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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Environmental Geosciences (DEG)

Abstract

 

DOI: 10.1046/j.1526-0984.2001.84001.x

The Previous HitOilNext Hit 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 Previous HitoilNext Hit handling and loss in early 20th century flush production fields. Emulsion problems and waste were severe; millions of barrels of heavy Previous HitoilNext Hit were stored in earthen pits for up to a decade, and millions of barrels of Previous HitoilNext Hit were lost to land and water. The largest quantity of crude Previous HitoilNext Hit waste was from the inadequate handling and treatment of waterin- Previous HitoilNext Hit emulsions. Crude Previous HitoilNext Hit loss was also associated with earthen storage both on leases and in large tank farms. Previous HitLeaseNext Hit storage pits served numerous purposes and had the most complex fluid history. Many were used for decades as saltwater disposal pits following the flush Previous HitoilNext Hit period. Large earthen tank farms on the field edge stored millions of barrels of heavy Previous HitoilNext Hit 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 Previous HitoilNext Hit history. Asphaltic layers are most prominent in creek areas that did not burn, but degraded Previous HitoilNext Hit exists to some extent in almost all field drainage areas.

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