Don

A 5.2 year life makes a real difference, and thanks for the info, also a 500 meter reach. I'll be happy to redo and get back with you. There's a lot of stranded oil in Texas, production was basicially uncontrolled before 1936, and the East Texas field was discovered in 1930, the peak of discovery. It was drilled to a well density of 1 well per 6 acres.

The reservoir energy was dissipated. They flared or vented the natural gas, and the absolute open flow caused massive coning. The US Department of Energy Fossil Fuels Department thinks that the average recovery rate on the old fields was around 10% of the original oil in place, and the University of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology says 10% to 20).

The current prospect I'm working up uses a figure of 20% O.O.I.P., but thats pretty arbitrary, but it still yeilds a figure of 100 million barrels OOIP, a hefty target. Its 18 gravity sweet, and an oil pipeline is less than 1/4 mile away, the refineries located about 60 miles as the crow flies. Salt domes have numerous reservoirs, and the one I'm planning to reenter first is apparently about 50 acres, and old reef, so I doubt its suitable. I'd guess at your temperatures of 700o farenheight the lime would cook to cement. But there's plenty more reservoirs, mostly frio and miocene sands, and they might be very suitable they're high silica. I'm trying to raise $500 K to buy up the rest of the formerly productive acreage, about 2,000 acres and I've been shamelessly chumming for investors here because I've only got about $30K of my own to put in on the deal. And I have at least 12 more similar prospects within 200 miles, mostly too big for me to handle, so i'm focusing on one that i think I can put together on my own.

Salt domes and structures control about 90% of the oil production in the Gulf Coast and Louisiana, plus the Gulf of Mexico and the Golden Lane of Mexico. Bob Ebersole

When you do get the acreage together, what do you do then?