s ^ \ _- . ] G^^ SuLChUiji^ STATE OF ILLINOIS ADI.AI E. STEVENSON, Governor DEPARTMENT OF REGISTRATION AND EDUCATION C. HOBART ENGLE, Director • DIVISION OF THE STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY M. M. LEIGHTON, Chief URBANA ILLINOIS PETROLEUM NO. 67 OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENT IN ILLINOIS DURING 1951 By ALFRED H. BELL and VIRGINIA KLINE Reprinted From Statistics oh Oil and Gas Development and PKonucrioN Coverinc 1951 American Institute oe Mining and Metallukcical Encineers PRINTED BY AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS URBANA, ILLINOIS 1952 ILLlNOib otiOLOGlCAL S'JRVEY LIBRARY ^nv ^0 19^^ FOOTNOTES TO COLUMN HEADINGS TABLE I a All fields to be listed alphabetically, and if by counties, the latter also in alphabetical order. b Use as many numbered lines as necessary to list in order of increasing depth each reservoir productive of oil, gas or condensate. In multi-reservoir fields the (upper) line on which the field name is placed should reflect, in certain columns, the totals of the separate reservoirs listed below it. Show name of producing forma- tion, and show its age by abbreviation as follows: Cam, Cambrian; Ord, Ordovician; Sil, Silurian; Dev, Devonian; Mis, Mississippian; Mis L, Lower Mississippian; Mis U, Upper Mississippian; Pen, Pennsylvanian; Per, Permian; Tri, Triassic; Jur, Jurassic; Cre L, Lower Cretaceous; Cre U, Upper Cretaceous; Eoc, Eocene; Olig, Oligocene; Mio, Miocene; Pli, Pliocene. c Volume of gas produced from the field and not re- turned to the reservoir. Indicate measurement pressure base in special footnote. d Only gas production shown in the gas production column of this table, and only oil shown in the oil pro- duction column of this table, should be considered in calculating entries for this column, i.e., entries should correspond with gas production for the year divided by oil production for the year. e Include all original completions, but exclude work- overs or well deepened or plugged back. Abandoned refers only to wells abandoned after having produced oil, gas or condensate and is not to include wells abandoned without having secured production. / A well producing both oil and gas is classified as an oil well, unless it has been designated as a gas well by the State regulatory agency. Gas wells are wells pro- ducing gas only or condensate, and wells producing gas with some oil but classified as gas wells by the State regulatory agency. g Show type of operation as indicated by the following symbols: P, pressure maintenance; G, gas injection; W, water injection; C, cycling. h Show weighted average gravity A.P.I, as oil is de- livered to the pipe lines and percentage of sulphur, if any, in the oil. Where oils from more than one reservoir are commingled and delivered into the pipe line at a gravity of 26 to 26.9, show as 26°, etc. 1 Show character of formation by code letter as fol- lows: A, anhydrite; C, chalk; Cg, conglomerate; Ch, chert; CR, cap rock; D, dolomite; Da, arkosic dolomite; Gw, granite wash; Sh, shale; L, limestone; LS, limestone, sandy; OL, oolitic limestone; S, sandstone. J Figures represent ratio of pore space to total volume of net reservoir rock expressed in per cent. P indicates reservoir rock is of porous type, but ratio is not known by the author. C, indicates that the reservoir rock is of cavernous type; and F, fissure type. k Show actual depth to top of producing zone or reser- voir. If producing zone is a series of interbedded sands and shales, and the sands are all productive or capable of producing, show the depth to top of top sand member. i Show actual average thickness that is producing or known to be productive. If, for example, average thick- ness of productive zone above water level is 50 feet, show 50 feet, even though wells are completed in only upper 10 or 15 feet of zone. m A, anticlinal; AF, anticlinal with faulting as im- portant factor; Af, anticlinal with faulting as minor factor; AM, accumulation due to both anticlinal and monoclinal structure; D, dome; DS, salt dome; H, strata are horizontal or nearly horizontal; MC, monocline with accumulation due to change in character of stratum; MF, monocline- fault; MI, monocline with accumulation against igneous barrier; ML, monocline-lense; MU, monocline- unconformity; MP, monocline with accumulation due to sealing at outcrop by asphalt; N, nose; S, syncline; SL, shoreline; T, terrace; TF, terrace with faulting as important factor. n Show name of deepest stratigraphic zone tested and total depth of well that tested such zone, whether it is deepest well in field or not. X Correct entry not determinable. lUUNO'f, STATE GEOLOGICAUSOBVEV f^froooob ob6^ rv^ . fe'7 Oil And Gas Developments In Illinois During 1951 By ALFRED H. BELL i^/ AND VIRGINIA KLINE ^ PRODUCTION AND DRE.LING In 1951 Illinois produced 60,244,000 bbis of oil, i^ or 2.7 per cent of the total for the United States, dropping to seventh place in the country after having ranked sixth for eight consecu- tive years. Production decreased by three per cent from 1950, when the total Illinois production was 62,028,000 bbls -' (Fig. 2). Daily average production by months was as follows: Months Barrels Months Barrels January 169,000 July 166,000 February 158,000 August 167,000 March 166,000 September 161,000 April 167,000 October 170,000 May 170,000 November 166,000 June 163,000 December 159,000 Production for January was slightly higher than for January, 1950; during July and November it was the same as in these months in 1950 and during the other nine months of 1951 daily production ranged, by months, from 1,000 to 12,000 bbls less than during the same months in 1950, averaging about 6,000 bbls lower. The number of producing wells completed during the year was about 25 per cent lower than during 1950. An in- crease in the amount of oil produced by secondary recovery methods compensated, in part, for the decrease in new oil found during 1951. A total of 2,383 wells were drilled for oil or gas during 1951, a decrease of 511 wells from the total of 2,894 drilled in 1950. Of the 2,383 wells completed, 916 were oil wells, eight were gas wells, 714 were dry holes in pools, and 745 were unsuccess- ful wildcats. Producing wells made up about 39 per cent of all wells completed, as compared with 45 per cent during 1950. The percentage of successful wildcats was 11.2, or a drop of about 1 per cent. The percentage of successful pool completions was about 54 per cent, a decrease of five per cent. Data on production and drilling by fields for Illinois are given in Table I, on annual production and drilling since 1936 for the State in TaUe HI, and on drilling in 1951 by counties in Table V. DISCOVERIES Forty oil fields and one gas field (Table II A, Fig. 1), 53 extensions to oil fields (Table II B), and 22 new oil pays and two new gas pays in oil fields (Table II C) were discovered in 22 counties in Illinois in 1951, two more counties than in 1950. Printed with permission of the Chief, Illinois State Geological Survey, Urbana, Illinois. 1/ Member, A I M E. 2/ Oil and gas Division, Illinois State Geological Survey, Urbana, Illinois. Of the 41 new .pools, two, Christopher and Pinkstaff, were abandoned before the end of the year. The new field having the largest number of producing wells at the end of the yeeu- was Frogtown North, Clinton County, with 22 wells completed and development work still in progress. In most of the other new fields only one or two wells were completed at the end of the year, but rigs were in operation in several that were discovered near the end of the year, and it appeared that there were possi- bilities that they might develop into small but profitable pools. At the end of the year there were 113 producing oil wells and one capped gas well in the 41 new fields, as compared with 145 wells at the end of 1950 in the 24 new fields discovered during that yesir. Initial productions of new-field discovery wells ranged from nine to 490 bbls of oil, with a majority of them making less than 100 bbls. A generalized geologic column for the southern Illinois oil region showing principal producing strata is shown in Fig. 3. As in previous years, most of the new field discoveries in 1951 were in formations of Mississippian age. Of the 43 pro- ducing formations in the 41 discovery wells of new fields listed in Table II A, 37 are of Mississippian age, including nine in the Upper Mississippian Chester series and 28 in the Lower Miss- issippian Iowa series. Of the remaining six, three are in the Pennsylvanian, and three in the Devonian-Silurian. There were no Ordovician discoveries. In addition to the three Devonian or Silurian pools discovered during the year (Assumption South, Beaucoup, and Okawville), two other discovery wells in the Devonian or Silurian were being completed at the end of the yeeir. Although Frogtown North was discovered by a Lower Mississippian well, most of the wells in the pool produce from Devonian or Silurian pays. In this pool 18 Devonian or Silurian wells, the first of which went on produc- tion in April, 1951, had produced more than 242,000 bbls by the end of the year. These developments have given a considerable impetus to exploration for pre-Mississippian production. Most of the recent testing of the Devonian and lower systems has been done around the margin of the basin, with Clinton, Washington, Randolph, Christian, and Madison counties showing the most favorable results for the areas thus far tested. Although its discovery well had not been officially completed at the end of 1951, the Tilden pool, in Randolph County, showed promise of developing excellent production. Two Pennsylvanian oil pools, Irvington East and Raymond East, and one Pennsylvanian gas pool, Livingston East, were discovered in 1951. Raymond East appears to be one of the most promising new pools for the year. 3/ Source of 1951 production figures is Illinois Basin Scout Associa- tion monthly reports which are based on pipeline runs. 4/ From U. S. Bureau of Mines Annual Petroleum Statement No P347, "Crude Petroleum and Petroleum Products, 1950 (Final Summary)." OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS EXPLORATORY DRILLING Of the total number of wells drilled during 1951, 839, or 35 per cent, were wildcats. Of this number 509 were drilled less than 2 miles from production, discovering 25 new fields and 53 extensions to pools, or about 15.3 per cent successful. The 330 wildcats drilled more than 2 miles from production discovered 16 new fields, or 4,8 per cent successful. In pools 50 wells were drilled to test deeper pays. Of these, two were successful. An extension well opened up a deeper pay in one other pool. Unsuccessful Devonian or Silurian tests were drilled in one Pennsylvanian pool, Raymond, and nine Mississippian pools, Beaucoup South, Carlyle North, Dubois, Fairman, lola Consoli- dated, Mt Carmel, Panama, Posey, and Siggins. A Trenton test was drilled in the old Progtown pool, an upper Mississippian pool. Wildcat tests to the St. Peter or deeper formations were drilled in Adams, Monroe, Pulaski, Schuyler, and Whiteside counties. During the year a deep well was begun in the New Harmony Consolidated pool which was intended to be the deepest well ever drilled in Illinois. At the end of the year it had not yet reached the record depth of 7,205 ft set in the Clay City Con- solidated pool, but had reached a depth of about 6,000 ft and was still drilling. The total footage of wildcat wells completed during the year was 1,901,149 ft of which 245,343 ft, or about 13 per cent, was drilled in successful wells. The average depth of wildcat wells drilled during 1951 was about 2,165 ft, approximately 150 ft deeper than the average depth of wildcats drilled in 1950. This reflects the emphasis on pre-Mississippian wildcat drill- ing on the northern and western margins of the basin in 1951 as opposed to a large amount of Pennsylvanian testing along the eastern edge of the state during the two previous years. A se- lected list of dry wildcats for 1951 is given in Table II D. Geophysical exploration during the year included use of seismograph and gravity meter. There was a small amount of geochemical exploration by soil analysis. The number of geo- physical parties operating throughout the year, by months and methods, is given in Table VI. DEVELOPMENT Wells were completed in 52 counties in Illinois in 1951, the same number as in 1950, extending from Whiteside on the north to Pulaski on the south and from the Mississippi River on the west to the Indiana border on the east. Over half the wells drilled were concentrated in six counties; White, Hamilton, Wayne, Richland, Clay, and Wabash. Thirteen counties or one-quarter of those drilled in, accounted for over three-quarters of all com- pletions. Producing wells were drilled in 28 counties. The six counties listed above had sJmost two-thirds of the producing wells completed. Clay County had the largest number of new fields for the year, with six discovered, none of which appeared to be of im- portance, Hamilton and Wayne counties each had four new fields, each with one better than average discovery (Blairsville West and Zenith North). Fields with the largest number of successful completions for the year were Clay City Consolidated with 73, New Harmony Consolidated with 61, Dale Consolidated with 45, and Phillips- town Consolidated with 36. The average depth of all wells drilled for oil and gas in Illinois in 1951 was 2,493 ft, or about 260 feet deeper than dur- ing 1950. Depths of producing wells completed during the year varied from about 300 ft to almost 3,400 ft. In fields discovered since 1936, the total number of wells producing at the end of 1951 was 17,436; in older fields the num- ber was qjproximately 9,407, or a total for the state of 26,843 wells producing at the end of 1951. PRODLiCTIVE ACREAGE The area of proved production, including abandoned pro- duction, in Illinois at the end of 1951 was 412,050 acres for oil and 17,965 acres for gas. Of this amount, 298,305 oil acres and 6,640 gas acres were in pools discovened since 1936. About 15,000 acres were added in 1951 by new pools discovered during the year and development and extensions of older pools. ESTEV1ATED PETROLEUM RESERVES The Illinois Geological Survey estimates that on Jan. 1, 1952, the oil reserves in Illinois that can be produced from wells now in existence by methods in use in each area total 692.7 million bbls. This represents an increase of 77 million bbls over the estimate for Jan. 1, 1951, and the factors in this change are shown in the following table: Millions of Bbl. Estimated reserves, Jan. 1, 1951 615.7 Withdrawal by 1951 production 60.2 Added by new drilling in 1951 555.5 28.8 584.3 Added by upward revision due mainly to secondary recovery operations (water flooding) 108.4 Estimated reserves, Jan. 1, 1952 692,7 The 939 producing oil wells completed in 1951 added esti- mated oil reserves of 28.8 million bbls, or an average of about 30,000 bbls per well. This compares with an average of about 29,800 bbls per well in the previous year (39.1 million bbls for 1,309 producing oil wells completed in 1950). Of the 28.8 million bbls of reserves added by the 1951 drill- ing, it is estimated that four per cent is in Pennsylvanian sand- stones, 91 per cent in Mississippian sandstones and limestones, 5 per cent in Devonisin-Silurian limestones, and less than one per cent in Ordovician limestones. The most important pay zones are in the Ste. Genevieve formation, which is estimated to have 36 per cent of the reserves added by 1951 drilling, the Cypress sandstone with 26 per cent, and the Aux Vases sandstone with 19 per cent. The Devonian-Silurian, which accounted for only about 0.3 per cent of the reserves added by 1950 drilling, is given five per cent of the 1951 total ECONOMIC DATA The price of crude oil throughout 1951 remained at $2.77 for most Illinois fields, although small amounts sold at higher and lower prices. The value (at the wells) of the crude oil produced in Illinois during the year was approximately $166,876,900. To this should be added the value (at the plants) of natural gas- oline andliquified petroleum gases produced in the state in 1951, which is estimated to be approximately $8,687,700. This gives a total value of $175,564,600 for liquid products from Illinois oil fields in 195 L The crude oil produced in Illinois during 1951, amounting to 60,244,000 bbls, is 13 per cent of runs-to-stills for refineries in the Central Refining district (Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mi- chigan, western Ohio, and Wisconsin). Stocksof crudepetroleum on hand in Illinois (including Minne- sota and Wisconsin) on Dec. 31, 1951, were 20,250,000 bbls, as compared with 16,811,000 bbls on Dec. 31, 1950. Stocks of re- fined products in the Central Refining District, according to the ALFRED H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE L. S. Bureau of Mines, were as follows: Dec. 31, 1951 Product Bbl Gasoline 28,500,000 Kerosene 5,146,000 Distillate Fuel Oil 15,892,000 Residual Fuel Oil 5,715,000 GAS AND GAS PRODUCTS Dec. 31, 1950 Bbl 24,560,000 4,212,000 10,251,000 3,619,000 An estimated 45 billion cu ft solution gas was produced from Illinois oil wells during 1950, and about a quarter billion cu ft of gas was produced from gas wells in oil fields, either in gas caps or in separate reservoirs in the oil areas. The production of gas from Illinois gas fields was insignificant, amounting to only a few million cu ft during. 1951. Most of the 236 million cu ft of Illinois gas marketed during the year, as shown in Table VIII, came from dry gas wells within oil fields. In addition to the gas marketed, a somewhat smaller amount from gas wells in oil fields was used as fuel on leases. About 12.8 billion cu ft of solution gas from oil wells was utilized in Illinois natural gasoline plants during 1951. Accord- ing to preliminary figures from the U. S. Bureau of Mines, 124,110,000 gals of natural gasoline and allied products was extracted from this gas in the natural gasoline plants. This com- pares with a total yield of 130,494,000 gals during 1950. Data collected by the Illinois Basin Scout Association indicated that approximately 1.7 billion cu ft of dry residue gas from these plants was returned to the formation with the remainder being used as plant or lease fuel. The amount of plant residue gas flared was negligible. In addition to the 12.8 billion cu ft of metered solution gas processed, it is believed that an additional 10 to 15 billion cu ft of unmetered solution gas was used, largely for lease fuel. When compared with the estimated 45 billion cu ft of produced solution gas, it is obvious that the amount flared is greater than the amount used. Eight new gas wells scattered in five pools and five counties in Illinois, which had a combined initial open flow capacity of of 13,9 cu ft daily, were completed in 1951. Five of these, three in Louden and one each in Cottonwood and Herald, are being utilized, the others being shut in or abandoned because of lack of market. The underground storage of natural gas for the purpose of augmenting supplies during periods of high seasonal demand and permitting the long distance pipelines to operate steadily at nearly their capacity rate has received much attention in Illi- nois during 1951. The Mississippi River Fuel Corporation is now conducting an experimental storage operation in the Roubidoux- Gasconade formation on the Waterloo anticline about 15 miles south of St. Louis, Missouri. If successful, this storage opera- tion will be an important factor in supplying gas consumers in St. Louis. The Natural Gas Storage Co. of Illinois applied to the Illi- nois Commerce Commission in November, 1951, for approval of a project to store natural gas underground in the Galesville- Ironton formation on the Herscher dome in Kankakee County. Storage of 90 billion cu ft or more of natural gas from the Mid- Continent and Gulf Coast areas is contemplated. This is for the purpose of increasing gas supplies available to consumers in Chicago and the surrounding area. SECONDARY RECOVERY The development of secondary recovery by water flooding over the state is continuing to increase according to Paul A. Witherspoon, Head of the Petroleum Engineering Division, Illi- nois State Geological Survey. As of Jan. 1, 1951, there were 64 water floods in operation, and by the end of 1951, it is estimated that there were approximately 100 projects operating in 45 diffe- rent oil fields. As of Dec. 31, 1951, the crude oil recovered by this method of secondeu^y recovery is estimated to be 25 million bbls. A project that has received a great deal of attention is the Benton Unit in Franklin County operated by the Shell Oil Co. This water flood was started in November, 1949, and currently covers 2,200 acres. The accumulated water flood oil recovery at the end of 1951 was approximately 1,750,000 bbls. During December, 1951, the daily average production of the Benton field was slightly below 8,000 bbls, as compared with 1,500 B/D two years earlier and before water flooding begun. Secondary recovery operations are expected to contribute a progressively increasing proportion of the state s total oil pro- duction during the next few years. GAS PRODUCED IN ILLINOIS AND MARKETED IN 1951 Field, County Cottonwood, Gallatin j Herald, White > Storms, White ) Louden, Fayette Panama, Bond, Montgomery Market Carmi Vandalia, St. Elmo Amount Used 160,659,000 25,752,500 20,453,000 27,752,000 2,000,000 236,616,500 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The writers gratefully acknowledge the cooperation of the many oil companies and individuals who contributed the basic data for this report. The following members of the Illinois Geological Survey assisted in its preparation: Paul A. Witherspoon, Lester L. Whiting, Wayne F. Meehts, Mrs. Kathryn C. Irving, W. W. Hall- stein, and Robert L. Brownfield. TABLE 1-OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS UJ CD Z UJ Z _J FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION >- q: UJ Q u. O < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION O %^ on CD CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE*" UJ Its i2i< < BARRELS O "^ at UJ UJ ^ a: < MILLION CU FT " UJ )- O U. 1- o o Q O u. 1- O O Q §5 UJ i- O u. O Z '- Q 1 Warrenton- Borton, Edgar Unnamed; Pen 1906 120 30,000 500 2 Westfield, C/orA-Co/es 1904 10,000 X X X X X 3 Shallow Gas; Pen 9,050 X X X X X 4 Westfield; Mis L 9,000 X X X X X 5 Trenton; Ord 300 X 7,000 6 7 Siggins, Cumberland-Clark 4 1906 4,000 X X X X X 8 1st Siggins; Pen 3,200 X X X X X 9 2nd & 3rd Siggins; Pen 500 X X X X X 10 Lower Siggins; Pen 1,000 X X X X X 11 York, Cumberland-Clark^ York; Pen 1907 350 X X X X 12 Casey, Clark 1906 2,100 X X X X X 13 Upper Gas; Pen 200 X X X X X 14 Lower Gas; Pen 400 X X X X X 15 Casey; Pen 1,540 X X X X X 16 Carper; Mis L 20 X X 17 Martinsville, Clark 1907 1,450 X X X X X 18 Shallow; Pen 35 X X X X X 19 Casey; Pen 350 X X X X X 20 Martinsville; Mis L 710 X X X X X 21 Carper; Mis L 650 X X 22 Devonian; Dev 660 X X 23 Trenton; Ord 20 X X c 24 Johnson North, Clark 1907 2,400 X X X X X 25 Claypool; Pen 1,200 X X X X X 26 Shallow; Pen 200 X X X X X 27 Casey; Pen 900 X X X X X 28 Upper Partlow; Pen 250 X X X X X 29 Carper; Mis L 20 X X c 30 Johnson South, Clark 1907 2,200 X X X X X 31 Claypool; Pen 200 X X X X X 32 Casey; Pen 300 X X X X X 33 Upper Partlow;. Pen 1,700 X X X X X 34 Lower Partlow; Pen 850 X X X X X 35 Bellair, Crawford- J asp er 1907 1,500 X X X X X 36 "500 ft."; Pen X X X X X X 37 "800 ft."; Pen X X X X X X 38 "900 ft."; Pen X X X X X X 39 Clark County Division 24,000 62,162,000 1,660,000 X X X 40 Main, Crawford ' 1906 35,800 X X X X X 41 Shallow; Pen 340 X X X X X 42 Robinson; Pen 34,420 X X X X X 43 Bethel; Mis U 20 X X 44 Oblong; Mis L 1,000 X X 45 Salem; Mis L 180 X X 46 Devonian; Dev 30 X X 47 New Hebron, Crawford Robinson; Pen 1909 1,570 X X X X X 48 Chapman; Crawford Robinson; Pen 1914 1,560 X X X X X 49 Parker, Crawford Robinson; Pen 1907 1,340 X X X X X 50 Allison-Weger, Crawford Robinson; Pen X 1,100 X X X X X 51 Flat Rock, Crawford^ Robinson; Pen X 1,950 X X " X 52 Birds, Crawford- Lawrence Robinson; Pen X 4,485 X X X X X 53 Crawford County Division^ 47,805 160,864,000 1,518,000 X X 54 Lawrence, Lawrence-Crawford 1906 26,700 X X X X X 55 Pennsylvanian; Pen 85 X X X X X 56 Bridgeport; Pen 5,060 X X X X X 57 Buchanan; Pen 2,300 X X X X X 58 "Gas"; Mis U 1,440 X X X X X 59 Tar Springs; Mis U 10 X X 60 Hardinsburg; Mis U 10 X X 61 Jackson; Mis U 10 X X 62 Cypress (Kirkwood); MisU 16,300 X X X X X 63 Bethel (Tracey); Mis U 4,600 X X X X X 64 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 X X 65 Lower Ohara; Mis L 10 X X C 66 Rosiclare; Mis L 250 X X 67 McClosky; Mis L 7,400 X X 68 Salem, Mis L 10 X X 69 4 70 St. Francisville, Lawrence Bethel; Mis U X 420 X X X X X 71 Lawrence County Division' 27,120 246,576,000 1,951,000 X X X TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE UJ m Z UJ z _J NUMBER OF WELLS'' WELLS producing'' DEC 1951 RESERVOIR , PRESSURE ' Pli SECONDARY RECOVERY^ CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" | TO END OF 1951 | o 1- o u 1951 01 L^ < < Z %^ > < > < e UJ t- 1- NAME X . 1- UJ Q. _J ui O Q X o UJ 1- LU _J Q- O o UJ sz o o z •s m z o _] U- < u. ^ 1 — 1 < 1 25 1 X X X X s P 160 20 ML Trenton 2,212 2 1,657 5 1 188 K D St. Peter 3,009 3 206 5 X X X V .,0.0 X s P 280 40 D 4 1,450 1 X X X 33.5 X L C 335 X U 5 19 8 X X 38.2 0.18 L C 2,300 40 D 6 2 X 7 1,034 2 60 561 w D Dev 2.010 8 883 2 X X X X w 34.0 X s P 400 X D 9 90 X X X X w (;!3.6) X s P 480 X D 10 202 X X X X ;1I5.7) X s P 580 40 1) 11 71 I X X w (30.3) X s P 590 X AM Dev 2,381 12 441 4 10 '.'■.yi w AM Mis L 1,358 13 41 X X X (31.9) X s P 265 X AM 14 82 X X X (30.1) X s P 310 X AM 15 326 3 10 X X X W (33.6) X s P 445 40 AM 16 2 1 X X X X X s P 1,300 50 AM 17 233 7 2 120 W D St. Peter 3,411 18 7 X X X X X s P 255 X D 19 71 5 2 X X X W X X s P 500 X D 20 23 q X X X X X L P 480 X D 21 40 1 6 X X X W (38.9) X s P 1,340 X D 22 42 1 X X X X X L P 1,550 X D 23 2 X X X (39.6) X L P 2,700 X D 24 496 2 12 281 W AM Dev 1,910 25 298 X X X X X s P 415 X AM 26 32 X X X X X s P 315 X AM 27 181 10 X X X tt X X s P 465 X AM 28 47 1 2 X X X X X s P 535 X AM 29 2 1 X X X X X s P 1,325 X AM 30 558 5 5 35 388 G,W AM Dev 2,030 31 38 X X X X X s P 390 X AM 32 60 X X X G 30.0 X s P 450 X AM 33 419 4 35 X X X W X X s P 490 X AM 34 175 1 5 X X X 28.5 X s P 600 X AM 35 487 1 7 46 49 w AM MisL 1,471 36 310 0' 2 4b X X X w (32.41 X s P 560 X AM 37 64 1 4 X X X X X S P 815 X AM 38 182 1 X X X (37.0) X S P 885 X AM 39 4,977 27 97 81 1,919 St. Peter 3,411 40 7,384 27 81 3,729 G.W ML St. Peter 4,654 41 72 1 3 X X X X X S P 510 X ML 42 7,192 26 71 X X X G,W 34.0 X S P 900 25 ML 43 2 X X X X S P X X ML 44 108 6 X X X X X LS r 1,335 X ML 45 10 X (J X X X X L p 1,815 5 ML 46 2 1 X X X X X L p 2,795 11 ML 47 300 4 136 X X C 30.1 X S p 940 25 ML Mis 2,056 48 193 42 X X G X X S p 995 25 ML Mis 2 279 49 256 9 191 X X 29.5 X s p 1,000 25 ML Pen 1,227 50 151 1 I 54 X X 22.5 X s p 910 20 ML Pen 1,011 51 297 97 X \ 31.8 X s p 935 X ML Dev 3,110 52 689 2 4 317 X -^ G,W 31.8 X s p 930 28 ML MisL 1,731 53 9,270 30 92 4,566 St. Peter 4,654 54 4,574 21 166 2,105 G,R A St. Peter 5,190 55 10 1 X X X X X s p 290 X A 56 1,242 4 13 X X X G,W 33.0 X s p 800 40 A 57 491 4 5 X X X 33.0 X s p 1,250 15 A 58 243 15 X X X 33.0 X s p 1,330 15 A 59 1 X X X X X s p 1,410 10 A 60 1 X X X 33.0 X s p 1,570 10 A 61 1 X X X 33.0 X s p 1,360 10 A 62 3,046 6 37 X cooi X W 33.0 X s p 1,400 30 \ 63 728 3 50 X 6501 X 33.0 X s p l,o50 20 \ 64 3 1 X X X 33.0 X s p 1,810 20 A 65 X X X X X L p X X \ 66 13 2 2 X X X 33.0 X 15 p 1,850 X AC'" 67 999 43 X X X 33.0 X L p 1,860 10 A 68 1 X X X X X L p 1,955 2 A 69 5 1 X 70 55 21 600 X K 32.3 X S p 1.845 22 ML Mis 1,900 71 4,629 21 166 2,126 St. Peter 5,190 TABLE 1-OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS ILI m s z UJ z _J FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION > LU !^ Q Li. o < ai >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o ^^ q: CD °^ CO ■^ < CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbi NAME AND age'' UJ ^-> a: liJ < < UJ ^ a: < BARRELS O >" S "J LU ^ < MILLION CU FT " is UJ Si- O u. H O O ID '- Q O u. 1- O O z — Q O u. 1- O O z — 3 — Q 72 AWeadaie, Vabash-Lawrence^^ 1912 6,000 12,668,000 601,000 73 Pennsylvanian; Pen X X X 74 Bridgeport; Pen X X X 75 Buchanan; Pen X X X 76 * Biehl; Pen X X X 77 Jordan; Pen X X X 78 Waltersburg; Mis U X X X 79 Tar Springs; Mis U X X X 80 Hardinsburg; Mis U X X X 81 Cypress; Mis U X X X 82 Bethel; Mis U X X X 83 Aux Vases; Mis U X X X 84 Lower Ohara; Mis L X X X 85 Rosiclare; Mis L X X X 86 McClosky; Mis L X X X 87 88 Total Southeastern Fields'^ 4 105,045 482,300,000 5,730,000 X X 89 Ayers (Gas), Bond^^ Bethel; Mis U 1922 325 298.7 90 Greenville (Gas), Bond^^ Lindley (1st & 2nd); MisU 1910 160 990.0 91 Bartelso, Clinton 1936 580 2,085,000 66,000 92 Carlyle; Mis U 350 1,145,000 24,000 93 Devonian; Dev 230 940,000 42,000 94 Carlyle, Clinton Carlyle (Cypress); Mis U 1911 915 3,736,000 32,000 95 Frogtown, Clinton Carlyle (Cypress); Mis U 1918 300 500 % Ava-Campbell Hill, Jackson Cypress; Mis U 1917 .440 X 97 Colmar-Plymouth, Hancock- Hoing; Dev 1914 2,500 3,734,000 74,000 98 McDonough Carlinville, Macoupin'^^ Unnamed; Pen 1909 80 X 1,000 99 Gillespie-Denld (Gas), Macoupin^^ Unnamed; Pen 1923 80 135.8 100 Gillespie-Wyen, Macoupin Unnamed; Pen 1915 45 X 500 101 Spanish Needle Creek (Gas); Macoupin Unnamed; Pen 1915 80 14.4 102 Staunton (Gas), Macoupin'^^ Unnamed; Pen 1916 400 1,050.0 103 Collinsville, Madison Devonian-Silurian 1909 40 1,000 104 Brown, Junction City, 1910 175 X 5,000 105 Langewisch-Kuester, Marion Dykstra-Wilson; Pen 60 X X 106 Cypress; Mis U 115 X X 107 Sand oval, A/arion 1909 480 5,596,000 42,000 108 Bethel, Mis U 460 2,705,000 109 Devonian; Dev 390 2,891,000 42,000 110 Wamac, Marion-Clinton-9 ash- Petro; Pen 1921 250 560,000 9,000 111 ington Litchfield, Montgomery'^^ Unnamed; Pen 1879 100 24,000 112 Waterloo, Monroe'^^ Trenton; Ord 1920 230 236,000 113 Jacksonville (Gas), Morgan'^'^ Gas; Pen, Mis L 1910 X 2,000 1,320 X 114 Pittsfield (Gas), Ptie^e Niagaran; Si 1 1886 8,960 X 115 Sparta, Randolph^^ Cypress; Mis U 1888 165 X 116 117 Dupo.Sf. Clair Total of fields discovered Trenton; Ord 1928 2,400 2,649,000 80,000 113,745 501,023,000 6,097,000 11,325 2,506.5 prior to January 1, 1937^° 118 Ab Lake, Gallatin 1947 40 18,000 1,000 119 Renault; Mis 40 X X 120 Aux Vases; Mis U^' 40 X X 121 4 122 Al) Lake West, Gallatin Renault; Mis U 1950 10 1,000 500 123 Aden Consolidatea, V/ayne- Hamilton 1938 2,300 6,226,000 243,000 124 Aux Vases; Mis U 800 X X 125 Lower Ohara; Mis L-" 40 X X 126 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 127 McClosky; Mis L 2,300 X X 128 Salem; Mis L 20 X X 129 4 130 Aden South, Hamilton 1945 480 231 ,000 122^000 131 Aux Vases; Mis U 60 X X TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE UJ m Z UJ z _J NUMBER OF WELLS^ WELLS producing'' DEC 1951 RESERVOIR PRESSURE ' psi CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 o h 1951 01 L^ < _i < z Q z Ml •— > < 1- _: LU LU H u < < X u ^1 O UJ CL CL •^ U h- O 3 U. h- Q -T O y c a; S ir 0- o UJ u. Q O 1- lO UJ 1- > < E UJ H (X 1- NAME X , y- UJ Q 1 UJ O Q I Q t— LU _J O o o UJ z o o < < ie o _j < y 1- 1- -" cc < 72 756 8 19 375 AM Mis L 2,571 73 1 X X X X X S P 400 X AM 74 12 + 1 X X X X X s P 1,070 12 AM 75 X X X X X X s P 1,290 15 AM 76 542 3 4 X X X 35.1 X s P 1,425 20 AM 77 4 X X X X X s P 1,490 10 AM 78 21 1 4 X X X X X s P 1,540 15 AM 79 10 3 X X X X X s P 1,600 20 AM 80 1 X X X X X s P 1,780 10 AM 81 6 1 X X X 36.0 X s P 1,920 10 AM 82 69 2 5 X X X 37.0 X s P 2,010 10 AM 83 3 1 X X X X X s P 2,280 12 AM 84 9 X X X X X L P 2,300 10 AM 85 3 X X X X X LS P 2,300 5 AM 86 12 + 2 X 900 X 37.0 X L P 2,300 8 AM 87 88 ' X 19,657 86 374 81 8,987 89 21 355 X S P 940 5 A Ord 3,044 90 4 X X S P 925 X A Dev 3,290 91 50 RI6 St. Peter 4,212 92 51 29 X X 36.2 0.20 s P 985 24 D 93 26 21 X X 41.5 0.27 L P 2,420 12 D 94 173 3 4 30 X X 35.2 0.26 s P 1,035 20 AL'- St. Peter 4,120 95 14 1 2 X X 31.9 X s P 950 7 ML Sil 2,444 96 35 X X X X s P 780 18 A Dev 2,530 97 493 2 193 X X G 37.6 0.38 s P 450 21 AL Ord 805 98 8 3 135 X 27.7 X s P 380 X A Mis 1,380 99 4 155 X s P 540 X A Pen 575 100 23 7 X X 30.2 X s P 650 X T Ord 2,560 101 7 X X s P 305 X D Pen 495 102 18 145 X s P 460 X A Ord 2,371 103 6 X X X X L C 1,305 20 ML St. Peter 2,177 104 16 1 4 Dev 3,355 105 8 1 X X X 32.0 X s P 610 20 Mf 106 8 X X X 32.0 X s P 1,660 15 N 107 151 2 15 R St. Peter 5,023 108 123 X X 34.5 X s P 1,540 20 D 109 28 2 15 X X 38.0 0.38 L P 2,920 9 D 110 106 1 4 X X 30.2 X s P 720 20 D MisL 1,760 111 18 X X 23.0 0.24 s P 660 X D Pen 774 112 41 X X 30.2 0.97 L c 410 50 A Cam 1,801 113 53 X X X X LS p 330 5 ML Ord 1,390 114 68 X X L p 265 10 A Pre-Cam 2,226 115 20 X X X X S p 850 7 D Mis U 985 116 117 320 1 5 31 X X 32.7 0.70 L c 700 50 A Ord 1,800 21,333 92 388 81 9,326 118 2 1 1 M Mis L 2,941 119 2 X X 35.1 X L p 2,735 8 MF 120 X X 35.1 X S p 2,770 9 MF 121 1 1 122 1 1 X X X X L p 2,725 6 MC Mis L 2,867 123 90 72 w A Dev 5,395 124 5 15 X X w 37.0 X S p 3,175 12 A 125 X X 37.0 X L p 3,290 7 A 126 2 X X 37.0 X S p 3,320 5 A 127 72 23 X X w 37.0 X L p 3,350 8 A 128 1 X X 40.0 X L p 3,735 16 A 129 11 33 130 19 3 1 18 A Mis L 3,466 131 2 1 2 X X X X S p 3,245 8 AL TABLE 1-OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS a: UJ m UJ z _l FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION a: LLI Q Li. o < LU >■ OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION t3 o OL CO CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* Q UJ £ UJ ^< a: < BARRELS o Of Q- < UJ a: < UJ u < MILLION CU FT " O u. 1- o O u. 1- o O z — is UJ ^ O u. 1- o o z — Q 132 Lower Ohara; Mis L^' ) X X 133 Rosiclare; Mis L ( 460 X X 134 McClosky; Mis L 1 X X 135 4 136 Akin, Franklin 1942 280 547,000 54,000 137 Cypress; Mis U 180 X X 138 Aux Vases; Mis U 80 X X 139 McClosky; Mis V^ 20 X X 140 4 141 Akin West; Franklin 1948 100 39,000 13,000 142 Cypress; Mis U 20 X X 143 Lower Ohara; Mis L^' 20 X X 144 Rosiclare; Mis L^' 20 X X 145 McClosky; Mis L 60 X X 146 4 147 Albion Consolidated, Edwards- White 1940 4,700 10,604,000 1,248,000 40 148 Pennsvlvanian; Pen ) 40 149 Mansfield; Pen ( X X 150 Bridgeport; Pen 1,500 X X 151 Biehl; Pen ) X X 152 Degonia; Mis LI-" 10 X X 153 Waltersburg; Mis U 630 X X 154 Tar Springs; Mis U 60 X X 155 Ilardinsburg; Mis U 60 X X 156 Cypress; Mis U 320 X X 157 Bethel; Mis U 310 X X 158 Renault; Mis U 100 X X 159 Aux Vases; Mis U 580 X X 160 Lower Ohara; Mis L 100 X X 161 Rosiclare; Mis L 100 X X 162 McClosky; Mis L 1,600 X X 163 4 164 Albion East, Edwards 1943 560 790,000 77,000 165 Cypress; Mis U 160 X X 166 Paint Creek; Mis U^^ 10 X X 167 Bethel; Mis U 20 X X 168 Renault; Mis U 40 X X 169 Aux Vases; Mis U 70 X X 170 Lower Ohara; Mis L I X X 171 Rosiclare; Mis L I 360 X X 172 McClosky; Mis L ) X X 173 4 174 Alma, Marion 1941 60 71,000 2,000 175 Bethel; Mis I] X X 176 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 177 Amity, Richland McClosky; Mis L 1942 160 19,000 1,000 178 Assumption, Christian Devonian; Dev 1948 200 15,000 5,000 179 Assumption North, Christian 1948 1,760 3,119,000 809,000 180 Bethel; Mis U 400 X X 181 Rosiclare; Mis L 320 X X 182 Devonian; Dev 1,760 1,795,000 445,000 183 Assumption South, Christian Devonian; Dev 1951 20 500 500 184 Bamhill, V, ayne 1939 1,060 2,410,000 96,000 185 Aux Vases; Mis U 80 X X 186 Lower Ohara; Mis L I X X 187 Rosiclare; Mis L I 1,000 X X 188 McClosky; Mis L \ X X 189 Salem; Mis L 60 X X 190 4 191 Bartelso &st, Clinton 1950 120 36,000 33,000 192 Devonian; Dev 120 X X 193 Silurian; Sil 20 X X 194 Bartelso South, Clinton Devonian; Dev 1942 100 21,000 1,000 195 Bartelso West, Clinton Cypress; Mis U 1945 120 7,000 1,000 196 Beaucoup, Washington Devonian: Dev 1951 20 3,000 3,000 197 Beaucoup South, ]^ashington Bethel; Mis U 1951 60 8,000 8,000 198 Beaver Creek, Bond- Clinton Bethel; Mis U 1942 150 119,000 13,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE UJ CD Z UJ z _l NUMBER OF WELLS^ WELLS PRODUCING^ DEC )951 RESERVOIR PRESSURE ' psi >- >. CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O h UJ -, U 1951 01 L^ < < 1- z Q z UJ '~ > < >- 1- _• <^ a < =1 ^ '^ a. UJ h- u < X u (- z 8S O UJ Q- a. Q. O ^ U 1- O ID U. h- Q £ 1^ 5 tr ol o °- M UJ u. Q O i/> UJ a u "- 1- > < E UJ (- O Z3 q: 00 NAME X , 1- UJ a. _j UJ o Q X o LU 1- UJ _l Q- O o o UJ o Q z < m o _i U- _1 < 1 — 1 < 132 X K X X L P 3,310 7 AC 133 1 1 X X X X L P 3,330 8 AC 134 8 1 1 7 X X 39.0 X L P 3,395 9 AC 135 8 1 8 136 15 14 A MisL 3,515 137 11 10 X X 33.4 0.14 S P 2,840 10 AL 138 3 4 X X 37.8 0.12 S P 3,120 9 AL 139 X X X X L P 3,270 9 AC 140 1 141 6 1 6 A Mis L 3,435 142 2 2 X X X X S P 2,715 8 AL 143 X X X X L P 3,050 10 AC 144 X X X X L P 3,080 12 AC 145 3 1 3 X X X X L. P 3,130 4 AC 146 1 1 147 345 22 5 307 w Dev 5,185 148 1 X X S P 1,490 6 MF 149 4 1 3 500 X 35.4 X S P 1,650 5 MF 150 16 14 255 X w 35.0 0.16 s P 1,860 15 MF 151 94 14 1 87 600 X w 34.0 0.16 s P 1,995 17 MF 152 X X 35.4 X s P 2,125 9 MF 153 37 2 32 X X 34.8 X s P 2,365 16 AL 154 2 X X 36.0 X s P 2,400 5 AL 155 3 1 X X 36.0 X s P 2,635 10 A 156 26 26 X X 36.0 X s P 2,860 15 A 157 13 1 16 X X 35.2 X s P 2,960 14 Af 158 2 X X 35.4 X L P 3,000 13 Af 159 27 3 2 24 475 X 35.4 X s P 3,045 18 Af 160 5 3 X X 40.0 X L P 3,110 5 AC 161 3 3 X X 35.4 X L P 3,130 10 AC 162 78 47 X 90 w 35.2 X L P 3,140 12 AC 163 36 1 2 47 164 33 1 2 30 A Mis L 3,254 165 7 1 1 6 X X X X S P 2,800 7 A 166 X X X X s P 2,910 6 A 167 1 2 X X X X s P 2,920 6 A 168 2 2 X X X X LS P 2,925 10 A 169 4 5 X X 39.4 0.14 S P 3,020 17 A 170 6 1 5 X X X X L P 3,100 n A 171 2 2 X X X X L P 3,125 7 A 172 6 6 X X X X L P 3,155 7 A 173 5 2 174 4 2 A Dev 3,692 175 2 1 X X X X S P 1,945 8 A 176 2 1 X X 36.2 0.26 L P 2,085 10 A 177 4 2 X X X X OL P 2,960 5 MC MisL 3,089 178 6 2 6 X X 38.9 X L P 2,330 15 A Ord 3,070 179 139 5 127 w A Ord 3,021 180 40 30 X X w 38.0 X S P 1,050 10 A 181 16 16 X X 38.0 X s P 1,170 4 AL 182 83 5 81 X X 40.0 X L P 2,300 8 A 183 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,635 15 X Dev 2.740 184 78 37 w A Mis L 3,878 185 4 4 X X X X S P 3,325 15 AL 186 2 X X X X OL P 3,370 6 AC 187 1 X X X X LS P 3,400 9 AC 188 67 30 X X w 37.6 0.17 OL P 3,450 10 AC 189 1 1 X X 39.0 X L P 3.795 8 AC 190 3 2 191 6 5 6 R Sil 2,788 192 6 5 5 X X 41.6 X L P 2,540 7 R 193 1 X X X X L P 2,600 8 R 194 3 1 3 X X 40.0 0.15 L P 2,475 3 A Dev 2,652 195 8 1 3 X X X X S P 930 10 A Dev 2,520 196 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,070 4 A Sil 3,303 197 10 10 10 X X X X S P 1,430 6 AL Dev 3,122 198 14 3 11 X X 34.2 0.25 S P 1,130 6 A Dev 2,526 10 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS UJ rj z lij z -J FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION >- cn LU Q U- O < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o p u CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* Q LU < < IIJ ^ a: < BARRELS O >" a: LU < < LU ^ a: < MILLION CU FT ' O u- 1- o Q UJ — O u. H O O Z — Eg? n — Q O u. h- o o z — 199 Beaver Creek North, Bond Bethel; Mis U 1949 40 500 200 Beaver Creek South, Clinton Bethel; Mis U 1946 460 111,000 69,000 201 Belle Prairie, Hamilton 1940 220 490,000 32,000 202 Aux Vases; MisU^' 10 X X 203 McClosky; Mis L 220 X X 204 4 205 Belle Rive, Jefferson McClosky; Mis L 1943 200 263,000 11,000 206 Bellmont, \iabash 195:1 70 25,000 25,000 207 Bethel; Mis U 10 2,000 2,000 208 Lower Ohara; Mis L 60 23,000 23,000 209 Beman, Lawrence 1942 600 201,000 9,000 210 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 X 211 Rosiclare; Mis L 600 X 9,000 212 4 213 Beman East, Lawrence 1947 100 89,000 5,000 214 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 X X 215 Rosiclare; Mis- L 100 X X 216 4 217 Bend, 9 hue Tar Springs; Mis U 1941 120 211,000 186,000 218 Bennington, Edwards-Wayne 1943 1,000 1,444,000 68,000 219 Aux Vases; Mis U 200 X X 220 McClosky; Mis L 900 X X 221 4 222 Bennington South, Edwards McClosky; Mis L 1944 20 10,000 223 Benton, Franklin 1941 2,400 23,039,000 2,264,000 224 Pennsylvanian; Pen^^ 10 X 225 Tar Springs; Mis U 2,400 X 2,264,000 226 Benton North, Franklin 1941 700 1,185,000 239,000 227 Cypress; Mis U 100 X X 228 Paint Creek ; Mis U \ r 140 X X 229 Bethel; Mis U X 230 Aux Vases; Mis U 100 X X 231 Lower Ohara; Mis L 1 X X 232 Rosiclare; Mis L 600 X X 233 McClosky; Mis L X X 234 4 235 Berryville Consolidated, V/ abash-Edwards 1943 520 760,000 74,000 236 Lower Ohara; Mis L 100 X X 237 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 238 McClosky; Mis L 400 X X 239 4 240 Bessie, Franklin McClosky; Mis L 1943 40 52,000 5,000 241 Bible Grove North, Effingham 1947 135 54,000 8,000 242 Cypress; Mis U 50 X X 243 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 1,000 244 McClosky; Mis L 80 X X 245 4 246 Bible Grove South, Clay 1942 20 76,000 6,000 247 Cypress; Mis U 10 3,000 1,000 248 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 73,000 5,000 249 Blairsville West, Hamilton 1951 200 185,000 185,000 250 Rosiclare; Mis L^^ 20 X X 251 McClosky; Mis L 200 X X 252 4 253 Bogota, Jasper McClosky; Mis L 1943 240 419,000 10,000 254 Bogota North, Jasper^'^ McClosky; Mis L 1949 10 255 Bogota South, Jasper McClosky; Mis L 1944 480 249,000 95,000 256 Bone Gap, Edwards 1941 760 971,000 24,000 257 Waltersburg; Mis U 20 3,000 3,000 258 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 259 McClosky; Mis L 720 X X 260 Bone Gap East, Edwards 1951 40 6,000 6,000 261 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 6,000 6,000 262 McClosky; Mis L 20 263 Bone Gap South, Edwards 1947 250 291,000 42,000 264 Cypress; Mis U 60 139,000 14,000 265 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 10,000 266 Lower Ohara; Mis L X X 267 Rosiclare; Mis L i 180 X X 268 McClosky; Mis L \ X X TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE n a: UJ CD D Z UJ Z _] NUMBER OF WELLS^ WELLS PRODUCING^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR, PRESSURE ' psi CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O h o u 1951 01 L^ < < 1- z z > < >- 1- _: LU E LU q: 1- u ID a: 1- NAME X - H LU Q 1 LU O Q X a LU t— LJJ _1 o o o LU o Q < CO o _l U- _J < 1 — 1 < 199 4 1 X X X X s p 1,115 4 A Dev 2,460 200 36 6 9 24 X X X X s p 1,140 5 A Dev 2,537 201 11 10 A Mis L 3,580 202 X X 37.0 X s p 3,250 8 A 203 10 9 X X 37.0 0.12 L p 3,420 6 A 204 1 1 205 5 4 X X 39.4 0.50 L p 3,085 6 AC MisL 3,201 206 4 4 1 3 A MisL 3,006 207 1 1 I X X X X s p 2,650 7 AL 208 3 3 1 2 X X X X L p 2,840 7 AC 209 21 1 12 A MisL 2,000 210 1 p X X X X S p 1,805 20 AL 211 18 12 X X 38.1 X I, p 1.850 7 AC 212 2 I 213 5 3 A MisL 1,907 214 1 1 X X X X S p 1,805 12 AL 215 3 2 X X X X L p 1.860 8 AC 216 1 217 11 10 11 X X 38.0 X S p 2,250 25 ML MisL 3,146 218 45 40 w M MisL 3,372 219 7 3 X X X \ S p 3,145 15 ML 220 35 36 X X w 37.0 ^ L p 3,240 8 MC 221 3 1 222 1 X X X X L p 3,240 8 MC MisL 3,420 223 243 153 w A MisL 3,205 224 X X X X S p 1,700 9 A 225 243 153 X X w 38.0 X S p 2,100 10 A 226 49 1 44 A MisL 2,906 227 10 6 X X X X S p 2,460 18 A 228 6 11 X X X X S p 2,595 9 A 229 1 X X 38.4 0.15 S p 2,600 20 A 230 3 2 X X 37.0 0.15 S p 2,685 10 A 231 4 2 X X 37.4 0.70 L p 2,730 8 AC 232 3 3 X X 38.4 0.15 S p 2,775 6 AC 233 9 1 16 X X X X L p 2,800 10 AC 234 13 4 235 17 13 M MisL 3,125 236 4 5 X X X X L p 2,900 6 MC 237 1 X X X X L p 2,850 12 MC 238 11 8 X X 36.0 X L p 2,900 5 MC 239 1 240 1 1 X X 38.8 0.15 L p 2,895 10 MC Mis L 3,457 241 7 4 M MisL 2,999 242 3 2 X X 35.6 X S p 2,535 7 M 243 1 X X X X LS p 2,835 5 M 244 2 I X X X X L p 2,875 5 M 245 1 1 246 2 2 M MisL 2,929 247 1 1 X X X X S p 2,500 10 M 248 1 1 X X 37.8 X s p 2,750 10 M 249 10 10 1 9 A Mis L 3,507 250 X X X X L p 3,345 6 AL 251 9 9 1 9 X X X X 1. p 3,405 8 AC 252 1 1 253 7 6 X X 34.8 X L p 3,110 7 A MisL 3,234 254 1 X X X X L p 3,080 3 X MisL 3,130 255 23 1 3 19 X X 35.0 X L p 3,075 8 ML MisL 3,182 256 22 2 1 11 A MisL 3,350 257 2 2 2 X X X X S p 2,315 7 A 258 1 X X X X L p 3,230 6 A 259 20 1 8 X X 40.5 0.33 L p 3,240 6 A 260 2 2 1 1 X MisL 3,156 261 1 1 1 X X X X L p 2,980 10 X 262 1 1 1 X X X X I. p 3,050 5 X 263 16 1 1 14 A MisL 3,223 264 6 6 X X X X S p 2,710 10 A 265 1 I X X X X S p 3,020 9 A 266 2 1 n 2 X X X X I, p 3,040 5 AC 267 1 1 X X X X L p 3,045 5 AC 268 4 3 X X 37.0 X I, p 3,055 6 AC 12 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS de: UJ z UJ z _l FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION >- q: UJ y Q u. O < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o on CD p u CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE*" Q UJ O *" < < UJ *^ < BARRELS < < UJ ^ a: < MILLION CU FT " O u. I- o o Q H O O Z - a is UJ i- O u. t- o o z — 269 4 270 Boulder, Clinton 1941 640 4,262,000 282,000 271 Bethel; Mis U 520 X 187,000 272 Devonian; Dev 440 X 95,000 273 Boyd, Jefferson 1944 1,420 8,087,000 679,000 274 Bethel; Mis U 1,400 X X 275 Aux Vases; Mis U 600 X X 276 Lower Ghara; Mis L''' 40 X X 277 4 278 Broughton, Hamilton McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 2,000 2,000 279 Broughton South, Saline McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 280 Browns, Edwards-Wabash 1943 900 1,297,000 67,000 281 Tar Springs; Mis U^' 10 X X 282 Cypress; Mis U 260 X X 283 Bethel; Mis U 30 X X 284 Lower Ghara; Mis L 40 X X 285 Rosiclare; Mis L^^ 20 X X 286 McClosky; Mis L 700 X X 287 4 288 Browns East, \i abash Cypress; Mis U 1946 490 1,241,000 184,000 289 Browns South, Edtvards 1943 20 10,000 2,000 290 Bethel; Mis U 20 X X 291 Aux Vases; Mis U'" 10 X X 292 293 Bungay Consolidated, 4 1941 2,700 6,220,000 891,000 294 Hamilton^^ Renault; Mis U ' X X 295 Aux Vases; Mis U 2,660 X X 296 Lower Ghara; Mis L | X X 297 Rosiclare; Mis L 400 X X 298 McClosky; Mis L X X 299 4 300 Burnt Prairie South, Vthite McClosky; Mis L 1947 20 7,000 1,000 301 Calhoun Central, Richland 1950 30 1,000 1,000 302 Rosiclare; Mis L 10 X X 303 McClosky; Mis L 20 X X 304 Calhoun Consolidated, Rich- land-Wayne 1944 2,300 2,462,000 96,000 305 Lower Ohara; Mis L x X X 306 Rosiclare; MisL X X X 307 McClosky; Mis L X X X 308 4 309 Calhoun Kast, Richland Ste. Genevieve; Mis L 1950 160 166,000 30,000 310 Calhoun North, Richland 1944 40 42,000 3,000 311 Rosiclare; Mis L^' 20 X X 312 McClosky; Mis L 40 X X 313 4 3141 Cantrell, Hr ilton Aux Vases; Mis U 1949 200 340,000 78,000 315 Cantrell Nortn, Hamilton Aux Vases; Mis U 1951 60 62,000 62,000 316 Cantrell South, Hamilton 1950 300 445,000 320,000 317 Aux Vases; Mis U 200 X X 318 Lower Ghara; Mis L 80 X X 319 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 320 McClosky; Mis L 20 1,000 321 4 322 Carlinville North, Macoupin Pottsville; Pen 1941 120 1,000 100 323 Carlyle North, Clinton Bethel; Mis U 1950 460 161,000 85,000 324 Carlyle South, Clinton Cypress; Mis V 1951 10 325 Carmi, If/tite^e McClosky; Mis L 1939 30 6,000 326 Carmi North, White 1942 70 150,000 8,000 327 Cypress; Mis U 20 X X 328 Aux Vases; Mis U 60 X X 329 4 330 Centerville, White McClosky; Mis L 1940 120 347,000 13,000 331 Centerville East, White 1941 900 2,561,000 286,000 332 Palestine; Mis U 30 X X 333 Tar Springs; Mis U 380 X X 334 Hardinsburg; Mis U 10 X X 335 Cypress; Mis U 110 X X 336 Bethel; Mis U 140 X X 337 Aux Vases; Mis U 250 X X 338 Lower Ghara; Mis L^' 20 X X TABLE 1-A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 13 a: LU ffi 3 Z LU 2 _l NUMBER OF WELLS'" WELLS PRODUCING^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR, PRESSURE ' psi i> CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" | TO END OF 1951 | COMPLETED TO END 1951 1951 01 L^ < _l < z o z m •— > o > < >- 1- _: - K 1- z So or q: O iu Q- a. DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE FT^ PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET LU 3 h- U Di 1- NAME X V t- lU Q 1 lU O Q X o aJ 1— UJ _J o o o LU Z o o z <: CQ < z ie o —I L^ _i < f- -1 on < 269 2 9 2 270 36 1 28 R Dev 2,841 271 25 23 X \ 36.0 X s P 1,190 20 D 272 11 I 5 j: X 28.2 0.33 L P 2,630 5 D 273 114 1 106 w A Dev 3,870 274 72 1 '^S 345 X w 39.4 0.14 S P 2,050 18 A 275 6 X X 39.4 X s P 2,130 15 A 276 X X 39.4 X L P 2,230 2 A 277 36 38 278 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,275 5 X MisL 3,345 279 1 1 i X X X X L P 3,215 4 X Mia L 3,300 280 47 1 38 A Mis L 3,113 281 X X X X S P 2,365 14 AL 282 8 8 1,050 X 34.7 0.18 i P 2,640 13 AL 283 1 1 X X 34.7 X s P 2,785 12 A 284 2 1 \ X X X L P 2,965 4 A 285 X X X X L P 2,975 3 A 286 27 1 17 X X 35.0 X L P 3,000 6 A 287 9 U 288 48 1 38 1,035 X w 36.0 X S P 2,570 10 ML Mis L 3,058 289 2 1 N Mis L 3,095 290 1 X X X X s P 2,850 15 N 291 X X X X s P 2,955 5 N 292 1 1 293 164 23 4 141 w A Mis L 3,565 294 2 2 15 X X X X s P 3,270 10 AL 295 145 20 3 107 1,300 X w 37.0 0.24 s P 3,285 15 AL 296 1 1 X X X X L P 3,335 8 AC 297 2 1 1 X X X X I, P 3,400 8 AC 298 8 4 X X 36.8 0.24 L P 3,425 8 AC 299 6 1 13 300 1 1 500 X 36.5 X L P 3,415 6 X Mis L 3,552 301 2 1 1 I M Mis L 3,335 302 1 I 1 X X X X L P 3,245 6 MC 303 1 1 X X X X L P 3,280 3 MC 304 94 2 2 72 w A Mis L 3,323 305 19 1 10 X X X X OL P 3,140 9 A 306 10 1 8 X X X X OL P 3,160 6 A 307 51 1 1 44 X X w 38.0 0.15 OL P 3,180 9 A 308 14 10 309 5 5 X X 39.4 X L P 3,265 5 MC Mis L 3,380 310 2 1 A Mis L 3,280 311 X X X X LS P 3,155 10 A 312 1 X X X X OL P 3,170 11 A 313 1 1 314 19 2 1 16 X X 39.0 X S P 3,200 15 AL Mis L 3,462 315 6 6 6 X X X X s P 3,270 10 AL Mis L 3,419 316 20 10 1 19 A MisL 3,415 317 14 10 1 14 X X X X s P 3,130 20 AL 318 4 3 X X X X L P 3,180 9 AC 319 I 1 X X X X L P 3,185 3 AC 320 1 1 X X X X L P 3,325 4 AC 321 1 322 6 1 X X 20.3 0.35 S P 440 10 X Pen 562 323 38 1 2 35 X X 36.0 X S P 1,150 6 AL Dev 2,558 324 1 1 I X X X X S P 1,075 3 X MisU 1,194 325 2 X X X X OL P 3,150 6 MF MisL 3,282 326 4 1 4 A Mis L 3,418 327 1 1 1 \ X 38.0 X S P 2,940 13 Af 328 3 2 X X 37.0 0.14 s P 3,220 14 Af 329 1 330 5 4 X X 40.0 0.17 OL P 3,370 6 AC Mis L 3,600 331 84 15 1 74 w A Mis L 3,368 332 2 1 X X X X s P 2,225 3 AL 333 26 26 X X w 37.2 0.20 s P 2,460 24 AL 334 1 1 X X X X s P 2,615 22 AL 335 11 4 1 X X 36.0 X s P 2,915 6 AL 336 8 3 10 X X 36.0 X 8 P 2,990 20 AL 337 24 6 18 X X 36.0 X S P 3,075 21 AL 338 X X 36.0 X OL P 3,175 5 AC 14 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS a. UJ m s. D Z UJ z FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION V q: UJ y Q u. O < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o a: m CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* O UJ ^^ a. ^ < < UJ ^ < BARRELS o */> < < UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT " O u. h- o o O u- 1- o O z — Q O u. 1- o o z — 3 '- 339 McClosky; Mis L 220 X X 340 4 341 Centerville North, K/iiteS^ Bethel; Mis U 1947 10 342 Central ia, Clinton-Marion 1937 3,360 36,149,000 879,000 343 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 X X 344 Cypress; Mis U X X 345 Bethel; Mis U 1,400 X X 346 Devonian; Dev J 2,500 20,808,000 386,000 347 Trenton; Ord 1,400 1,827,000 278,000 348 4 349 Centralia West, Clinton Bethel; Mis U 1940 90 370,000 8,000 350 Christopher, Franklin Lower Ghara; Mis L 1951 10 351 Cisne North, Kayne 1942 260 121,000 23,000 352 Aux Vases; Mis U 80 X X 353 McClosky; Mis L 200 X X 354 4 355 Claremont (Gas), Richland Rosiclare; Mis L 1950 160 356 Clarksburg, Shelby Bethel; Mis U 1946 20 12,000 2,000 357 Clay City Consolidated, 1937 66,000 140,786,000 6,957,000 X X X 358 Clay-Uayne- Richland- Jasper Cypress; Mis U 5,000 X X X X X 359 Bethel; Mis U 30 X X 360 Aux Vases; Mis U 10,100 X X 361 Lower Ghara; Mis L | X X 362 Rosiclare; Mis L , 55,000 X X 363 McClosky; Mis L X X 364 St. Louis; Mis L^^ 20 X X 365 Salem; Mis L 60 X X 366 Devonian; Dev 20 5,000 1,000 367 4 368 Clay City North, Clay 1948 300 378,000 18,000 369 Cypress; Mis U 30 X X 370 Rosiclare; Mis L 120 X X 371 McClosky; Mis L 160 X X 372 4 373 Clay City West, Clay 1941 530 1,280,000 31,000 374 Cypress; Mis U 10 20,000 375 Aux Vases; Mis U 30 X X 376 McClosky; Mis L 520 X X 377 4 378 Coil, Uayne 1942 480 1,227,000 38,000 379 Aux Vases; Mis LI 460 1,226,000 38,000 380 McClosky; Mis L 20 1,000 381 Coil West, Jefferson 1942 300 486,000 24,000 382 Aux Vases; Mis U 80 X X 383 LowerOhara; Mis L X X 384 Rosiclare; MisL^' 300 X X 385 McClosky; Mis L X X 386 4 387 Concord, White 1942 1,300 3,385,000 161,000 388 Tar Springs; Mis U 180 X X 389 Cypress; Mis U 140 X X 390 Renault; Mis U^' 20 X X 391 Aux Vases; Mis U 360 X X 392 Lower Ghara; Mis L 120 X X 393 McClosky; Mis L 1,040 X X 394 4 395 Concord Central, White 1947 140 183,000 22,000 396 Cypress; Mis U 20 X X 397 Aux Vases; Mis U 100 X X 398 McClosky; Mis L 40 X X 399 4 400 Concord East Consolidated, White^^ 1942 100 129,000 16,000 401 Waltershurg; Mis V 30 X X 402 Tar Springs; Mis U 20 17,000 1,000 403 Lower Ghara; Mis L 40 X X 404 McClosky; Mis L 20 X X 405 Concord North, \ihite 1946 40 116,000 5,000 406 Aux Vases; Mis U 40 X X 407 McClosky; MisL^l 20 X X TABLE I - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 15 UJ CD 2 Z LU Z NUMBER OF WELLS^ WELLS PRODUCING'^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR , PRESSURE ' psi i> ss CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O h I'" 1951 01 L^ 1/1 < _l < z Q Z O - > < >- 1- _: < E UJ en 1- H a: 1- NAME X . h- UJ Q 1 UJ O Q X LU 1— UJ -J Q- o CD UJ o o •< CO < C3 Z * o -J < U 1- 1 — 1 < 339 10 1 4 X X 3T.0 X OL p 3,230 7 AC 340 2 1 14 341 1 X X X X S p 2,990 13 ML MisL 3,290 342 995 12 479 w A Ord 4,170 343 1 X X X X s p 690 X A 344 50 3 76 500 X 36.4 0.20 s p 1,200 12 A 345 566 6 220 525 X 37.0 0.17 s p 1,355 20 A 346 319 3 180 2,000 X 39.8 0.38 L C 2,870 9 A 347 59 65 1,840 X w 41.0 X L C 3,930 40 A 348 1 9 349 9 3 4 X X 37.8 0.17 S P 1,440 9 N MisU 1,634 350 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,675 8 X MisL 2,822 351 11 8 ' M MisL 3,295 352 3 2 X X 38.0 X S P 3,050 15 ML 353 7 6 X X 37.0 X L P 3,170 6 MC 354 1 355 1 X X L P 3,200 5 MC MisL 3,315 356 2 1 X X 33.5 X S P 1,770 6 A MisL 2,454 357 2,981 75 84 2,223 2 w A St. Peter 7,205 358 243 17 8 232 2 X X 34.0 X S P 2,635 16 AL 359 1 X X X X s P 2,800 15 AL 360 506 16 17 412 X X 39.0 X s P 2,940 15 AL 361 81 15 2 67 X X w 38.0 X L P 3,020 5 AC 362 165 8 6 137 X X 38.0 X OL P 3,030 8 AC 363 1,851 10 38 1,151 X X w 40.0 X OL P 3,050 10 AC 364 X X X X L P 2,935 3 A 365 2 1 1 X X X X L P 3,575 10 A 366 1 X X X X L P 4,350 10 A 367 133 9 12 221 368 16 14 A MisL 3,135 369 3 2 X X X X S P 2,650 6 A 370 5 4 X X 38.0 X L P 3,010 5 AC 371 7 7 X X X X L P 3,020 10 AC 372 1 1 373 17 12 w A MisL 3,218 374 1 X X X X S P 2,700 10 A 375 3 X X X X S P 2,950 7 A 376 16 8 X X w 39.4 0.12 OL P 3,065 15 A 377 1 378 17 13 A MisL 3,250 379 16 13 X X 39.0 0.12 S P 2,700 10 A 380 1 X X X X OL P 3,065 15 A 381 15 2 8 A MisL 3,022 382 4 4 X X X X S P 2,720 15 AL 383 1 1 X X X X L P 2,790 7 AC 384 X X X X L P 2,805 X AC 385 6 1 X X X X L P 2,880 8 AC 386 4 4 387 98 2 84 w A MisL 3,115 388 15 13 400 X 36.0 X s P 2,270 U AL 389 9 8 X X X X s P 2,625 10 AL 390 X X X X L P 2,850 X AC 391 16 16 X X 36.0 0.15 S P 2,905 14 AL 392 1 1 X X X X L P 2,930 8 AC 393 44 2 26 1,000 X w 37.0 X L P 2,990 10 AC 394 13 20 395 9 8 A MisL 3,057 396 1 1 X X X X S P 2,610 13 AL 397 6 5 X X X X S P 2,900 15 AL 398 1 1 X X X X L P 2,970 7 AC 399 1 1 400 8 2 6 A MisL 3,125 401 3 3 X X 37.2 X S P 2,140 10 A 402 2 1 1 X X X X s P 2,175 4 A 403 2 1 1 X X X X L P 2,895 6 AC 404 1 1 X X X X L P 2,960 2 AC 405 4 4 A MisL 3,138 406 4 3 900 X 38.0 X S P 2,950 10 A 407 X X X X L P 3,035 6 A 16 TABLE I - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS LU m s n z UJ z -J FIELD (County)"' PRODUCING FORMATION >- q: LU h Q u. O < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION -a o 1/5 -^ < CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE*' Q LU Is < < UJ ^ IX < BARRELS O <" C^ UJ < < UJ ^ a: < MILLION CU FT ' O u. 1- o o a. ^ 3 — Q LU — O li- \- o o z — O u. 1- O o z — 3 — Q 408 4 409 Concord South, ^'hite Tar Springs; Mis U 1944 40 25,000 1,000 410 Cooks Mills, Coles'^'^ Aux Vases; Mis U 1941 20 6,000 411 Cooks Mills North, Coles^^ Rosiclare; Mis L 1946 20 200 412 Cordes, Washington Bethel; Mis U 1939 1,500 4,975,000 689,000 413 Cottonwood, Gallatin Tar Springs; Mis U 1947 20 19,000 2,000 480 439.9 160.7 414 Cottonwood North, Gallatin 1951 70 18,000 18,000 415 Cypress; Mis U 60 X X 416 McClosky; Mis L 20 X X 417 Covington South, Vayne McClosky; Mis L 1943 320 155,000 4,000 418 Craig, Perry'^'^ Trenton; Ord 1948 20 2,000 500 419 Cravat, Jefferson Bethel; Mis U 1939 120 302,000 7,000 420 Crossville, ^hite 1946 100 15,000 1,000 421 Bethel; Mis U 20 " X 422 Lower Ghara; Mis L 20 500 423 McClosky; Mis L 60 X X 424 Dahlgren, Hamilton McClosky; Mis L 1941 760 1,143,000 22,000 425 Dale Consolidated, Hamilton'^^ 1940 12,000 43,168,000 2,197,000 426 Tar Springs; Mis U 460 X X 427 Hardinsburg; Mis II 100 X X 428 Cypress; Mis U 800 X X 429 Paint Creek; Mis U X X 430 Bethel; Mis U 1,900 X X 431 Aux Vases; Mis U 9,300 X X 432 Lower Ohara; Mis L X X 433 Rosiclare; Mis L 3,000 X X 434 McClosky; Mis L " X 435 " 436 Divide, Jefferson 1943 240 379,000 12,000 437 Lower Ohara; Mis L^' 20 X X 438 McClosky; Mis L 240 X X 439 4 440 Divide East, Jefferson 1947 680 920,000 147,000 441 Aux Vases; Mis U 100 X X 442 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 443 McClosky; Mis L 600 X X 444 4 445 Divide South, Jefferson McClosky; Mis L 194« 80 140,000 15,000 446 Divide VIesi, Jefferson 1944 1,140 2,572,000 96,000 447 Lower Ohara; Mis L^' 120 X X 448 Rosiclare; Mis L 120 X X 449 McClosky; Mis L 1,140 X X 450 4 451 Dix, Jefferson-Marion 1938 2,000 6,851,000 339,000 452 Bethel; Mis U 1,900 X X 453 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 X X 454 Rosiclare; Mis L 100 X X 455 Dix South, Jefferson'^* Bethel; Mis U 1941 20 13,000 456 Dubois, )i'ashington 1939 170 206,000 16,000 320 457 Cypress; Mis U 20 4,000 4,000 320 458 Bethel; Mis U 150 202,000 12,000 459 Dubois West, Washing- ton 1942 10 12,000 1,000 460 Cypress; Mis U 10 X X 461 Bethel; Mis U^' 10 X X 462 4 463 Dudley, Edgar 1943 520 281,000 106,000 80 464 Pennsylvanian; Pen 260 X X 80 465 Pennsylvanian; Pen 500 X X 466 Dundas East, Richland- 1942 1,620 1,640,000 289,000 467 Jasper Lower Ohara; Mis L X X X 468 Rosiclare; Mis L X X X 469 McClosky; Mis L X X X 470 4 471 Eberle, Effingham 1947 110 59,000 5,000 472 Cypress; Mis U 10 X X 473 Rosiclare; Mis L ^ 20 1,000 1,000 474 McClosky; Mis L 80 X X 475 Edinburg, Christian*^ Devonian; Dev 1949 20 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 17 lU m z LU z NUMBER OF WELLS'" WELLS PRODUCING'' DEC 1951 RESERVOIR, PRESSURE ' psi is S5 ct CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 o 1— Q_ ^ U 1951 01 L^ < -I < z Q z LU • — > < >- y- ■ <<• O 3 tu ^ a. UJ 1-- U < < X >- H 1- Z SS CC IX O LU Q- Ol DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE FT* PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET E LU Qi Z) 1- H a: NAME X , 1- lij Q- _l UJ O Q I Q h- LU _J Q_ O UJ z o Q - ai LU o u. o a: < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION ■a o ^^ CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE^ Q LU ^^ < < UJ < BARRELS O o^ CK UJ < >- 1- ■ - ^ 1- z oc or O LU Q- Q. Q. O '^ U H O Z) LL 1- Q X O ^ £ 1^ 5 tr Q- o °- M LU LL Q O 1- c/> LU Q; (J u- ^x6 1- > < E LU 1- U 1- NAME X , 1- LU Q 1 LU O D X Q UJ 1- LU _l Q- O O Q LU o o z < CO < o z o _J _J < y 1- 11. u- 1- -1 < 476 38 1 1 34 w R Dev 2,093 477 2 1 o X X X X S P 760 3 D 478 36 1 32 X X w X X L P 950 3 D 479 X X X X L P 1,950 20 D 480 3 1 1 A MisL 3,144 481 1 1 X X X X S P 1,940 7 A 482 X X X X S P 2,205 17 A 483 1 1 X X X X s P 2,865 15 A 484 1 X X 34.2 0.14 I. P 2,945 5 A 485 1 X X X X L P 2,735 7 X MisL 2,958 486 1 1 X X 35.8 0.22 s P 2,000 10 X MisL 2,387 487 3 1 2 A MisL 3,379 488 X X X X s P 3,240 20 AL 489 3 1 1 X X X X L P 3,345 10 AC 490 1 491 3 1 1 M MisL 3,496 492 2 1 1 X X X X s P 3,350 9 MC 493 1 X X 37.0 0.19 L P 3,420 7 MC 494 5 1 2 M MisL 3,434 495 1 1 X X X X S P 3,210 20 ML 496 4 2 X X 38.0 X L P 3,300 9 MC 497 42 29 2 39 A MisL 3,445 498 17 17 17 X X X X S P 3,110 10 AL 499 X X X X S P 3,230 15 AL 500 13 4 6 X X X X L P 3,280 10 AC 501 2 1 1 11 X X X X L P 3,300 7 AC 502 2 2 1 X X X X L P 3,370 3 AC 503 8 5 1 4 504 1 1 X X X X S P 2,730 8 X MisL 2,884 505 2 1 A MisL 3,497 506 1 1 X X X X S P 3,280 5 AL 507 1 X X X X L P 3,420 7 AC 508 25 6 21 AF MisL 3,204 509 3 3 3 X X X X S P 1,840 4 AL 510 10 8 X X 38.0 X s P 2,100 10 AL 511 5 3 X X 38.0 X s P 2,360 15 AL 512 1 2 X X 38.0 X s P 2,730 10 AL 513 5 3 4 X X 38.0 X s P 2,995 13 AL 514 1 1 X X X X L P 3,115 2 AC 515 1 X X X X L P 2,660 4 X MisL 2,808 516 1 1 X X X X LS P 2,650 8 X MisL 2,771 517 8 7 A MisL 3,094 518 1 1 X X 37.4 X S P 2,835 8 A 519 7 6 X X X X L P 2,970 7 A 520 2 2 M MisL 2,869 521 X X X X L P 2,695 10 MC 522 2 1 X X X X L P 2,730 8 MC 523 1 524 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,715 5 X MisL 2,831 525 66 6 56 A MisL 3,832 526 8 4 7 X X 37.0 X S P 2,560 15 AL 527 4 2 X X 37.0 X S P 2,945 12 AL 528 41 2 39 X X 37.0 X s P 3,200 20 AL 529 1 1 X X X X L P 3,210 4 AC 530 1 1 X X X X L P 3,240 6 AC 531 1 X X X X L P 3,305 5 AC 532 10 6 533 1 1 X X X X S P 3,180 12 ML MisL 3,802 534 41 27 X " 37.0 0.27 S P 1,435 10 A Ord 4,100 535 1 1 X MisL 3,012 536 1 X X X X s P 2,760 5 X 537 1 X X X X s P X X X 538 6 1 6 X X 38.0 X s P 3,240 18 AL MisL 3,471 539 31 2 20 A MisL 3,100 540 1 2 X X X X s P 2,630 10 A 541 1 X X 36.0 X s P 2,785 10 A 542 1 1 X X X X s P 2,875 25 A 543 27 2 13 X X 37.0 0.24 L P 2,965 10 A 544 1 4 545 4 1 3 X X 39.0 X L P 2,985 6 AC Mis L 3,361 20 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS a: UJ m Z) Z m z _j FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION >- q: LLJ Q U- O < >■ OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o a: CD < CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* Q tu Its < BARRELS o ^ < < UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT <= is LU ^ O li- 1- o o LU i- O U- 1- O z — 3 — Q is LU li- O u- t- O o z — Z3 — Q 546 Friendsville Central, ll/abash Bethel; Mis U 1946 30 25,000 2,000 547 Friendsville North, Wabash Biehl; Pen 1946 120 147,000 23,000 54S Frogtown North, Clinton 1951 380 308,000 308,000 549 St. Louis; Mis L 80 66,000 66,000 550 Devonian-Silurian 300 242,000 242,000 551 Cards Point, Wabash Lower Ohara; Mis L 1951 20 14,000 14,000 552 Cays, Moultrie Aux Vases; Mis U 1946 10 500 553 Coldengate Consolidated, Vayne-White 1938 3,500 4,870,000 597.000 554 Bethel; Mis U 10 " X 555 Aux Vases; Mis U 410 x X 556 Lower Ohara; Mis L X X 557 Rosiclare; Mis L 3,200 X X 558 McClosky; Mis L X X 559 4 560 Coldengate East, Wayne Lower Ohara; Mis L 1951 20 1,000 1,000 561 Coldengate North, Wayne 1945 60 35,000 3,000 562 Lower Ohara; Mis L^' 40 X X 563 Rosiclare; Mis L 60 X X 564 4 565 Coldengate West, Wayne 1948 80 12,000 7,000 566 Aux Vases; Mis U 40 X X 567 Lower Ohara; Mis L^' 40 X X 568 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 4,000 4,000 569 4 570 Cossett, White^* 1943 100 15,000 12,000 571 Cypress; Mis U 20 6,000 6,000 572 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 1,000 1,000 573 McClosky; Mis L 60 8,000 5,000 574 Grandview, Edgar^^ 1945 10 X X 400 X X 575 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 X X 360 X X 576 Salem; Mis L 40 X X 577 Half Moon, Wayne 1947 430 583,000 272,000 578 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 X X 579 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 580 McClosky; Mis L 420 X X 581 4 582 Helena, Lawrence 1947 50 22,000 5,000 583 Waltersburg; Mis U 40 22,000 5,000 584 McClosky; Mis L 10 585 Herald, White-Gallatin 1939 2,360 3,231,000 358,000 400 X 26.0 586 Pennsylvanian; Pen 40 X X 587 Pennsylvanian; Pen X X 588 Pennsylvanian; Pen Pennsylvanian; Pen 150 X X 589 X X 120 590 Degonia; Mis U 10 X X 591 Waltersburg; Mis U 420 X X 240 X X 592 Tar Springs; Mis U 150 X X 593 Cypress; Mis U 800 X X 594 Paint Creek; Mis U^ ' 10 X X 595 Bethel; Mis U 100 X X 596 Aux Vases; Mis U 320 X X 597 Lower Ohara; Mis L X X 598 Rosiclare; Mis L 400 X X 599 McClosky; Mis L X X 600 4 601 Herald East, White- Gallatin 1947 500 855,000 102,000 602 Waltersburg; Mis U 50 X X 603 Tar Springs; Mis U 60 X X 604 Aux Vases; Mis U 380 X X 605 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 X X 606 Herald North, White Aux Vases; Mis U 1948 40 58,000 9,000 607 Hidalgo, Jasper^^ McClosky; Mis L 1940 60 10,000 608 Hidalgo North, Cumberland Rosiclare; Mis L 1946 40 6,000 609 Hill, Effingham^'' McClosky; Mis L 1943 80 41,000 610 Hoffman, Clinton 1939 260 652,000 16,000 611 Cypress; Mis U 100 X X 612 Bethel; Mis U 180 X X 613 4 614 Hoodville East, Hamilton^^ McClosky; Mis L 1944 20 1,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 21 DC LU 00 Z> Z LLJ z _J NUMBER OF WELLS- WELLS PRODUCING^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR PRESSURE ' psi SECONDARY RECOVERY^ CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O h o u 1951 01 L= to < < z Q > < =ia: a: LU 1- u < X u >- H H Z a: IX O uu a. a. DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE ft'' PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET e UJ a: (- u ct t- NAME f LU- Q 1 LU O Q X o UJ h- UJ _J 0- o o UJ o o <: CX3 o _j u. u- 1 — 1 < 546 3 2 X X X X s P 2,330 15 MC MisL 2,630 547 13 7 X X w X X s V 1,615 12 MC MisL 2,592 548 22 22 22 R Sil 2,456 549 4 4 5 x X X X L F 1,200 10 D 550 18 18 17 X X X X L P 2,250 8 R 551 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,240 6 X Mis L 2,941 552 1 X X X X S P 1,935 5 ML MisL 2,011 553 153 16 3 120 A MisL 3,568 554 1 X X X X S P X " AL 555 35 5 1 29 X X 40.0 0.14 s P 3,180 15 AL 556 11 10 X X 39.0 X OL P 3,250 6 AC 557 13 2 1 10 X X 39.0 X LS P 3,275 7 AC 558 66 3 1 36 1,025 X 40.0 0.19 OL P 3,310 7 AC 559 28 6 34 560 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,290 3 X MisL 3,420 561 3 1 2 M MisL 3,460 562 X X 37.0 X L P 3,310 10 MC 563 1 1 X X 37.0 X L P 3,325 6 MC 564 2 2 565 5 4 4 M MisL 3,490 566 3 2 2 X X 40.0 X S P 3,240 15 ML 567 X X X X L P 3,320 5 MC 568 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,330 4 MC 569 1 1 1 570 7 5 6 X MisL 3,210 571 2 2 2 X X X X S P 2,625 9 X 572 2 2 2 X X X X S P 2,970 14 X 573 3 1 2 X X X X L P 3,065 5 X 574 12 2 2 M MisL 663 575 11 2 2 X X X X S P 400 X ML 576 1 X X L P 570 2 ML 577 23 5 21 M MisL 3,467 578 1 1 X X X X S P 3,190 18 ML 579 1 X X X X L P 3,275 4 MC 580 20 4 21 1,008 X 27.0 X L P 3,300 10 MC 581 1 582 5 2 X MisL 2,633 583 4 2 X X X X S P 1,780 8 X 584 1 X X X X L P 2,390 6 X 585 190 8 6 159 A MisL 3,394 586 1 1 1 X X S P 695 5 A 587 1 X X 29.0 X S P 1,060 10 A 588 10 6 X X 29.0 X s P 1,500 15 A 589 5 2 2 1 X X 29.0 X s P 1,750 18 A 590 1 2 " X 36.0 X s P 1,920 12 A 591 36 1 33 1 800 X 38.0 X s P 2,240 10 A 592 10 7 X X 37.2 0.24 s P 2,260 13 AL 593 72 3 2 66 X X 36.0 0.22 s P 2,660 14 AL 594 X X 36.0 X s P X X AL 595 8 2 6 X X 36.0 X s P 2,790 11 AL 596 27 23 1,000 X 35.7 X s P 2,920 6 AL 597 4 1 2 X X 37.0 X L P 2,965 6 AC 598 2 1 X X X X L P 3,005 4 AC 599 8 2 6 750 X 38.0 X L P 3,010 10 AC 600 5 5 601 41 1 6 34 M MisL 3,157 602 5 1 7 X X 37.0 X S P 2,290 10 ML 603 6 4 X X 35.6 X S P 2,365 12 ML 604 30 1 5 22 700 X 38.0 X S P 2,930 16 ML 605 1 X X X X L P X X MC 606 4 4 X X .38.6 X S P 2,900 10 MF MisL 3,082 607 3 X X 36.6 0.20 L P 2,575 4 MC Dev' 4,140 608 2 1 X " X X S P 2,655 12 MC MisL 2,778 609 2 X X 39.0 X L. P 2,565 5 N MisL 2,710 610 50 3 17 A Dev 2,914 611 12 5 X X X X S P 1,190 11 A 612 37 3 12 X X 33.2 0.21 S P 1,320 7 A 613 1 614 1 X X X X L P 3,365 3 N Mis L 3,411 22 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS PRODUCING V 1 CONDENSATE ILI CD 3 FIELD (County)"- FORMATION UJ a O OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION i o PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND Q LU o <" ^ UJ BARRELS O '^ DC UJ MILLION CU FT '^ Q rr O Q r:; O Q rz o LU z AGE* < UJ UJ — z — 5^ UJ ^ Z o, UJ — z ^ 5g! Z o^ UJ iC UJ a: O u. Z) '- Qi O u. 3 — < O u. 3 — _l > < ^- O a < 1- O Q o H O Q 615 Hord, Clay McClosky; Mis L 1950 60 47,000 46,000 616 Hord South, Clay McClosky; Mis L 1951 80 83,000 83,000 617 Huey, Clinlon}'^ Bethel; Mis U 1945 60 500 618 Hunt City, Jasper^° Rosiclare; Mis L 1945 20 1,000 619 Hunt City South, Jasper McClosky; Mis L 1947 80 19,000 8,000 620 Ina, Jefferson^^ St. Louis; Mis L 1938 40 16,000 621 Ina North, Jefferson McClosky; Mis L 1949 20 1,000 622 Inclose, Edgar-Clark Pennsylvanian; Pen 1941 30 X X 320 X 623 Ingraham, Clay 1942 580 412,000 360,000 624 Rosiclare; Mis L X X X 625 McClosky; Mis L X X X 626 Inman East Consolidated, Gallatin^ ^ 1940 3,100 9,284,000 826,000 627 Pennsylvanian; Pen 50 X X 628 Degonia; Mis U X X 629 Clore; Mis U 90 X X 630 Palestine; Mis U 40 X X 631 Waltersburg; Mis U 500 X X 632 Tar Springs; Mis U 1,460 X X 633 Hardinsburg; Mis U 130 X X 634 Cypress; Mis U 1,360 X X 635 Aux Vases; Mis U 40 X X 636 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 X X 637 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 638 McClosky; Mis L 120 X X 639 4 640 Inman West Consolidated, Gallatin^'* 1940 2,100 1,928,000 421,000 641 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 X X 642 Palestine; Mis U 40 X X 643 Waltersburg; Mis U 40 X X 644 Tar Springs; Mis U 660 X X 645 Hardinsburg; Mis U 160 X X 646 Cypress; Mis U 900 X X 647 Renault; MisU^' 20 X X 648 Aux Vases; Mis U 150 X X 649 Lower Ohara; Mis L 60 X X 650 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 651 McClosky; Mis L 200 X X 652 4 653 lola Consolidated, Clay- Effingham^^ 1939 2,700 7,239,000 375,000 654 Tar Springs; Mis U^^ 10 X X 655 Cypress; Mis U 430 X X 656 Paint Creek; MisU^' 10 X X 657 Bethel Mis U 800 X X 658 Renault; MisU^' 10 X X 659 Aux Vases; Mis U 1,360 X X 660 Rosiclare; Mis L X X 661 McClosky; Mis L 1,200 X X 662 4 663 lola South, Clay 1947 200 89,000 60,000 664 Bethel; Mis U 120 X X 665 Rosiclare; Mis L 140 X X 666 4 667 lola West, Clay^^ McClosky; Mis L 1945 20 500 668 Iron, ff/iUe 1940 1,020 3,665,000 61,000 669 Waltersburg; Mis U^^ 10 X 670 Tar Springs; Mis U 100 X X 671 Hardinsburg; Mis U 400 X X 672 Cypress; Mis U 50 X X 673 Bethel; Mis U 20 X X 674 Aux Vases; Mis U^' 10 X X 675 Lower Ohara; Mis L'' ' 20 X X 676 Rosiclare; Mis L^' 20 X X 677 McClosky; Mis L 340 X X 678 4 679 Irvington, U ashington 1940 1,000 5,053,000 170,000 680 Barlow; Mis U" 10 X X 681 Cypress; Mis U 100 X X 682 Bethel; Mis U 900 X X TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 23 LLI CO Z LU z NUMBER OF WELLS'" WELLS PRODUCING '^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR PRESSURE ' psi ss CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O u 1951 OIL' lO < O —I < 1- z Q z ^^ > < >- 1- ■ <^ ct < O X ^ 3 LU UJ u < < X u 1- z O LU Q- Q- DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE FT* PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET E UJ 1- u CK H- (/5 NAME X - 1- UJ Q- _J UJ O Q X o LU V- UJ -J Q- O C3 LU o o < CO < z o < u. u- 1 — 1 < 615 3 2 3 X X X X L p 2,800 5 TC MisL 2,954 616 4 4 4 X X X X L p 2,780 5 NC MisL 2,902 617 3 X X X X S p 1,260 6 AL Dev 2,720 618 1 X X X X S p 2,540 10 MC MisL 2,716 619 4 2 4 X X X X L P 2,445 7 MC MisL 2,559 620 2 X X 36.4 0.20 L p 3,000 4 AC MisL 3,100 621 1 X X X X L p 2,940 4 X MisL 3,150 622 12 X X X X S p 340 8 AL MisL 1,600 623 32 25 2 27 M MisL 3,14S 624 28 25 2 26 X X 36.8 0.21 L p 3,000 7 MC ■ 625 4 1 X X 36.8 0.21 L p 3,075 8 MC 626 296 4 4 274 A MisL 3,020 627 3 2 X X 38.0 X S p 780 10 AF 628 1 1 X X 37.0 X S p 1,690 10 AF 629 1 1 X X 37.0 X s p 1,725 8 AF 630 1 1 X X 37.0 X s p 1,840 13 AF 631 28 1 1 25 X X 38.0 X s p 1,980 18 Af 632 128 2 119 X X 36.0 0.24 s p 2,080 13 AF 633 3 2 X X 34.0 X s p 2,135 10 Af 634 89 2 1 85 X X 35.0 0.23 s p 2,390 14 Af 635 3 2 X X 38.0 X s p 2,715 8 AF 636 1 1 X X X X L p 2,795 5 AF 637 1 1 X X X X L p 2,790 7 AF 638 4 3 X X 38.0 X L p 2,800 8 Af 639 33 1 31 640 155 16 6 133 T MisL 3,060 641 1 X X X X s p 925 8 NL 642 3 1 2 X X 30.6 X s p 1,765 13 NL 643 4 1 2 X X X X s p 2,080 10 NL 644 40 3 1 38 750 X 37.0 X s p 2,140 8 TL 645 4 3 X X X X s p 2,300 10 TL 646 52 5 2 49 X X 37.0 X s p 2,475 10 T 647 X X X X L p 2,775 7 T 648 12 2 1 10 X X X X s p 2,790 15 TL 649 1 1 X X X X L p 2,815 12 MC 650 1 1 X X X X L p 2,800 8 MC 651 8 2 2 X X 36.0 0.19 L p 2,940 6 MC 652 29 4 25 653 203 2 5 164 w A Dev 4,227 654 X X X X S p 1,890 9 A 655 26 1 23 X X w 35.8 X s p 2,125 15 A 656 X X X X s p 2,255 10 A 657 28 1 19 X X 36.0 0.14 s p 2,290 12 A 658 X X X X L p X X A 659 71 52 X X w 35.4 0.25 S p 2,325 10 A 660 11 1 9 X X 36.6 X LS p 2,400 7 A 661 16 1 1 11 X X 37.6 X OL p 2,425 10 A 662 51 1 1 50 663 15 4 1 12 A Dev 4,325 664 9 3 8 X X X X S p 2,490 10 AL 665 5 1 1 4 X X X X L p 2,590 6 AC 666 1 667 1 X X X X L p 2,495 11 MC MisL 2,613 668 73 3 39 w A MisL 3,246 669 X X X X S p 2,270 8 A 670 6 2 X X 37.0 X s p 2,385 14 A 671 38 23 X X w 36.0 0.30 s p 2,500 18 A 672 3 3 X X 38.0 X s p 2,720 15 A 673 1 X X X X s p 2,850 6 A 674 X X X X s p X X A 675 X X X X L p 3,045 5 A 676 X X X X L p 3,080 10 A 677 21 2 9 X X 37.2 0.20 r. p 3,080 8 A 678 4 1 2 679 93 3 80 A Dev 3,412 680 X X X X L p 1,525 3 A 681 2 2 X X 37.6 X s p 1,380 12 A 682 82 2 63 X X 37.6 0.16 s p 1,535 12 A 24 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS PRODUCING >- 1 CONDENSATE UJ m 2 ID FIELD (Countyf FORMATION LU Q U. O OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION 1 o PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND Q UJ BARRELS O '^ tx UJ Q. °^ MILLION CU FT '= Q r: o Q Tz O o ■:; o Z UJ age'' < ^ U < < UJ ^ UJ i- Z — 5g! zS UJ — is o u zS UJ X "Z. UJ q: O u. r) -- IX O u. 3 — < O u. 3 — _1 >- < 1- O Q < H O Q o 1- o Q 683 Devonian; Dev 160 X X 684 4 685 Irvington East, ] efferson Pennsylvanian; Pen 1951 10 1,000 1,000 686 luka, Marion McClosky; Mis L 1947 120 58,000 5,000 687 Johnsonville Consolidated, Ifayne 1940 8,720 26,760,000 661,000 688 Bethel; Mis U^S 30 X X 689 Aux Vases; Mis U 2,300 X X 690 Lower Ghara; Mis L 600 X X 691 Rosiclare; Mis L 60 X X 692 McClosky; Mis L 8,000 X X 693 4 694 Johnsonville North, V/ayne 1943 40 41,000 2,000 695 Lower Ghara; Mis L" 40 X X 696 McClosky; Mis L^' 40 X X 697 4 698 Johnsonville South, \layne 1942 340 283,000 45,000 699 Aux Vases; Mis U 180 X X 700 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 701 McClosky; Mis L 160 X X 702 Johnsonville West, Ifayne^^ 1942 250 274,000 72,000 703 Aux Vases; Mis U 110 X X 704 Lower Ghara; Mis L 20 X X 705 McClosky; Mis L 120 X X 706 Junction, Gallatin 1939 170 289,000 3,000 707 Pennsylvanian; Pen 30 8,000 2,000 708 Waltersburg; Mis U 130 277,000 709 Hardinsburg; Mis U 10 4,000 1,000 710 Junction North, Gallatin 1946 40 12,000 2,000 711 Pennsylvanian; Pen 30 12,000 2,000 712 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 713 Keensburg East, fi abash^^ 1939 120 9.000 714 Lower Ghara; Mis L 40 X 715 McClosky; Mis L 80 X 716 Keensburg South, \fabash 1944 100 151,000 64,000 717 Pennsylvanian; Pen 30 X X 718 Cypress; Mis U 40 X X 719 Lower Ghara; Mis L 40 57,000 1,000 720 Keenville, l^aj-ne 1945 640 878,000 1 15,000 721 Aux Vases; Mis U 210 X X 722 Lower Ghara; Mis L 60 X X 723 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 724 McClosky; Mis L 360 X X 725 4 726 Keenville East, Wayne McClosky; Mis L 1951 40 8,000 8,000 727 Kell, Jefferson^'^ McClosky; Mis L 1942 40 3,000 728 Kenner, Clay 1942 610 741,000 42,000 729 Tar Springs; Mis U 10 X X 730 Bethel; Mis U 560 X X 731 Aux Vases; Mis U^^ 10 X X 732 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 733 McClosky; Mis L 20 X X 734 4 735 Kenner North, Clay 1947 300 623,000 64,000 736 Cypress; Mis U 10 X X 737 Bethel Mis U 280 X X 738 McClosky; Mis L 120 X X 739 Kenner South, Clay McClosky; Mis L 1950 20 3,000 1,000 740 Kenner West, Clay 1947 310 1,089,000 127,000 741 Cypress; Mis U 310 X X 742 Bethel; Mis U 200 X X 743 McClosky; MisL^' 40 X X 744 4 745 Keyesport, Clinton Bethel; Mis U 1949 120 24,000 9,000 746 King, Jefferson 1942 760 1,330,000 75,000 747 Aux Vases; Mis U 640 X X 748 Lower Ghara; Mis L ( X X 749 Rosiclare; Mis L 300 X X 750 McClosky; Mis L ( X X 751 4 752 Kinmundy, Marion Bethel; Mis U 1950 10 4,000 2,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 25 NUMBER OF WELLS PRODUCINg/^ RESERVOIR CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" | a: UJ m Z UJ 2 WELLS'' DEC 1951 PS i TO END OF 1951 o 1951 OIL OO _J < 1- Q >- H ■ UJ h- u < •^ U H- O =3 U. 1- Q X O y £ Q: S h- lO UJ o i ^ Qi O "- °- x6 UJ q: 1- y OL NAME X . V- UJ CL _J a UJ 1— UJ _J o UJ o o z o o _l < u. u. 1 — 1 o o CO _J q: < 2 > UJ "J q: < 5 ^ X O UJ UJ u. 1- > \- UJ O Ij o o <. U- < O < S en o '^ Q. u Q. CL Q O < uy Q X 683 7 8 X X 39.0 0.27 L C 3,090 12 A 684 2 1 7 685 1 1 1 X X X X S P 1,030 15 X Pen 1,156 686 3 1 X X X X L P 2,875 6 MC MisL 2,9U 687 379 1 7 317 A Dev 5,198 68fi X X X X S P 2,950 12 AL 689 71 73 X X 39.4 0.14 s P 3,020 20 AL 690 6 2 X X X X OL P 3,120 10 AL 691 3 3 X X 38.0 X OL P 3,150 8 AL 692 263 1 7 171 X X 38.0 0.17 OL P 3,170 15 AL 693 36 68 694 1 1 A MisL 3,324 695 X X 37.6 0.17 OL P 3,190 3 AC 696 X X 37.6 0.17 OL P 3,250 3 AC 697 1 1 698 21 1 1 14 A Mis L 3,291 699 15 10 X X 39.0 X S P 3,060 15 A 700 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,160 4 AC 701 5 1 3 X X 37.7 X L P 3,200 5 AC 702 18 4 2 13 M MisL 3,251 703 11 4 2 11 X X X X S P 2,900 12 ML 704 1 X X X X L P 2,930 6 MC 705 6 2 X X X X L P 3,100 6 MC 706 18 2 M Mis L 2,795 707 3 1 X X X X S P 1,150 7 ML 708 14 X X 37.2 0.22 s P 1,770 20 ML 709 1 1 X X X X s P 2,120 5 ML 710 4 2 M MisL 2,929 711 3 2 X X X X s P 1,.565 16 ML 712 1 X X X X s P 2,725 10 ML 713 3 M Mis L 2,802 714 1 X X X X L P 2,705 10 MC 715 2 X X 37.6 0.26 L P 2,710 6 MC 716 8 5 7 A MisL 2,879 717 3 1 2 X X X X S P 1,150 15 AL 718 4 4 4 X X X X s P 2,385 11 AL 719 1 1 X X X X L P 2,715 10 AC 720 45 10 41 A MisL 3,267 721 20 9 17 t X 37.0 X s P 2,960 20 AL 722 2 2 X X X X L P 3,050 8 AC 723 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,060 10 AC 724 20 20 X X 36.0 X L P 3,100 7 AC 725 2 1 726 2 2 2 X X X X L P 3,140 10 X MisL 3,210 727 1 X X 36.6 0.26 L P 2,625 6 A MisL 2,720 728 44 39 A MisL 3,082 729 1 X X X X S P 2,200 7 AL 730 40 39 X X 38.0 0.22 S P 2,690 10 A 731 X X X X s P 2,835 9 AL 732 1 X X X X LS P 2,875 5 AC 733 1 X X X X L P 2,930 7 AC 734 1 735 32 28 A MisL 3,076 736 1 X X X X S P X X AL 7 37 27 23 X X 36.0 X s P 2,755 8 A 738 5 4 X X 36.0 X L P 2,970 6 AC 739 1 u X X 37.2 X L P 2,870 10 AC Mis L 3,000 740 30 30 A Dev 4,800 741 14 14 X X 36.0 X S P 2,570 16 A 742 2 2 X X 38.0 X s P 2,705 9 A 743 X V 38.0 X L P 2,870 4 AC 744 14 14 745 11 1 10 X X X S P 1,180 8 AL MisL 1,358 746 38 1 32 A Dev 4,76a 747 27 22 X X 38.6 0.17 b '^ 2,725 15 AL 748 1 X X X X L P -■''65 10 AC 749 4 1 2 X X 39.6 0.16 LS P 2,815 10 AC 750 1 X X X X L P 2,840 t) *C 751 C 8 752 1 1 X X 34.0 X S P 1,910 3 A Mis L 2,389 26 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS PRODUCING >- CONDENSATE | UJ m FIELD (Countyf FORMATION LLI o U- o OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o PRODUCTION Thousands of Rbl | NAME AND a UJ ^- S UJ BARRELS O <^ MILLION CU FT " Q :;; O Q rz O Q r: o z LLI age'' < Z o, UJ — z ^ 5g; -r ^ Z o- UJ x: z — o u Z o^ UJ i- "Z. UJ Qi O u. r) — Qi O u. ID — < O u. 3 ^ _1 > < 1- O Q < t- o Q o t- O a 753 Laclede, FayeUe^° Bethel; Mis LI 1943 50 10,000 1,000 754 Lakewood, Shelby 1941 130 170,000 19,000 755 Bethel; Mis U 80 X X 756 Aux Vases; Mis U 50 X X 757 Lancaster, Sabash-Lawrence 1940 1,400 2,449,000 74,000 758 Paint Creek; Mis U 1 X X 759 Bethel; Mis U i 890 X X 760 Lower Ohara; Mis L 40 X X 761 McClosky; Mis L 500 X X 762 4 763 Lancaster Central, Wabash 1946 300 323,000 11,000 764 Lower Ohara; Mis L 100 X X 765 Rosiclare; Mis L 260 X X 766 McClosky; Mis L^s 20 X X 767 4 768 Lancaster East, 9 abash 1944 50 24,000 3,000 769 Biehl; Pen 30 6,000 1,000 770 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 18,000 2,000 771 Lancaster North, Lawrence Bethel; Mis U 1948 10 1,000 772 Lancaster South, Wabash 1946 90 78,000 24,000 773 Bethel; Mis U 50 62,000 24,000 774 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 775 McClosky; Mis L 20 16,000 776 Lexington, Wabash McClosky; Mis L 1947 200 321,000 13,000 777 Lexington North, Wabash Lower Ohara; Mis L 1951 20 1,000 1,000 778 Lillyville, Cumberland- Effingham 1946 160 266,000 21,000 779 Livingston, Madison Pennsylvanian; Pen 1948 340 157,000 34,000 780 Livingston East (Gas), Madison Pennsylvanian; Pen 1951 40 781 Livingston South, Madison Pennsylvanian; Pen 1950 150 28,000 19,000 782 Locust Grove, Wayne 1951 80 40,000 40,000 783 Aux Vases; Mis U 40 X X 784 Lower Ohara; Mis L 40 X X 785 McClosky; Mis L^ ' 20 X X 786 4 787 Long Branch, Saline- Hamilton 1950 60 43,000 18,000 788 Palestine; Mis U 20 26,000 11,000 789 Cypress; Mis U 20 3,000 3,000 790 McClosky; Mis L 20 14,000 4,000 791 Louden, Fayette-Effingham 1937 23,160 163,818,000 6,101,000 800 X 140.4 792 Burtschi; Pen 320 X 27.7 793 Tar Springs; Mis U 480 112.7 112.7 794 Cypress; Mis U 23,000 X X 795 Paint Creek; Mis U I X X 796 Bethel; Mis U ( 13,000 X X 797 Aux Vases; Mis U 500 X X 798 Devonian; Dev 3,000 13,916,000 730,000 799 4 800 Lynchburg, Jefferson McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 8,000 8,000 801 McKinley, Washington 1940 320 380,000 17,000 802 Bethel; Mis U 70 200,000 1,000 803 Silurian; Sil 300 180,000 16,000 804 Maple Grove, Edwards 1943 1,160 1,450,000 59,000 805 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 26,000 13,000 806 McClosky; Mis L 1,140 1,424,000 46,000 807 Maple Grove East, Edwards''^ 1944 380 144,000 56,000 808 Waltersburg; Mis U 40 15,000 13,000 809 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 4,000 2,000 810 Rosiclare; Mis L 120 X X 811 McClosky; Mis L 200 X X 812 Maple Grove South, Edwards '^ McClosky; Mis L 1945 20 y,000 813 Marcoe, 1 efferson ^ McClosky; Mis L 1938 ^« 13,000 814 Marine, Madison Silurian; Sil ■\0'J> 3,100 7,328,000 788,000 815 Marion, Williamson Aux Vases; Mi^ '' 1950 10 500 816 Markham City, Jefferson Ste. Ge- -'^^^^ '^''^ L 1942 760 1,111,000 29,000 817 Markham City North, Jefferson 1943 500 818,000 28,000 818 Wayne Aux Vases; Mis U 30 X X 819 McClosky; Mis L 500 X X TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 27 UJ CD S z LU Z _J NUMBER OF WELLS'" WELLS PRODUCING^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR PRESSURE psi ss CHARACTER OF oil'" PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O 1- 1951 OIL < -J < Z Q z LU •" ^ o- o — > < >- 1- • c^ < a 13 LU a: LU 1- u < X u >- H H Z sS or DC O LU Q- D- Q. O ^ U l- O 3 u. 1- Q X o ^ i c^ ?i ir a. o °- 1^ LU Ll. a o K U> LU '^xo h- > < E LU a: Z3 \- H a: NAME X - h- LU Q. -J LU O a X Q UJ K- LU —i % O o LU SI o Q "t CO <: C3 * O _l U- < u. u- 1 — 1 < 753 3 2 X X 35.6 0.18 s P 2,335 15 A MisL 2,608 754 12 11 A MisL 1,794 755 7 7 X X 38.0 X s P 1,690 7 Al. 756 5 4 X X 31.7 0.23 s P 1,720 8 AL 757 100 1 62 A MisL 2,908 758 1 2 X X X X s P 2,530 5 AL 759 67 1 54 X X 39.0 X s P 2,540 14 AL 760 1 X X X X L P 2,670 10 AC 761 30 5 X X 39.8 0.28 L P 2,690 7 AC 762 1 1 763 14 1 3 5 M Mis L 2,888 764 2 X X X X L P 2,750 7 MC 765 8 3 4 X X X X LS P 2,810 7 MC 766 X X X X L P 2,815 8 MC 767 4 1 1 768 4 4 M MisL 2,750 769 3 3 X X X X S P 1,745 10 ML 770 1 1 X X X X L P 2,660 6 MC 771 1 X X X X S P 2,295 10 X MisL 2,534 772 1 1 1 5 M MisL 2,817 773 5 5 X X 32.0 X S P 2,520 6 ML 774 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,670 6 MC 775 1 n X X X X L P 2,720 12 MC 776 10 3 6 X X X X L P 2,970 8 MC MisL 3,031 777 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,930 5 MC MisL 3,045 778 8 8 X X 35.5 X L P 2,425 10 A Dev 4,000 779 779 37 5 2 31 X X 36.3 X S P 535 15 ML Ord 2,378 780 1 1 X X S P 540 12 X Pen 555 781 781 14 9 1 13 X X X X s P 530 7 ML Mis 845 782 6 6 6 X MisL 3,420 783 4 4 4 X X X X s P 3,215 10 X 784 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,240 4 X 785 X X X X L P 3,280 6 X 786 1 1 1 787 5 2 5 A MisL 3,367 788 2 2 X X X X S P 2,070 8 AL 789 2 2 2 X X X X S P 2,745 13 AL 790 1 1 X X X X L P 3,190 5 AC 791 2,155 19 8 3 1,987 3 P,G,W A St. Peter 4,680 792 6 1 " X S P 1,000 20 AL 793 3 3 3 X X S P 1,170 2 AL 794 954 16 6 866 X X G,W 36.0 0.25 s P 1,495 15 A 795 171 109 X X G 37.8 0.24 s P 1,540 15 A 796 649 1 285 X X G 38.5 0.20 s P 1,550 10 A 797 2 X X 37.0 0.17 s P 1,630 9 A 798 85 3 73 1,350 X p 28.5 0.48 L c 3,000 15 A 799 287 652 800 1 1 1 X X X X L p 3,050 10 X MisL 3,162 801 17 3 7 R Ord 3,983 802 7 2 2 X X 44.1 0.18 s p 1,000 5 A 803 10 1 5 X X 42.8 X L c 2,240 40 R 804 39 26 A MisL 3,375 805 1 1 X X X X L p 3,230 3 A 806 38 25 X X 37.0 X L p 3,275 6 A 807 21 4 1 15 M MisL 3,323 808 4 3 4 X X X X S p 2,430 10 ML 809 1 1 X X X X L p 3,195 15 MC 810 6 5 X X X X L p 3,210 5 MC 811 10 1 1 5 X X X X L p 3,230 5 MC 812 1 X X X X L p 3,250 10 MC MisL 3,358 813 2 X X 23.2 0.54 L p 2,745 15 MC MisL 3,066 814 145 3 2 135 X X 34.0 0.28 L p 1,740 5 H Ord 2,619 815 1 X X 40.0 X S p 2,385 5 X MisL 2,560 816 19 U X X 38.2 0.08 L p 3,070 10 A Mis L 3,215 817 16 2 9 A MisL 3,169 818 2 2 X X X X S p 2,950 6 AL 819 14 2 7 X X 37.8 0.24 L p 3,075 8 AC 28 TABLE 1-OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS UJ CQ r3 z UJ z FIELD (County)'^ PRODUCING FORMATION >- a: Q u. O a: < LU >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o Qi to p u CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND age'' Q UJ O •" ^ LU a: < BARRELS O '^ < < UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT '' O u. 1- o o ID ^ Q O li- 1- o O z — r> — Q O u- 1- o o z — 820 Maricham City ^esl, Jefferson 1945 600 1,266,000 86,000 821 Aux Vases; Mis U 320 X X 822 McClosky; Mis L 360 X X 823 4 824 Mason, Effingham 1940 120 202,000 8,000 825 Bethel; Mis U 10 X X 826 McClosky; Mis L 110 " X 827 Mason, North, Effingham 1951 110 23,000 23,000 828 Bethel; Mis U 70 X X 829 Aux Vases; Mis U ^^ 10 " X 830 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 831 4 832 Massilon, V/ayne - Edwards Lower Ohara; Mis L 1946 120 89,000 3,000 833 Massilon South, Edwards Lower Ohara; Mis L 1947 20 500 834 Mattoon, Coles '^ 1938 5,100 9,970,000 464,000 835 Cypress; Mis U 2,200 X X 836 Aux Vases; Mis U 180 X X 837 Rosiclare; Mis L 3,700 X X 838 McClosky; Mis L 20 X X 839 4 840 Maunie East, Vihite McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 2,000 2,000 841 Maunie North, ^hite 1941 800 745,000 142,000 842 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 X X 843 Tar Springs; Mis U 50 X X 844 Paint Creek; Mis U 20 X X 845 Bethel; Mis U 340 X X 846 Aux Vases; Mis U 80 X X 847 Lower Ohara; Mis L 1 X X 848 Rosiclare; Mis L 1 i 400 X X 449 McClosky; Mis L ) X X 850 4 851 Maunie South, V/hite 1941 1,360 3,442,000 268,000 852 Bridgeport; Pen 80 X X 853 Degonia; Mis U 70 X X 854 Palestine; Mis U 480 X X 855 Waltersburg; Mis U 20 X X 856 Tar Springs; Mis U 430 X X 857 Cypress; Mis U 240 X X 858 Bethel; Mis U ^^ 10 X X 859 Aux Vases; Mis U 100 X X 860 Rosiclare; Mis L ^^ 20 X X 861 McClosky; Mis L 40 X X 862 4 863 Maunie West, If/iije ^^ 1945 40 5,000 2,000 864 Bethel; Mis U ^^ 10 X X 865 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 X X 866 McClosky; Mis L 20 500 867 4 868 Mayberry, V/ ayne McClosky; Mis L 1941 240 295,000 5,000 869 Mayberry North, If oyne ^'^ McClosky; Mis L 1948 20 1,000 870 Merriam, froyne McClosky; Mis L 1949 20 7,000 2,000 871 Miletus, Marion 1947 200 157,000 23,000 872 Bethel; Mis U 80 X X 873 Aux Vases; Mis IJ 100 X X 874 McClosky; Mis L 60 X X 875 4 876 Mill Shoals, 9hite- Hamilton 1939 2,400 6,198,000 286,000 877 V/ ayne Aux Vases; Mis U 2,200 X X 878 Lower Ohara; Mis L 1 X X 879 Rosiclare; Mis L \ ( 800 X X 880 McClosky; Mis L 1 X X 881 4 882 Mills Prairie, Edwards Lower Ohara; Mis L 1948 20 2,000 883 Mitchell, Edwards - Wayne 1949 160 88,000 59,000 884 Lower Ohara; Mis L 1 X X 885 Rosiclare; Mis L I 1 160 32,000 32,000 886 McClosky; Mis L 1 X X 887 4 888 Mt. Auburn, Christian Silurian; Sil 1943 160 36,000 3,000 889 Mt. Carmel, \iahash '^ 1940 4,200 8,857,000 308,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 29 IX LU m Z> Z LU Z _J NUMBER OF WELLS'" WELLS PRODUCING'^ DEC. 1951 reservoir! pressure psi CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 O h- o u 1951 OIL^ < O _l < 1- z a z LU *" . o o — > < > - H- 1- z o u O lu CL CL DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE FT* PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET LU IX H NAME I , K LU Q. -J LU O Q X o h- UJ —1 O Q LU o o CD z o —J Ll_ < y 1- u. ^ < 820 34 2 1 32 A MisL 3,182 821 16 1 14 X X 38.0 X s P 2,905 15 AL 822 15 2 7 X X 38.0 X L P 3,035 7 AC 823 3 11 824 11 o 3 A Mis L 2,584 823 1 1 1 X X X X S P 2,295 8 AL 826 10 1 2 X X 38.4 0.21 L P 2,500 6 AC 827 9 9 •7 X MisL 2,553 828 6 6 5 X X X X S P 2,290 13 X 829 n X X X X s P 2,355 5 X 830 2 2 2 X X X X L P 2,370 18 X 831 1 1 832 3 1 2 X X 37.0 X L P 3,255 6 MC Mis L 3,472 833 1 X X X X L P 3,315 9 ;VIC Mis L 3,391 834 420 1 u 375 w A St. Peter 4,915 835 94 82 X X 38.0 0.16 S P 1,835 15 A 836 13 1 6 X X 38.0 X s P 1,900 15 A 837 210 8 193 X X w 38.0 0.21 s P 2,000 12 A 838 1 1 X X 38.0 X L P 2,010 5 A 839 102 3 93 840 1 1 1 X X X X L P 2,870 J AF MisL 3,032 841 52 6 3 44 A MisL 3,260 842 1 X X X X S P 1,320 20 AL 843 5 5 X X X X s P 2,350 10 AL 844 2 2 X X X X s P 2,830 13 AL 845 19 19 X X 36.5 X s P 2,820 13 AL 846 4 1 4 X X X X s P 2,930 13 AL 847 1 1 6 X X X X L P 2,995 4 AC 848 5 3 4 X X X X L P 3,025 6 AC 849 9 3 2 X X X X L P 3,035 10 AC 850 6 1 2 851 124 6 2 102 » A MisL 3,091 852 6 4 X X 37.0 X S P 1,400 7 AL 853 6 1 3 X X X X s P 1,900 10 AL 854 37 1 30 X X 38.0 X s P 2,010 17 AL 855 2 1 X X X X s P 2,210 19 AL 856 36 3 29 X X tt 38.0 X s P 2,240 16 AL 857 20 1 18 X X 39.0 X s P 2,590 10 AL 858 X X X X s P 2,735 X AL 859 8 7 X X X X s P 2,845 12 AL 860 X X X X L P 2,900 8 AC 861 1 2 X X X X L P 2,920 6 AC 862 8 2 8 863 3 1 1 1 M MisL 3,152 864 X X X X s P 2,820 15 ML 865 1 1 1 X " X X s P 2,950 17 ML 866 1 X X X X L P 3,040 3 MC 867 1 1 868 7 3 X X 38.6 0.16 L P 3,350 8 AC Uev 5,377 869 1 X X X X L F 3,330 2 X MisL 3,463 870 1 1 X X X X L P 3,370 5 X Mis L 3,410 871 14 12 A Dev 3,950 872 5 4 X X 35.6 X S P 2,140 7 A 873 5 3 X X 35.6 X s P 2,200 7 A 874 1 1 X X 35.6 X L P 2,350 5 A 875 3 4 876 183 3 143 A MisL 4,311 877 144 2 110 X X 39.8 0.14 S P 3,220 16 A 878 2 2 X X X X OL P 3,320 11 AC 879 5 4 X X X X LS P 3,345 8 AC 880 25 1 21 X X 38.0 X OL P 3,375 5 AC 881 7 6 882 1 X X X X L P 2,925 5 MC Mis L 3,010 883 -T 5 7 H Mis L 3,400 884 1 X X X X L P 3,280 7 lie 885 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,300 12 HC 886 887 5 1 3 1 4 I X X X X L P 3,310 4 lie 888 889 4 408 1 9 2 294 X X w 36.6 0.28 L P 1,890 5 MIJ A Uev 2,000 4,237 30 TABLE 1-OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS m z UJ z FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION >- UJ Ci u. o < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o a: tn o u CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND age'' Q UJ is < < UJ ^ < BARRELS O "> a. "J UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT " O u. t- o o a O u- K O is Q UJ ii- O u. H O o z — Q 890 Bridgeport; Pen 100 X X 891 Biehl;Pen 600 X X 892 Jordan; Pen 40 X X 893 Palestine; Mis U 30 X ^ 894 Waltersburg; Mis U ^' 10 X X 895 Tar Springs; Mis U 220 X X 896 Jackson; Mis U ^2 10 X X 897 Cypress; Mis L) 3,300 X X 898 dethel; Mis U 80 X X 899 Lower Ohara; Mis L ) X X 900 Rosiclare; Mis L 1,400 X X 901 McClosky; Mis L ) X X 902 4 903 Mt. Erie North , B'ayne 1944 120 211,000 50,000 904 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 X X 905 Lower Ohara; Mis L 20 X X 906 McClosky; Mis L 80 X X 907 Mt. Olive, Montgomery Pottsville; Pen 1942 80 X X 908 Mt. Vernon, Jefferson 1943 190 241,000 19,000 909 Aux Vases; Mis U 30 X 2,000 910 Lower Ohara; Mis L^^ 20 X 911 McClosky; Mis L 160 X 17,000 912 4 913 Nason, Jefferson Hosiclare; Mis L 1943 20 14,000 1,000 914 New iiellair, Crawford '^ Pennsylvanian; Pen 1942 20 10,000 915 New Harmony Consolidated, 1939 21,000 66,673,000 3,533,000 916 Wabash - Edwards Jamestown; Pen \ X X 917 Mansfield;Pen" X X 918 Bridgeport; Pen \ 800 X X 919 Biehl; Pen ( X X 920 Jordan; Pen ^' ; X X 921 Uegonia; Mis U X X 922 Clore; Mis U 150 X X 923 Palestine; Mis Li 220 X X 924 Waltersburg; Mis U 680 X X 925 Tar Springs; Mis U 800 X X 926 Cypress; Mis U 7,100 X X 927 Paint Creek; Mis U ( X X 928 Bethel; Mis U \ 7,400 X X 929 Aux Vases; Mis U 5,200 X X 930 Lower Ohara; Mis L \ X X 931 Rosiclare; Mis L \ I 5,000 X X 932 McClosky; Mis L ) X X 933 4 934 New Harmony South, White 1941 90 67,000 3,000 935 Waltersburg; Mis tl 10 X 3,000 936 Tar Springs; Mis L 10 X 937 Cypress; Mis U 10 938 Bethel; Mis U 10 X 939 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 2,000 940 McClosky; Mis L 40 X 941 4 942 New Harmony South (Indiana), White ^^ 1946 60 338,000 32,000 943 Uegonia; Mis U 3' 20 X X 944 Palestine; Mis Li 30 X X 945 Waltersburg; Mis LI 30 X X 946 4 947 New Haven Consolidated, White ^^ 1941 380 735,000 35,000 94« Tar Springs; Mis U 130 X X 949 Hardin sburg; Mis U 10 X X 950 Cypress; Mis Li 200 X X 951 Aux Vases; Mis U 70 X X 952 McClosky; Mis L 100 X X 953 4 954 Newton, Jasper Ste. Genevieve; Mis L 1944 80 66,000 2,000 955 Newton North, Jasper " McClosky; Mis L 1945 20 7,000 956 Newton West, Jasper ^^ McClosky; Mis L 1947 20 300 957 Noble West, Clay Uosiclare; Mis L 1951 20 1,000 1,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 31 UJ m Z LU z _l NUMBER OF WELLS*' WELLS PRODUCING'^ DEC. 1951 RESERVOIR 1 PRESSURE psi 35 a: CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 o h U 1951 OIL^ < < z Q z m ' — o - > < >- 1- • - on LU O u. o Qi < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o < CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* Q UJ < BARRELS O ^ UJ ^ a: < MILLION CU FT "^ O u. 1- o 3 — Q O u. H O O a. 1- O is o 958 Odin, Marion Cypress; Mis U 1945 290 764,000 308,000 959 Okawville, Vashington Silurian; Sil 1951 60 9,000 9,000 960 Olney Consolidated Richland 1938 2,200 3, 190,000 103,000 961 Lower Ohara; Mis L 120 X X 962 McClosky; Mis L 2,100 X X 963 Olney South, Richland ^^ Ste. Genevieve; Mis L 1938 180 84,000 41,000 964 Omaha, Gallatin 1940 730 1,959,000 159,000 120 965 Pennsylvanian; Pen 1 21,000 7,000 966 Biehl; Pen ,( 260 X X 967 Palestine; Mis U 400 X X 968 Tar Springs; Mis U 70 X X 120 969 4 970 Omaha East, Gallatin Lower Ohara; Mis L 1946 20 8,000 1,000 971 Omaha South, Gallatin Rosiclare; Mis L 1951 20 1,000 1,000 972 Omaha West, Saline 1950 20 22,000 19,000 973 Cypress; Mis U 20 X X 974 Aux Vases; Vlis U ^' 10 X X 975 4 976 Omega, Marion ^* McClosky; Mis L 1946 40 5,000 977 Orchardville, Wayne 1950 40 16,000 12,000 978 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 2,000 2,000 979 McClosky; Mis L 20 14,000 10,000 980 Oskaloosa, Clay Bethel; Mis U 1950 360 382,000 190,000 981 Oskaloosa East, Clay 1951 40 20.000 20,000 982 Aux Vases; Mis U 20 X X 983 McClosky; Mis L 40 X X 984 Oskaloosa South, Clay McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 985 Pana, Christian Bethel; Mis U 1951 30 4,000 4,000 986 Panama, Bond ■ Montgomery 1940 40 4,000 1,000 280 X 2.0 987 Pennsylvanian; Pen 160 X 988 Golconda; Mis U 30 1,000 500 989 Bethel; Mis U 10 3,000 500 120 X 2.0 990 Parkersburg Consolidated, 1941 5,800 7,318,000 588,000 991 Richland ■ Edwards ^^ Cypress; Mis U 120 X X 992 Paint Creek; Mis U 30 X X 993 Bethel; Mis U 30 X X 994 Lower Ohara; Mis L ( X X 995 Rosiclare; Mis L ( 5,800 X X 996 McClosky; Mis L 1 X X 997 4 998 Parkersburg South, Edwards 1948 60 20,000 8,000 999 Pennsylvanian; Pen 40 12,000 6,000 1000 Bethel; Mis U 20 8,000 2,000 1001 Parkersburg West, Richland - Edwards 1943 240 1 19,000 16,000 1002 Lower Ohara; Mis L 40 X 1003 McClosky; Mis L 200 X 16,000 1004 Passport, Clay 1945 960 1,705,000 107,000 1005 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 1006 McClosky; Mis L 940 X X 1007 4 1008 Passport South, Richland 1948 60 25,000 3,000 1009 Cypress; Mis U 20 X X 1010 McClosky; Mis L 40 X X 1011 Patoka, Marion 1937 960 10,517,000 456,000 1012 Cypress; Mis U 40 X X 1013 Bethel; Mis U 920 X X 1014 Rosiclare; Mis L 200 X X 1015 Devonian; Dev 20 220,000 43,000 1016 Patoka East, Marion 1941 500 3,470,000 117,000 1017 Cypress; Mis U 500 X X 1018 Bethel; Mis U 60 X X 1019 Patoka West, Fayette Bethel; Mis U 1950 180 66,000 62,000 1020 Phillipstown Consolidated, 1939 4,400 11,149,000 1,096,000 1021 White ■ Edwards Pennsylvanian; Pen \ X X 1022 Clark - Bridgeport; Pen X X 1023 Pennsylvanian; Pen \ / 1,000 X X 1024 Buchanan; Pen ( X X 1025 Biehl; Pen ) X X TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 33 NUMBER OF WELLS producing/' RESERVOIRl PRES^' ""^ CHARACTER PRODUCING formation DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" | a. m CD Z LU 2 WELLS^ 3EC.1951 PS i OF OIL* TO END OF 1951 O I- 1951 01 L^ 00 _J < Q Z 111 •— ; °~ o — >- 1- • X ^ a: LU 1- u < < >- H- t- 2 OS q: PTH TO TOP PRODUCING lOHE FT* PROD. HICKNESS G. FT.' NET e LU =) 1— H 0^ NAME X . H LU o LU 1- LiJ -J Q- o UJ o Q < * o < U 1- a. "- 1 1 O O m _1 QC < "Z. > m ^ a. < ^ ^ X O LU LU Li. 1- > 1- LU O I) U O - OL LU Q LL. o < UJ >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION ■a o ^^ a: (c < CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* a LU ^ UJ < < LU < BARRELS a o */> UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT " O u. H O o or o a LU i- O u. 1- O is Q is UJ i- O u. 1- o o z — SS Q 1026 Degonia; Mis U \ X X 1027 Clore; Mis U i 480 X X 1028 Palestine; Mis U 50 X X 1029 Waltersburg; Mis U 50 X X 1030 Tar Springs; Mis U 800 X X 1031 Cypress; Mis U 350 X X 1032 Paint Creek; Mis U \ X X 1033 Bethel; Mis U j 500 X X 1034 Aux Vases; Mis U 500 X X 1035 Lower Ohara; Mis L 1 X X 1036 Rosiclare; Mis L \ 1,300 X X 1037 McClosky; Mis L ] X X 1038 4 1039 Phillipstown South, I^Aue Aux Vases; Mis U 1951 10 X X 1040 Pinkstaff, Lawrence McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 1041 Plainview, Macoupin Pennsylvanian; Pen 1942 10 2,000 X 1042 Posey, Clinton Cypress; Mis U 1941 20 7,000 1,000 1043 Raccoon Lake, Marion 1949 320 713,000 223,000 1044 Cypress; Mis U 190 X X 1045 Lower Ohara; Mis L " ( X X 1046 Rosiclare; Mis L 1 160 X X 1047 McClosky; Mis L ) X X 1048 Devonian; Dev 20 4,000 4,000 1049 4 1050 Raymond, Montgomery Pottsville; Pen 1940 100 14,000 1,000 1051 Raymond East, Montgomery Pennsylvanian; Pen 1951 10 1052 Reservoir, ] efferson McClosky; Mis L 1950 80 31,000 29,000 1053 Hicliview, Washington Cypress; Mis U 1946 10 5,000 1,000 1054 Ridgway, Gallatin ^'' McClosky; Mis L 1946 20 100 1055 Riffle, Clay Rosiclare; Mis L 1948 100 55,000 6,000 1056 Rinard, Wayne " McClosky; Mis L 1937 20 7,000 1057 Ritter, Richland Ste. Genevieve; Mis L 1950 60 75,000 17,000 1058 Ritter North, Richland McClosky; Mis L 1951 20 1,000 1,000 1059 Roaches, ] efferson 1938 200 550,000 7,000 1060 Bethel; Mis U 30 X X 1061 Lower Ohara; Mis L 60 X X 1062 Rosiclare; Mis L 160 X X 1063 McClosky; Mis L 120 X X 1064 4 1065 Roaches North, Jefferson 1944 350 1,151,000 49,000 1066 Bethel; Mis H 350 X X 1067 Rosiclare; Mis L 60 X X 1068 4 1069 Roby, Sangamon ^9 Silurian; Sil 1949 20 200 1070 Rochester, Wabash '^ 1948 250 377,000 84,000 1071 Pennsylvanian; Pen 120 X X 1072 Waltersburg; Mis U 160 X X 1073 4 1074 Roland, White - Gallatin 1940 3,300 10,686,000 592,000 160 1075 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 X X 1076 Waltersburg; Mis U 2,000 X X 160 1077 Tar Springs; Mis U 40 X X 1078 Ilardinsburg; Mis LI ^' 30 X X 1079 Cypress; Mis LI 500 X X 1080 Paint Creek; Mis U ^ ' 40 X X 1081 Bethel; Mis U 600 X X 1082 Aux Vases; Mis U 600 X X 1083 Lower Ohara; Mis L 100 X X 1084 Rosiclare; Mis L 100 X X 1085 McClosky; Mis L 160 X X 1086 St. Louis; Mis L ^' 20 X X 1087 4 1088 Roland West, Saline Aux Vases; Mis U 1950 10 16,000 10,000 1089 Ruark, Lawrence 1941 230 1,234,000 467,000 1090 Pennsylvanian; Pen 220 X X 1091 Bethel; Mis U 10 X X 1092 Rural FliU North, Womi/ton ^° Rosiclare; Mis L 1949 20 1,000 1093 Rural Hill West, Hamilton Aux Vases; Mis U 1945 10 18,000 3,000 1094 Russellville (Gas), Lawrence 1937 40 8,000 1,000 1,800 7,081.6 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 35 UJ m 3 Z UJ 2 _i NUMBER OF WELLS*" WELLS PRODUCING^ DEC.I95I RESERVOIR! PRESSURE Psi CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 o h U 1951 OIL^ < O _l < z o z > < >- 1- _: <^- q: < o =! ^ ^ Q_ LU 1- u < X u t- 2 O UJ Q- Q. DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE FT* PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET E UJ =) t- t- NAME X . 1- UJ a. _j UJ o Q X o UJ h- LXJ _l Q- o o o UJ o o z < ca o * o -J u. _1 < u. u- 1 — 1 < 1026 26 1 17 X X p 35.0 X s p 1,975 15 MF 1027 4 4 X X 34.4 X s p 2,010 12 MF 1028 4 X X X X s p 2,050 11 MF 1029 4 4 X X X X s p 2,280 U MF 1030 56 1 41 X X 35.0 X s p 2,295 15 MF 1031 17 9 20 X X 36.0 X s p 2,720 12 MF 1032 3 5 X X X X s p 2.780 9 MF 1033 28 3 23 X X 37.0 X s p 2,810 15 MF 1034 22 1 18 X X 37.0 X s p 2,880 15 MF 1035 T 3 4 X X X X L p 3,010 10 MC 1036 7 2 3 X X 38.0 X LS p 2,960 10 MC 1037 40 7 5 35 1,200 X 36.0 0.21 L p 3,000 6 MC 1038 42 3 2 41 1039 1 1 1 X X X X s p 2,980 10 X Mis L 3,161 1040 1 1 1 . X X X X L p 1,735 4 X Mis L 1,797 1041 1 1 X X X X S p 410 5 X Pen 421 1042 ■2 1 X X 35.7 0.18 s p 1,105 5 M Sil 2,729 1043 33 1 33 D Dev 3,385 1044 18 18 X X X X s p 1,625 10 D 1(45 X X X X L p 1,885 5 DC 1046 2 1 X X X X s p 1,930 12 DC 1047 4 2 X X X X L p 1,950 10 DC 1048 1 1 1 X X X X L p 3,260 X D 1049 8 11 1050 10 3 3 X X 34.8 0.22 S p 590 10 ML Dev 1,891 1051 1 1 1 X X X X S p 600 10 X Pen 612 1052 4 3 3 X X X X L p 2,600 4 MC Mis L 2,700 1053 1 1 X X X X S p 1,520 7 AL Mis L 1,932 1054 1 X X X X L p 2,840 6 MC Mis L 2,938 1055 5 1 4 X X X X L p 2,735 7 MC Mis L 2,848 1056 1 X X 38.5 X L • p 3,145 5 AC MisL 3,280 1057 3 2 X X X X L p 3,210 12 MC Mis L 3,925 1058 1 1 1 X X X X L p 3,200 5 X Mis L 3,288 1059 13 7 A Dev 3,840 1060 3 X X X X S p 2,000 X AL 1061 2 X X 37.2 0.22 L p 2,170 5 AC 1062 5 1 X X 37.2 0.22 L p 2,190 12 AC 1063 6 X X 37.2 0.22 L p 2,250 4 AC 1064 3 1065 34 1 33 A Mis L 2,283 1066 32 1 31 X X X X S p 1,925 7 A 1067 1 X X X X L p 2,115 8 AC 1068 1 2 1069 1 I X X X X L p 1,775 5 X Sil 1,780 1070 34 26 M MisL 2,810 1071 11 11 X X X X S p 1,300 16 MCf 1072 21 13 X X X X S p 1,940 26 ML 1073 2 2 1074 230 8 3 1 197 A Dev 5,225 1075 X X 36.0 X s p X X AL 1076 112 2 86 1,200 X 38.2 0.25 s p 2,150 19 AL 1077 3 2 X X X X s p 2,240 10 AL 1078 X X X X s p X X AL 1079 25 2 1 22 X X 32.0 0.12 s p 2,560 15 AL 1080 X X X X s p 2,750 12 AL 1081 22 18 X X 32.0 0.20 s p 2,760 15 AL 1082 19 1 13 X X 32.0 0.12 s p 2,880 12 AL 1083 1 X X X X OL p 3,000 8 AC 1084 1 X X 38.4 X L p 3,020 4 AC 1085 3 2 X X 38.0 X L p 3,050 4 AC 1086 X X X X L p X X AC 1087 44 5 1 54 1088 I 1 X X X X S p 2,935 15 ML MisL 3,161 1089 23 1 2 16 A Mis L 2,442 1090 22 1 2 16 X X 33.0 X S p 1,600 10 AL 1091 1 X X X X S p 2,065 11 AL 1092 1 X X X X L p 3,325 8 MC Mis L 3,468 1093 1 1 X X X X S p 3,230 16 ML Mis L 3,483 1094 60 1 1 A Dev 3,133 36 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS LU m 2 ■z. UJ Z _l FIELD PRODUCING FORMATION >- OL LLI D 11. O < >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o p u CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbi NAME AND AGE^ o m Is < < UJ ^ a: < BARRELS o ^^ q: UJ UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT '^ O u- 1- o o ID ^ o LU i^ O u- t- O O z — 3 — is UJ i- O u. 1- o o Z '- ss o 1095 Bridgeport; Pen X X 0. 1096 Buchanan; Pen X X 1097 McClosky; Mis L 40 8,000 1,000 1098 St. Francisville East, Lmurence 1941 200 217,000 19,000 1099 Hardinsburg; Mis U 30 x X 1100 Cypress; Mis U 10 X X 1101 Bethel; Mis U 200 X X 1102 St. Jacob, Madison Trenton; Ord 1942 1,120 2,425,000 103,000 1103 St. James, Fayette 1938 1,860 11,750,000 427,000 1104 Golconda; Mis U ^^ 10 X X 1105 Cypress; Mis U 1,860 X X 1106 4 1107 St. Paul, Fayette Bethel; Mis U 1941 240 473,000 23,000 1108 Ste. Marie, Jasper McClosky; Mis L 1941 720 711,000 27,000 1109 Ste. Marie East, Jasper Ste. Genevieve; Mis L 1949 80 1,000 1110 Ste. Marie West, Jasper 1949 80 29,000 10,000 nil Aux Vases; Mis U ^^ 10 X 1112 McClosky; Mis L 80 X 10,000 1113 Sailor Springs Central, Ctay Rosiclare; Mis L 1948 20 1,000 500 1114 Sailor Springs Consolidated, 1941 9,%0 19,150,000 1.435,000 1115 Clay - Effingham Tar Springs; Mis U 700 X X 1116 Glen Dean; Mis U 10 X X 1117 Cypress; Mis U 7,000 X X 1118 Bethel; Mis U 140 X X 1119 Aux Vases; Mis U 200 X X 1120 Lower Ohara; Mis L I X X 1121 Rosiclare; Mis L 1 4,000 X X 1122 McClosky; Mis L ) X X 1123 4 1124 Sailor Springs East, Clay Cypress; Mis U 1944 90 62,000 2,000 1125 Sailor Springs North, Clay 1948 40 1,000 500 1126 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 500 1127 McClosky; Mis L 20 500 500 1128 Salem, Marion 1938 9,600 219,314,000 3,375,000 1129 Bethel; Mis U '^ X X 1130 Renault; MisU ^' X X 1131 Aux Vases; Mis U ( X X 1132 Rosiclare; Mis L ( 9,600 X X 1133 McClosky; Mis L X X 1134 St. Louis; Mis L \ X X 1135 Salem; Mis L 1 X X 1136 Devonian; Dev 5,680 35,764,000 212,000 1137 Trenton; Ord 2,160 3,712,000 67,000 1138 4 1139 Samsville, Edwards Waltersburg; Mis U 1942 30 X X 1140 Samsville North, Edwards PaintCreek-Bethel;MisU 1945 160 164,000 1 1,000 1141 Samsville West, Edwards Lower Ohara; Mis L 1951 40 5,000 5,000 1142 Sandoval West, Clinton Cypress; Mis U 1946 10 19,000 2,000 1143 Santa Fe, Clinton ^^ Cypress; Mis U 1944 10 2,000 1144 Schnell, Richland McClosky; Mis L 1938 80 221,000 4,000 1145 Schnell,South, Clay Rosiclare; Mis L 1951 40 4,000 4,000 1146 Seminary, Richland McClosky; Mis L 1945 160 161,000 9,000 1147 Sesser, Franklin 1942 340 605,000 102,000 1148 Renault; Mis U i X X 1149 Aux Vases; Mis U \ 300 X X 1150 Rosiclare; Mis L ^'^ 20 X X 1151 McClosky; Mis L 80 X X 1152 Devonian; Dev 20 X X 1153 4 1154 Shattuc, Clinton 1945 320 325,000 62,000 1155 Cypress; Mis U 160 X X 1156 Bethel; Mis U 10 X X 1157 Trenton; Ord 220 200,000 31,000 1158 Shawneetown, Gallatin Aux Vases; Mis U 1945 10 500 1159 Shawneetown North, Calla'tin : McClosky; Mis L 1948 20 6,000 1,000 1160 Shelbyville, Shelby Aux Vases; Mis U 1946 60 17,000 3,000 1161 Sorento, Bond Devonian; Dev 1938 140 34,000 1162 Sparta South, Randolph ^' Cypress; Mis U 1949 10 1163 Stanford, Clay 1945 380 770,000 61,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 37 NUMBER OF WELLS* 1951 WELLS PRODUCINg'^ DEC. 1951 OIL-' RESERVOIR' PRESSURE E5j Q Z LU ■" \ "^ > O o — > < . w 1^ i> ^-* 111 LT, Qi CHARACTER OF oil'' >- H _: q; < O -2 "J PRODUCING FORMATION >- I- t- z on oc O LU D. a. O 2^ U I- Z> LL Q O LU Q. O Q O CO LU •^ x6 I- > < DEEPEST ZONE TO END OF TESTED" 1951 NAME LU O Q X 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100. 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 18 12 15 3 1 11 53 191 190 1 17 22 4 4 4 1 611 46 350 10 17 4 30 122 32 9 2 1 1 2,471 491 152 9 562 8 541 2 706 3 14 2 1 1 4 2 8 24 10 9 1 1 3 27 12 1 14 1 1 1 18 1 1 3 2 2 11 6 4 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 u 1 5 4 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 15 15 44 147 147 13 16 4 4 I 531 37 1 321 3 10 2 25 108 24 1,988 286 6 298 4 3 216 47 1,128 1 10 2 1 2 2 6 6 3 24 10 14 1 1 1 15 37.0 40.0 34.4 34.0 38.2 38.0 38.0 37.0 X 38.5 35.5 39.0 X 38.0 38.0 38.2 W 37.0 W 38.6 w 37.0 ff 37.0 37.0 37.0 R 42.1 37.0 39.2 39.2 40.0 35.4 0.21 0.23 0.31 0.23 0.14 0.17 X 0.28 0.21 0.28 0.19 0.17 0.17 S L S s s OL LS OL S s s LS L L L L L S S L S S OL L L 760 1,100 1,560 1 ,460 1,605 1,750 2,260 1,555 1,580 1,900 2,840 2,685 2,720 2,815 3,015 2,340 2,390 2,550 2,740 2,825 2,900 2,900 2,925 2,695 2,985 3,030 1,780 X 1,825 1,950 1,990 2,100 2,160 3,440 4,500 2,420 2,900 3,275 1,420 955 3,000 3,005 3,195 2,690 2,700 2,835 2,860 4,360 1,280 1,420 4,020 2,650 3,045 1,860 1,850 880 15 12 6 15 20 17 15 16 10 12 20 13 6 5 2 40 X 40 5 17 X 17 40 50 4 10 10 10 16 5 7 13 13 10 6 15 4 A A A A A \ A A A A A AC MC M ML MC MC A A A A A A A A A D M MC MC A A A A A A A A A A A A X A A AC X MC A AC ^L A A A A AL AL A MF MF' A A A M MisL Ord Oev Dev Mis L Mis L Mis L Mis L Mis L Mis L Mis L St. Peter Mis L Mis L MisL Mis U Dev Mis L' MisL Mis L Dev Ord MisL Mis L Mis L Dev Mis U Mis L 1,960 2,519 3,457 3,570 2,953 3,018 2,968 3,109 3,460 3,168 3,126 5,655 3,303 3,220 3,379 1,560 2,512 3,130 3,077 3,333 4,688 4,078 2,837 3,091 2,119 1,946 900 3,152 38 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS UJ OQ z LU z _l FIELD (County)'^ PRODUCING FORMATION >- QL UJ Q u. O < >- OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o ^^ O (J < CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND age'' Q UJ Di tu < < UJ ^ < BARRELS O "^ S "J UJ ^ < MILLION CU FT " O u. \- o o Q z^ O u. 1- O o z — Q is UJ ^ O u. 1- o o Z '- 1164 Cypress; Mis U 20 10,000 1165 Bethel; Mis U 10 x X 1166 Rosiclare; Mis L 1 X X 1167 McClosky; Mis L ( 340 X X 1168 4 1169 Stanford South, Clay 1946 210 289,000 15,000 1170 Aux Vases; Mis U 140 X X 1171 McClosky; Mis L 100 X X 1172 Stanford West, Clay 1947 60 60,000 5,000 1173 Rosiclare; Mis L ^^ 20 X 1174 McClosky; Mis L 60 X 5,000 1175 4 1176 Stewardson, Shelby Aux Vases; Mis U 1939 120 116,000 9,000 1177 Stokes - Brownsville, While 1939 2,800 6,951,000 346,000 1178 Palestine; Mis U 20 X X 1179 Tar Springs; Mis U 100 X X 1180 Hardinsburg; Mis U 1,100 X X 1181 Cypress; Mis U 220 X X 1182 Paint Creek; Mis U 1 f X X 1183 Bethel; Mis U 500 X X 1184 Aux Vases; Mis U 180 X X 1185 Lower Ohara; Mis L 1 X X 1186 Rosiclare; Mis L \ i 900 X X n 1187 McClosky; Mis L \ X X 1188 4 1189 Storms, 'S/hite 1939 2,200 6,621,000 409,000 460 X 20.5 1190 Waltersburg; Mis U 2,100 X X 460 X 20.5 1191 Tar Springs; Mis U 70 X X 1192 Cypress; Mis U 20 X X 1193 Bethel; Mis U 10 X X 1194 Aux Vases; Mis U ^' 10 X X 1195 Ste. Genevieve; MisL 60 X X 1196 4 1197 Stringtown, Richland Ste. Genevieve; Mis L 1941 800 1,123,000 60,000 1198 Stringtown Kasi^ Richland McClosky; Mis L 1948 20 2,000 1199 Summer, Lau,rence McClosky; MisL 1944 40 15,000 1,000 1200 Sumpter, While 1945 90 45,000 25,000 1201 Tar Springs; Mis U 60 39,000 23,500 1202 Hardinsburg; Mis U 10 500 500 1203 Cypress; Mis U 20 5,500 1,000 1204 Sumpter East, While Lower Ohara; Mis L 1951 20 8,000 8,000 1205 Sumpter South, ^hite Tar Springs; Mis U 1948 110 67,000 26,000 1206 Tamaroa, Perry Cypress; Mis U 1942 60 17,000 2,000 1207 Taylor Hill, Franklin ^^ Lower Ohara; Mis L 1949 20 14,000 2,000 1208 Thackeray, Hamillon 1944 560 2,181,000 90,000 1209 Aux Vases; Mis U 560 X X 1210 McClosky; Mis L 160 X X 1211 4 1212 Thompsonville, Franklin '°° McClosky; Mis L 1940 240 285,000 1213 Thompsonville East, F ranklin Aux Vases; Mis U 1949 60 148,000 32,000 1214 Thompsonville North, Franklin 1944 530 1,373,000 86,000 n 1215 Cypress; Mis U 10 4,000 1216 Aux Vases; Mis LI 520 1,369,000 86,000 1217 Toliver, Clay '°' McClosky; MisL 1942 20 6,000 1218 Toliver East, Clay 1943 80 184,000 6,000 1219 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 6,000 1,000 1220 McClosky; Mis L 60 178,000 5,000 1221 Tonti, Marion 1939 650 9,724,000 264,000 1222 Bethel; Mis U ) X X 1223 Aux Vases; Mis U ( X X 1224 Rosiclare; Mis L ( 650 X X 1225 McClosky; MisL ) X X 1226 Devonian; Dev 80 X X 1227 4 1228 Trumbull, While 1944 250 476,000 45,000 1229 Cypress; Mis U 110 X X 1230 Aux Vases; Mis U 80 X X 1231 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 1232 McClosky; MisL 60 X X 1233 4 1234 Valier, Franklin McClosky; Mis L 1942 20 2,000 1235 Waggoner, Montgomery Pottsville; Pen 1940 40 1 1,000 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 39 LU m Z UJ z _I NUMBER OF WELLS'" WELLS PRODUCINg'^ DEC 1951 RESERVOIR PRESSURE psi S5 ct CHARACTER OF oil'' PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" TO END OF 1951 o h 1951 OIL < _1 < z o z 11 1 •— > o o — > < >- 1- • - H- 1- Z So q: a: O lu Q- Q. DEPTH TO TOP OF PRODUCING ZONE FT* PROD. THICKNESS AVG. FT.' NET E LLI =) I- 1- NAME X , 1- UJ Q- _J m O a X Q t- UJ _J Q- o o Q UJ z o o CO < o o _t u. < U 1- U. LL 1 — 1 q: < 1164 o 1 X X X X s V 2,700 8 ML 1165 1 X X X X s P 2,885 S ML 1166 8 5 X X X X OL P 3,000 6 MC 1167 5 1 8 X X 38.0 X L P 3,025 6 MC 1168 3 1 1169 17 1 12 A MisL 3,205 1170 13 12 X X X X S P 2,970 12 AL 1171 4 1 X X 37.0 X L P 3,090 3 AC 1172 3 1 M Mis L 3,106 1173 X X X X L P 2,980 2 MC 1174 2 1 X X X X L P 3,030 6 MC 1175 1 1176 6 6 X X 36.7 0.18 S P 1,945 9 A Mis L 2,138 1177 189 151 A Mis L 3,394 1178 2 X X 36.0 X S P 2,085 2 MF 1179 2 3 X X 36.0 X S P 2,295 15 MF 1180 92 83 X X 35.6 0.22 S P 2,630 18 A 1181 9 7 X X 36.0 X S P 2,660 12 MF 1182 11 13 X X 36.0 X S P 2,800 22 AF 1183 12 8 X X 36.0 X S P 2,815 8 AF 1184 8 7 X X 36.0 X S P 2,890 13 AF 1185 7 n 1 X X 36.0 X OL P 3,035 5 AC 1186 11 4 X X 36.0 X LS P 3,070 8 AC 1187 18 4 X X 35.8 0.23 OL P 3,100 8 AC 1188 17 21 1189 211 26 1 159 1 A Mis L 3.267 1190 198 24 1 149 1 X X 32.1 0.28 S P 2,230 15 AL 1191 4 3 X X 36.0 X s P 2,340 10 Mf 1192 2 2 X X X X s P 2,700 10 Mf 1193 1 X X X X s P 2,810 X Mf 1194 X X 36.0 X s P 3,015 9 Mf 1195 3 2 2 X X X X L P 3,055 5 MC 1196 3 3 1197 32 1 30 X X 39.8 0.24 OL P 3,025 8 AC MisL 3,108 1198 1 X X X X L P 3,010 4 X MisL 3,144 1199 2 1 X X X X L P 2,260 4 MC MisL 2,365 1200 8 3 7 M Mis L 3,379 1201 5 2 4 X X X X S P 2,575 18 MF 1202 1 1 1 X X X X s P 2,655 14 MF 1203 2 2 X X X X s P 2,860 15 MF 1204 1 1 1 X X X X L P 3,120 7 X MisL 3,265 1205 9 9 X X X X s P 2,580 8 ML MisL 3,430 1206 4 1 1 X X 36.0 0.12 s P 1,130 7 AL MisL 1,630 1207 1 1 X X X X L P 3,055 6 X MisL 3,223 1208 50 45 A MisL 3,660 1209 49 38 X X 37.3 X s P 3,360 15 AL 1210 3 X X X X L P 3,500 10 AC 1211 1 4 1212 19 X X 37.8 0.16 L P 3,120 10 A Mis L 3,455 1213 6 6 X X 38.0 X S P 3,150 8 ML MisL 3,310 1214 70 11 50 A MisL 3,365 1215 1 X X X X S P 2,750 10 AL 1216 69 11 50 X X 39.0 X S P 3,100 20 AL 1217 1 X X 37.1 X OL P 2,790 5 MC MisL 2,887 1218 4 4 M MisL 2,946 1219 1 1 X X X X L P 2,815 6 MC 1220 3 3 X X X X OL P 2,840 8 MC 1221 94 1 79 H Ord 4,900 1222 9 1 7 X X 39.0 X S P 1,930 20 D 1223 16 23 X X 39.0 X s P 2,005 30 D 1224 1 X X X X LS P 2,125 12 D 1225 55 36 X X 39.4 0.21 OL P 2,130 15 D 1226 7 4 X X X X L P 3,500 7 D 1227 6 9 1228 21 1 1 15 A Mis L 3,382 1229 11 1 1 7 X X 36.0 X S P 2,845 10 A 1230 6 6 X X 36.0 X s P 3,170 9 A 1231 1 X X X X L I' 3,270 6 A 1232 2 1 X X X X L P 3,290 5 A 1233 1 1 1234 1 X X X X L P 2,715 12 ML Mis L 2,725 1235 4 X X 28.0 0.21 S P 6in 10 X IJev 1,893 40 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS UJ m 2 Z LU z _i FIELD (County)" PRODUCING FORMATION >- q: lU Q u. O a: < LU > OIL PRODUCTION GAS PRODUCTION o q: CO p u CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl NAME AND AGE* Q UJ is ^" ^< < BARRELS O "> Qi LU < < LU ^ < MILLION CU FT ' O li- h- o LU )^ O U- 1- o O z — is LU i- O u- H- O o z — o 1236 Wakefield, Jasper '°2 Rosiclare; Mis L 1946 20 1,000 1237 Walpole, Hamilton 1941 1,700 4,904,000 378,000 1238 Tar Springs; Mis U 80 X X 1239 Aux Vases; Mis U 1,620 x X 1240 Walpole South, Hamilton Aux Vases; Mis U 1951 20 21,000 21,000 1241 R'altonville, Jefferson Bethel; Mis U 1943 40 88,000 5,000 1242 Waverly (Gas), Morgan 1946 20 700 1243 Pennsylvanian; Pen 160 1244 Devonian; Dev 20 700 1245 Weaver, Clark Devonian; Dev 1949 640 492,000 266,000 1246 West End, Hamilton - Saline 1944 140 405,000 18,000 1247 Aux Vases; Mis U 120 405,000 18,000 1248 McClosky; MisL 20 300 1249 West Frankfort, Franklin 1941 980 2,277,000 151,000 1250 Tar Springs; Mis U 450 X X 1251 Aux Vases; Mis LI 40 X X 1252 Lower Ohara; Mis L ( X X 1253 Rosiclare; Mis L 1 520 X X 1254 McClosky; Mis L \ X X 1255 4 1256 Westfield East, Clark Pennsylvanian; Pen 1947 100 17,000 3,000 80 1257 Westfield North, Coles 1949 20 400 1258 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 400 1259 Pennsylvanian; Pen 10 1260 Whittington, Franklin 1939 250 299,000 73,000 1261 Hardinsburg; Mis U 80 X X 1262 Cypress; Mis U 60 X X 1263 Aux Vases; Mis U 10 X X 1264 Rosiclare; Mis L 20 X X 1265 McClosky; MisL 80 X X 1266 St. Louis; Mis L 20 X X 1267 4 1268 Whittington South, Franklin Cypress; Mis U 1950 100 113,000 70,000 1269 Whittington West, Franklin 1943 240 158,000 15,000 1270 Bethel; Mis U 20 X X 1271 Aux Vases; Mis U' 140 X X 1272 Lower Ohara; Mis L 100 X X 1273 Rosiclare; MisL ^^ 20 X X 1274 McClosky; Mis L 40 X X 1275 4 1276 Williams, Jefferson 1948 160 122,000 39,000 1277 Bethel; Mis U 110 X X 1278 Aux Vases; Mis U 120 X X 1279 4 1280 Willow Hill East, Jasper McClosky; Mis L 1946 300 200,000 9,000 1281 Woburn Consolidated, Bond 1940 670 892,000 95,000 1282 Cypress; Mis U 220 X X 1283 Bethel; Mis U 260 X X 1284 Devonian; Dev 160 X X 1285 Trenton; Ord 320 X X c 1286 Wood] awn, Jefferson 1940 1,960 12,384,000 370,000 1287 Tar Springs; Mis U ^^ 20 X X 1288 Cypress; Mis U 60 X X 1289 Bethel; Mis U 1,900 X X 1290 Aux Vases; Mis U 240 X X 1291 Rosiclare; Mis L 40 X X 1292 McClosky; Mis L ^^ 40 X 1293 Devonian; Dev 20 8,000 1,000 1294 4 1295 Xenia, Clay Aux Vases; Mis U 1941 10 27,000 1,000 1296 Xenia East, Clay 1951 80 26,000 26,000 1297 Cypress; Mis U 70 X X 1298 B ethel; Mis U 10 X X 1299 Zenith, Wayne McClosky; Mis L 1948 40 19,000 2,000 1300 Zenith North, Wayne 1951 80 8,000 8,000 1301 Rosiclare; Mis L 60 X X 1302 McClosky; MisL 40 X X 1303 4 1304 Zenith South, Wayne 1949 280 643,000 56,000 1305 Lower Ohara; Mis L ^ ' 20 X X 1306 McClosky; Mis L 280 X X 1307 4 TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 41 NUMBER OF WELLS PRODUCING^ RESERVOIR PRES^' ipp CHARACTER PRODUCING FORMATION DEEPEST ZONE TESTED" | LU 03 •s. z UJ 2 WELLS^ DEC 1951 PS i is OF oil'' TO END OF 1951 o h |5 1951 OIL ' I/O _l < z >- 1- • <6 X ^ LU 1- u < a: < >- H 1- z o u ai a: PTH TO TOP PRODUCING JONE FT* PROD. HICKNESS G. FT.' NET E LU a: z> 1- H NAME X , H lU Q- _l Q LU 1- LU i UJ o o z o < u. ^ 1- -J Q o CD _J q: < -z. > Gj "^ a < ^ liJ X O UJ UJ LL H- > h- LU O IJ u o «t li- < O < I/) q; o •^ Q. u D- Q. Q O < a X 1236 1 X X X X L p 3,120 5 X Mis L 3,184 1237 94 9 1 92 G A MisL 3,390 1238 6 6 X X 36.1 X S p 2,465 15 AL 1239 88 9 1 86 X X & 38.4 0.13 .s p 3,070 20 A 1240 2 2 2 X X X X s p 3,120 6 X Mis L 3,362 1241 4 3 X X 37.8 0.14 s p 2,460 9 A MisL 2,905 1242 8 A Ord 1,543 1243 1 X X s p 250 13 A 1244 7 360 X X X L p 1,000 10 A 1245 33 6 31 X X 37.0 X L p 2,020 10 R Dev 2,135 1246 11 8 M Mis L 3,419 1247 10 8 X X 36.0 X s p 3,140 15 ML 1248 1 X X X X L p 3,275 5 MC 1249 65 1 1 59 A MisL 3,156 1250 36 1 31 X X 39.0 0.13 S p 2,060 20 A 1251 2 3 X X 37.0 X s p 2,710 20 A 1252 12 8 X X 38.6 X L p 2,760 8 AC 1253 X X X X L p 2,810 8 AC 1254 4 7 1,100 X 38.0 X L p 2,825 14 AC 1255 11 1 10 1256 10 1 6 X X X X S p 400 11 ML Pen 678 1257 2 X Pen 611 1258 1 X X X X s p 275 5 X 1259 1 X X X X s p 490 10 X 1260 18 1 17 A MisL 3,130 1261 6 5 X X X X s p 2,310 10 A 1262 5 1 6 X X 38.6 0.12 s p 2,535 10 A 1263 1 2 X X X X s p 2,735 15 A 1264 1 X X X X L p 2,880 10 AC 1265 2 2 X X 37.6 0.24 L p 2,870 9 AC 1266 1 X X 37.6 0.24 L p 3,080 6 AC 1267 2 2 1268 10 10 X X X X S p 2,580 10 A MisL 3,032 1269 13 9 A MisL 2,942 1270 1 1 X X X X S p 2,615 10 AL 1271 4 2 X X X X s p 2,680 15 AL 1272 1 X X X X L p 2,800 5 AC 1273 X X X X L p 2,780 4 AC 1274 1 1 X X X X L p 2,900 6 AC 1275 6 5 1276 15 14 A Dev 4,578 1277 4 2 X X X X S p 2,515 8 A 1278 9 3 X X X X s p 2,585 7 A 1279 2 9 1280 17 5 7 X X X X L p 2,645 6 A Mis L 3,281 1281 68 1 5 61 A Ord 3,257 1282 20 1 20 X X X X S p 865 8 AL 1283 30 1 28 X X 36.4 0.20 s p 1,020 6 AL 1284 3 1 2 X X X X L p 2,275 5 AC 1285 15 3 11 X X 38.7 0.27 L p 3,170 12 AC 1286 175 3 129 A Dev 3,746 1287 X X X X S p X X AL 1288 3 1 X X X X s p 1,800 10 AL 1289 171 1 101 X X 38.4 0.16 s p 1,960 25 A 1290 8 X X 38.5 X s p 1,975 10 A 1291 1 X X X X LS p 2,205 15 A 1292 X X X X L p 2,200 3 A 1293 1 X X 38.5 X L p 3,700 10 A 1294 2 18 1295 1 1 X X 35.0 0.19 S p 2,785 13 A Dev 4,698 1296 8 8 8 A MisL 3,011 1297 7 7 7 X X X " s p 2,500 6 AL 1298 1 1 1 X X X X s p 2,710 6 AL 1299 2 1 1 X X X X L p 2,970 7 MC Mis L 3,059 1300 4 4 1 3 N Mis L 3,210 1301 2 2 1 1 X X X X L p 3,085 5 NC 1302 1 1 1 X X X X L p 3,140 4 NC 1303 1 1 1 1304 14 4 8 M MisL 3,116 1305 X X X X L p 2,920 6 MC 1306 12 4 7 X X X X I. p 2,985 7 MC 1307 2 1 42 TABLE 1 - OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS FIELD (County)'' PRODUCING FORMATION NAME AND AGE^ OIL PRODUCTION O "" £ LU Q. °^ BARRELS O li- h- o o z — 3 — GAS PRODUCTION O i" LU ^ < MILLION CU FT ' O u- 1- O O CONDENSATE PRODUCTION Thousands of Bbl O Ll. I- o o a: o Q 1308 1309 Total of fields discovered after January 1, 1937 Total for Illinois 298,305 412,050 l,0f.8,386,000 54,147,000 1,569,409,000 60,244,000 6,640 17,965 7,521.5 10,028.0 349.6 349.6 Pressures in Southeastern Illinois oil fields are estimated bottom-hole pressures reported in previous Survey publications; in new pools are pressures as reported by companies, ^ Gravities for pools prior to 1936 (except those in parentheses) are from data for the year 1925 furnished by the Ohio Pipe Line Company (former- ly called the Illinois Pipe Line Company). Gravities in parentheses are for particular samples. Discrepancies between numbers of original completions and present producing wells in various pays are due in part to reworking of wells. Wells producing from more than one pay. See Table 7. ^ Abandoned 1945; revived 1950. ^ Total of lines 2, 7, U, 12, 17, 24, 30, and 35. Includes Kibbie, Oblong, Robinson, and Hardinsville. Includes Swearingen gas (abandoned). 9 Total of lines 40, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, and 52. 11 Anticline with accumulation controlled by change in character of rock. Total of lines 54 and 70. 12 Includes Patton '^ Total of lines 1, 39, 53, 71, and 72. '" Abandoned 1950. '^ Abandoned 1923. "^ Heef Anticlinal with accumulation in sand lense. '^ Abandoned 1933; revived 1949. '^ Abandoned 1934. ^° Abandoned 1925; revived 1942. ^' Abandoned 1935. ^^ Abandoned 1934. ^3 Abandoned 1919. ^'' Abandoned 1921. ^^ Abandoned 1904; revived 1942. ^^ Abandoned 1930; revived 1939; abandoned 1951. ^^ Abandoned 1937. Gas not used until 1905; abandoned 1930. ^^ Abandoned 1900. Total of lines 88 to 116, inclusive. Producing in combination only. Produced in workover or combination wells only. Not producing now. ^^ Abandoned 1946. ^^ Abandoned 1950. Includes Blairsville. ^^ Abandoned 1949. " Abandoned 1949. ^^ Abandoned 1951. Includes New Haven North ■"^ Abandoned 1947. "' Abandoned 1950. ''2 Abandoned 195L ''^ Includes Rural Hill. '"' Abandoned 1946. ■■^ Abandoned 1951. "^ Abandoned 1940. '' Abandoned 1943; revived and abandoned 1948; revived and abandoned 1951. "^ Abandoned 1951. "^ Abandoned 1951. Includes Epwortb East, TABLE 1 - A. H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 43 NUMBER OF WELLS^ 1951 WELLS producing'' DEC 1951 OIL < U 1- u. u- 1 1 i/> q: < < o RESERVOIR PRESSURE > < ¥ > rS CHARACTER a: < O PRODUCING FORMATION O <-> Qi a: O LU Q. CL o U 1- Z3 Li- Q O UJ Q. O Nl 8?- DEEPEST ZONE TO END OF TESTED" 1951 NAME I - I- UJ Q. _l UJ O Q X 1308 1309 22,220 43,553 8f-5 957 125 813 17,415 2(1,741 15 ^' Abandoned 1949. " Abandoned 1951. " Abandoned 1950. ^* Abandoned 1946; revived 1950. Discovered in 1945 ; not named until 1950. ^^ Abandoned 1943; revived 1949. ^' Abandoned 1950. ^^ Abandoned 1944. ^^ Abandoned 1949. ^° Abandoned 1950. ^' Abandoned 1946. ^^ Abandoned 1945; revived 1950. Includes New Haven West Includes Inman, Inman North, Inman South, and Inman Central. Includes Mason South, ^^ Abandoned 1945. ^'' Abandoned 1942; revived 1943. ^^ Abandoned 1947. ^^ Abandoned 1946. '° Abandoned 1946; revived 1946. " Abandoned 1947; revived 1949. '^ Abandoned 1950. '^ Abandoned 1941. ^•^ Abandoned 1947. '^ Abandoned 1939; revived 1940. Abandoned 1947; revived 1950. Abandoned 1950. Illinois portion only. ^^ Abandoned 1948. Includes Maud Consolidated and Maud North Consolidated. ^' Abandoned 1948. ^^ Abandoned 1947. '^ Abandoned 1940; revived 1949. ^'' Abandoned 1950. Includes Bonpas and Parkersburg North. ^^ Abandoned 1951. ^^ Abandoned 1946. ^^ Abandoned 1942. ^5 Abandoned 1951. ^° Abandoned 1950. Gas abandoned 1950. ^^ Abandoned 1951. ^^ Abandoned 1951. ^■^ Abandoned 1943; revived 195 L ^^ Abandoned 1947. ^^ Abandoned 1950. ^^ Abandoned 1950. ^^ Abandoned 1950. ^^ Abandoned 1951. '00 Abandoned 1947. '°' Abandoned 1945. '°^ Abandoned 1946. 44 TABLE II A - DISCOVERY WELLS OF NEW FIELDS Qi UJ CQ s z LIJ TOTAL 1- LU LU U. Q- O 1- o 1- lAL PRODUCTION (B8L.) A/ z g UJ _J Ql 2 O u o — — o U '- Q- LU -1 _j z 1 DEPTH PRODUCING X o ^8 § 5 POOL COUNTY COMPANY AND FARM LOCATION FEET FORMATION LU Q 1- z UJ t— < 1 /\ssumption South Christian Texas #1 Kemmerer Orphanage 14-12N-1E 2740 Devonian 2632 26; 1 12-31-51 1 2 3eaucoup Washington Collins Bros. Si Obering /?! Meineil 10-2S-2W 3080 Devonian-Silurian 3047 50 8-7-51 1 3 Beaucoup South Washington D. Hopkins #1 T. Kruski 33-2S-2W 1445 Bethel 1430 103; 4 10-30-51 6 4 3elImont Wabash G. Ellison #1 H. Epler 36-lS- 14W 2847 McClosky 2836 240 5-22-Sl 3 5 Blairsville West Hamilton G. C. Schoonmaker #1 R. Thompson 18-4S- 7E 3422 McClosky 3416 490 5-1-51 9 6 3one Gap East Edwards B. Kidd ffl A. H. Cowling 4-1S-14W 3115 Lower Ohara 2980 70 2-13-51 1 7 Broughton Hamilton Carter #1 J. Van Winkle 27-6S-7E 3330 McClosky 3277 92; 96 8-28-51 1 8 Broughton South Saline Skiles #1 M. Pemberton 20-7S-7E 3227 McClosky 3213 28; 3.0 10-2-51 1 9 Cantrell North Hamilton R. Halbert #1 Auten Hrs. 32-6S-5E 3250 Aux Vases 3236 253 9-4-51 6 10 Carlyle South Clinton P. Schoendienst #1 D. R. Branch 11-1N-3W 1079 Cypress 1076 9; 12 12-11-51 1 11 Christopher Franklin La Grange Pet #1 B. Harrison-Old Ben Coal 24-6S-1E 2822; PB 2685 Lower Ohara 2675 23; 10 2-27-51 12 Cottonwood North Gallatin Griffith & Berkman #1 Hale 21-7S-9E 2624 Cypress 2607 39 9-25-51 7 13 Exchange North Marion Atlas Drlg. #1 E. Sawyer 11-1N-3E 2831; PB 2735 McClosky 2715 152; 50 7-24r51 1 14 progtown North Clinton Gulf n F. Warnecke 6-2N-3W 2340; PB 1234 St. Louis 1195 165 4-17-51 22 15 Cards Point Wabash Gilliam Drlg. #1 E. Miller 25-1N-14W 2844 Lower Ohara 2838 312 9-25-51 1 16 Goldengate East Wayne C. E. Brehm ffl P. J. Seifert 2-3S-9E 3420; PB 3310 Lower Ohara 3291 29; 35 11-13-51 1 17 Hord South Clay Webster & Shirk ffl Roberts 26-5N-6E 2790 McClosky 2781 350 9-11-51 4 18 Irvington East Jefferson Ervin & Bassett #2 Hartley 19- IS- IE 1084 Pennsylvanian 1030 24 10-23-51 1 19 Keenville East Wayne Bolin & Appleby #1 Clevenger 36-1S-5E 3172 McClosky 3127 67 8-7-51 2 20 Lexington North Wabash P. Rossi #1 E. Leitch 23-1S-14W 3004 Lower Ohara 2931 46 6-19-51 1 21 Livingston East Madison J. S. Lehwald n T. Voyles 26-6N-6W 555 Pennsylvanian 543 4,500.000 cu. ft. 218 B/ 11-27-51 1 22 Locust Grove Wayne J. M. Zanetis #1 W. F. Daubs 31-1N-9E 3306 Lower Ohara: 3234 2-20-51 6 McClosky 3278 23 Lynchburg Jefferson Peak Drgl. #1 Brown 8-3S-4E 3065 McClosky 3050 175 10-23-51 1 24 Mason North Effingham Texas #1 R. Sinnickson 10-6N-5E 2521 Rosiclare 2363 53; 8 9-11-51 9 25 Maunie East White National Assoc. Pet. #1 Truscott Hrs. "B" 6-6S-11E 2878 Aux Vases 2868 20; 20 12-31-51 1 26 Noble West Clay J. H. Gilliam #1C. Jones 3-3N-8E 3143 Rosiclare 3036 42 10-9-51 1 27 Okawville Washington E. A. Oberling #1 Baldwin 15-1S-4W 2336 Silurian 2323 56 5-22-51 3 28 Omaha South Gallatin Inland Producers #1 Allen 8-8S-8E 3017; PB 2868 Rosiclare 2866 34; 30 10-9-51 1 29 Oskaloosa East Clay National Assoc. Pet. #1 Spicker-Sefton "A" 7-3N-6E 2897 McClosky 2894 297 7-31-51 2 30 Oskaloosa South Clay E. A. Obering #1 Hale 9-3N-5E 2883 McClosky 2770 9 12-18-51 1 31 Pana Christian Collins Bros. #1. R. T. Jones 3- UN- IE 2847; PB 1483 Bethel 1472 20; 20 5-15-51 2 32 Phillipstown South White Aubrey-Tennant #1 J. L. Brown 11-5S-10E 2994 Aux Vases 2981 30; 5 10-30-51 1 33 Pinkstaff Lawrence Cherry & Beebe n W. E. Conrad 9-4N-11W 1797 McClosky 1734 15; 65 5-22-51 34 Raymond East Montgomery L. Marsch ffl M. A. Poggenpohl 22-10N-4W 612 Pennsylvanian 602 50 12-11-51 1 35 Ritter North Richland Sanders & Fye #1 Phillips 18-3N-11E 3288 McClosky 3200 52; 10 11-13-51 1 36 Samsville West Edwards Peak Drlg. #1 E. King 27-lN-lOE 3312 Lower Ohara 3266 200 12-4-51 2 37 Schnell South Clay Calvert Drlg. #1 E. Gallagher 13-2N-8E 3071 Rosiclare 3003 85 9-11-51 2 38 Sumpter East White George & vVrather #1 R. Winter 32-4S-10E 3265 Lower Ohara 3118 300 12-11-51 1 39 Wapole South Hamilton Dee Miller ffl H. E. Howard 8-7S-6E 3133 Aux Vases 3125 350 6-26-51 2 40 Xenia East Clay W. W. Dayton #1 G. G. Campbell 11-2N-5E 2535 Cypress 2505 45; 24 7-17-51 4 41 Zenith North Wayne George & Wrather #1 D. McGrew 21-2N-6E 3204 Rosiclare; McClosky 3083 3136 251 B/ 12-18-51 2 A/ Oil and Water B/ Producing from 2 pays TABLE II B - ALFRED H. BELL AND VIRGINIA KLINE 45 NOIlBldWOD dO 3J-Va f-H lO -—• LO --H i-H ^ ^ r-< in -^ I lO 1/5 lO ^ I* CO— iNO^^-— 'r-souo --Hoo 3 u — 2- Q CQ = O m ^ S O C^ ■* .- Q C^ (N in ^ lO 00 ?5 00 : ml I .. in ^ f- o ■- « I CO CO ^ -^ "M C^ u^ 2 S5 0. Q. 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Sumpter East 39. Walpole South 40. Xenia East 41. Zenith North 1. Assumption South 15. Cards Point 2. Beaucoup 16. Goldengate East 3. Beaucoup South 17. Hord South 4. Bellmont 18. Irvington East 5. Blairsville West 19. Keenville East 6. Bone Gap East 20. Lexington North 7. Broughton 21. Livingston East 8. Broughton South 22. Locust Grove 9. Cantrell North 23. Lynchburg 10. Carlyle South 24. Mason North 11. Christopher 25. Maunie East 12. Cottonwood North 26. Noble West 13. Exchange North 27. Okawville 14. Frogtown North 54 TABLE 1-OIL AND GAS DEVELOPMENTS IN ILLINOIS f^ \ r 1^' A o / y Vv- ^/ \ A NUMBER OF PRODUCING WELLS rnMPi FTFn momthi v a i / J V V \ /u/^ ir» Ai I r^^ L ^i . AAA, . _ ^< f r^ . / rw ^> / ^^y y V/j J V^^WV •v.^^ V vv ^\J \^ \J \ n 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 I94S 1947 1946 1949 1950 1951 l\ J A /J / / \, TOTAL PRODUCTION / \ r>". / w r^ ■^ -^ \'~^ o/^ S (V> / \^ -^^ S^ ...-v^'s- ^ S/v- v^ .^ / 1937 19 38 19 39 19 40 19 41 l» 42 1943 1944 1045 1948 1947 1946 (949 1950 1951 FIG. 2 - NUMBER OF PRODUCING WELLS AND OIL PRODUCTION IN ILLINOIS, 1937 TO 1951 tElSTOCENE it ^IN- FORMATION KINKAID • DEGONIA CLORE PALESTINE MENARD TAR SPRINGS GLEN DEAN HARDINSBURG GOLCONDA CYPRESS PAINT CREEK BETHEL RENAULT AUX VASES FORMATION OR GROUP STE GENEVIEVE (MCCLOSKY ROSI- CLARE, L O'HARA) ST LOUIS SALEM OSAGE (CARPER) KINDERHOOK - NEW ALBANY MAQUOKETA • "TRENTON' ST. PETER O q: o 1- 10 PRE- CAMBRIAN FORMATION SHAKOPEE NEW RICHMOND ONECTA JORDAN TREMPEALEAU FRANCONIA GALESVILLE EAU CLAIRE MT. SIMON FIG. 3 - GEOLOGIC COLUMN FOR SOUTHERN ILLINOIS SHOWING OIL PRODUCING STRATA C)