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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Environmental Geosciences (DEG)
Abstract
DOI: 10.1046/j.1526-0984.2001.84001.x
The
Oil
Waste History of Smackover Field, Arkansas
Oil
Waste History of Smackover Field, Arkansas MARY L. BARRETT
Department of Geology & Geography, Centenary College of Louisiana, Shreveport, LA 71134
ABSTRACT
Smackover Field, discovered in 1922, is an excellent example of
the methodology of heavy
oil
handling and loss in early 20th
century flush production fields. Emulsion problems and waste
were severe; millions of barrels of heavy
oil
were stored in
earthen pits for up to a decade, and millions of barrels of
oil
were lost to land and water. The largest quantity of crude
oil
waste was from the inadequate handling and treatment of waterin-
oil
emulsions. Crude
oil
loss was also associated with earthen
storage both on leases and in large tank farms.
Lease
storage pits
served numerous purposes and had the most complex fluid history.
Many were used for decades as saltwater disposal pits following
the flush
oil
period. Large earthen tank farms on the field
edge stored millions of barrels of heavy
oil
in the 1920s and
1930s but were not used for saltwater storage. Today the farms
exist within young forests where the ground is hardened by asphaltic
deposits associated with both earthen construction and
seepage loss. Drainage areas also provide a record of the extensive
waste
oil
history. Asphaltic layers are most prominent in
creek areas that did not burn, but degraded
oil
exists to some extent
in almost all field drainage areas.
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