Tags: Activity, Mississippi
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I didn't mean to answer on top of you about the anticlines...
I have never heard anyone say that they are playing the low spots, but if that is the case it would go back to skip's comments about the sand in North LA. Sand does stretch across the a good portion of North LA in the "haynesville" depositional period. Except for NW Louisiana a minibasin formed which allowed for a deeper water depth during the time of deposition . The Sediments washed down by the MS and Red Rivers would have first deposited their sand in shallower climates, then the silt, and finally only clay was still suspended by the time the water from the rivers made it to the island sheltered mini-basin in NW Louisiana. Eventually the Clay particles settled out and this case mixed with Calcite and dead plankton to become the Haynesville. These events took place in deep water all over the then Gulf of Mexico, The pocket of haynesville in NW LA is unique in that there happed to be apocket of deepwater to promote shale deposition. This perhaps this is why they target Haynesville 'Lows' in North LA... because if it wasn't Low then it would have been sand or siltstone rather than shale... ???
I would suggest highly specific searches using Google Advanced... I always target .pdf files because that is where the meat is... I have literally hundereds of saved documents pertaining to each formation in the GoM Basin... is there something in particular that you are looking for? maybe I already have it....
Good Morning... I have read with considerable interest the foregoing discussions... I have also posted a few times on Yahoo Finance for MNLU...
Please email me if you want to see a copy of my MNLU report ... it is really focused on economics and is not complete.
bruce at fser dot net
About depth: According to a Paleontologist very familiar with the Haynesville in Louisiana, there is a hard limestone marker at the bottom of the Haynesville – just before the Smackover… Published material from AEXP referred to 2600 feet of Haynesville, likely measured by the seismic line. MNLU hit the top (H) around 20,000 and stopped at 22,000 feet, the programmed depth, likely leaving 600 feet (H). The deeper MNLU goes the greater the risk in Hydrogen Sulfide … treatable, but nonetheless a risk. Also, why push fate… go to 22,000 – correlate the CVX well data with the current hole and do a completion…
I hear that they lost circulation a number of times while in the Haynesville and had gas shows, which could indicate an excellent fracture matrix. MNLU got 22 out of 60 feet attempted core… Anyone have thoughts on why only 22 feet were recovered? I was speculating that it crumbled as did someone else.
Regards,
Bruce Badeau, Houston Texas www.fser.net bruce@fser.net
Missed this earlier, but here's a link to Mainland CEO Nicholas Atencio's interview on Bloomberg TV last week:
Way to go.... they are going to drill through the Haynesville and test the Smackover... I wonder if they cased to 20,000 before drilling further? Very good news IMO.
My guess the next PR report should be out tomorrow, Monday at the latest and could answer that question.
9.2 million... wow. And that is before completion costs... wow..or even the last string of casing...wow.
@$4 gas they need about 2 1/2 B's to just break even on drilling costs... wow.
"They were looking for the BIG ONE and they got it."
Look, I hope for everyone involved this project turns out, but statements like this are ridiculous. Gas is in the gutter, they are moving rigs out of gas plays as it is. We don't really know anything about Mainlands results yet. Lets keep the conjecture to a minimum
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