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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Environmental Geosciences (DEG)

Abstract

Environmental Geosciences, V. 24, No. 2 (June 2017), P. 95-112.

Copyright ©2017. The American Association of Petroleum Geologists/Division of Environmental Geosciences. All rights reserved.

DOI: 10.1306/eg.1221161600417009

Methods and challenges to locating legacy wells in western Pennsylvania: Case study at Hillman State Park

James I. Sams III,1 Garret A. Veloski,2 J. Rodney Diehl,3 and Richard W. Hammack4

1National Energy Technology Laboratory, US Department of Energy, 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15236; [email protected]
2National Energy Technology Laboratory, US Department of Energy, 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15236; [email protected]
3National Energy Technology Laboratory, US Department of Energy, 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15236; [email protected]
4National Energy Technology Laboratory, US Department of Energy, 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15236; [email protected]

ABSTRACT

This study demonstrates the application of aeromagnetic surveys for locating late 1800s-era oil and gas wells in Hillman State Park. The study area in southwestern Pennsylvania offered several unique challenges to locating legacy wells. Location records for many of Pennsylvania’s legacy wells do not exist. Those that do exist are often incomplete and inaccurate, and old wells were commonly abandoned without effective plugging. Now, unplugged legacy wells may serve as vertical migration pathways for fluids and gas associated with modern oil and gas operations. Wells in Hillman State Park were abandoned in the early 1900s, leaving little evidence of a well site. However, the steel well casing commonly remained at the site. Between 1940 and 1960, 50% of the Previous HitlandTop area at Hillman State Park was surface mined for coal. The removal of coal overburden also removed the upper well casings in surface-mined areas to the depth of the coal. The wells were then buried under mine spoil during regrading operations. Today, much of Hillman State Park is covered in trees and dense vegetation, and locating wells with ground-level searches is difficult, time consuming, and often futile. The airborne magnetic survey used in this study identified well locations, including buried wells in mined areas, based on the unique magnetic signature of vertical, steel well casing. The results of the aeromagnetic survey were combined with aerial photography, historic maps, and high-resolution topographic data in a geographic information system to refine well locations prior to verification with a ground search.

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