Limited
partner - In a limited partnership, a partner whose liability
is limited to the amount of his investment in the partnership
(plus any assessments and his share of undistributed partnership
earnings).
Limited
partnership - A partnership in which the general partner
manages the partnership's activities and is solely liable for
them. The limited partners are liable only to the extent of their
contributions.
LNG
(liquefied natural gas) - Natural gas that has been converted
to a liquid through cooling to -260 degrees Fahrenheit at atmospheric
pressure.
Logs
- Records made from data-gathering devices lowered into
the wellbore. The devices transmit signals to the surface which
are then recorded on film and used to make the record describing
the formation's porosity, fluid saturation, and lithology. The
filing of a log is required by the federal government if the drill
site is on federal land.
Lost
circulation - A serious condition that occurs when drilling
mud pumped into the well does not return to the surface, but goes
into the porous formation, crevices, or caverns instead.
LPG
(liquefied petroleum gases) - Hydrocarbon fractions lighter
than gasoline, such as ethane, propane and butane, kept in a liquid
state through compression and/or refrigeration, commonly referred
to as "bottled gas.