(4) Editorial: A Tale of Two Oil States; While the shale boom lifts Texas, California sits on vast resources. Wall Street Journal, May 6, 2013
online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324695104578416871045535226.html
("Another contrast is that most Texas oil is on private lands, which owners are willing to lease at a price. In California much of the oil-rich areas are state or federally owned, and leasing doesn't happen because of political constraints")
Note:
(a) "The Golden State has long been one of America's big three oil producing states, along with Texas and Alaska, but last year North Dakota surpassed it. This isn't a matter of geological luck but of good and bad policy choices. Barely unnoticed outside energy circles, Texas has doubled its oil output since 2005. Even with the surge in output in North Dakota's Bakken region, Texas produces as much oil as the four next largest producing states combined."
Crude Oil Production. Energy Information Administration (EIA), US Department of Energy, undated.
http://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/pet_crd_crpdn_adc_mbblpd_a.htm
(i) click "View History" for each state, one will find that oil boom in North Dakota and Texas began in 2005 and 2011, respectively, suggesting the starting years of meaningful fracking in these two states.
(ii) Crude oil production in 2007: federal offshore> Texas> Alaska> California>> Louisiana> Oklahoma> New Mexico> Wyoming> North Dakota
(b) "The two richest fields are the Eagle Ford shale formation in South Texas, where production is up 50% in the last year alone, and the 250-square mile Permian Basin. Midland-Odessa in the Permian is one of America's fastest-growing metro areas."
(i) Eagle Ford Formation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Ford_Formation
(also called the Eagle Ford Shale; derives its name from the old community of Eagle Ford, now a neighborhood in West Dallas, where outcrops of the Eagle Ford Shale were first observed)
(A) Map 2 shows Eagle Ford Shae is right underneath Austin Chalk (besides showing outcrops), and map 3 presents a larger picture. View the last map (map 4) in this Wiki page for shale oil and gas in this formation.
(B) What is an "outcrop" as a noun? This Wiki page says, "The Eagle Ford is mostly confined within the subsurface but outcrops on west side of Dallas and continues at a 1 degree easterly prograding tilt."
* outcrop (n, vi)
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/outcrop
(C) Three examples of outcrops of Monterey Formation:
* Monterey Formation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monterey_Formation
* General Research Topics in the Monterey Formation (Monterey Shale). MARS Project, California State University, Long Beach (CSULB), undated.
http://geology.campus.ad.csulb.e ... RS/page3/page3.html
For MARS Project, see (6) below.
* Dolomite, porcelanite, and phosphatic mudstone at Naples Beach, California. MARS Project, CSULB, undated
http://geology.campus.ad.csulb.edu/people/behl/rbehl/naples.htm
("Most times, the very best outcrops of the Monterey Formation are at the beach, where the sand constantly scours fresh faces of the interesting and beautiful rocks. You can find Monterey outcrops in many places along the California coast. Here, Julie Dumoulin is examining the phosphatic facies of the Monterey Formation at Naples Beach, west of Santa Barbara, California. Photo © Rick Behl (1997)")
(ii) Permian Basin (North America)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian_Basin_(North_America)
(so named because it has one of the world's thickest deposits of rocks from the Permian geologic period; The Permian Basin gives its name to a large oil and natural gas producing area)
(c) "California has huge reservoirs offshore and even more in the Monterey shale"
(i) Review of Emerging Resources: US Shale Gas and Shale Oil Plays. EIA, July 8, 2011
http://www.eia.gov/analysis/studies/usshalegas/
("The largest shale oil formation is the Monterey/Santos play in southern California, which is estimated to hold 15.4 billion barrels or 64 percent of the total shale oil resources shown in Table 1 [ie 64% of US total estimate]. The Monterey shale play is the primary source rock for the conventional oil reservoirs found in the Santa Maria and San Joaquin Basins in southern California. The next largest shale oil plays are the Bakken and Eagle Ford, which are assessed to hold approximately 3.6 billion barrels and 3.4 billion barrels of oil, respectively")
(A) The quotation discussed shale OIL only, whereas table 1 listed both shale oil and shale gas.
(B) For the meaning of "play" in the EIA report, search that word in
shale gas
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shale_gas
(C) play (n):
"4b
(1) : the state of being active, operative, or relevant <other motives surely come into play — MR Cohen> <several issues are at play>
(2) : brisk, fitful, or light movement <the gem presented a dazzling play of colors>"
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/play
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