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Guys, I have 80 acres in northeast Webster (about 12 miles south of the AR line and about a mile from the Claiborne Parish line). Regardless of the truth (or hype?) regarding the possibility of Brown Dense activity, could anyone recommend a good approach to getting the property leased? The current lease expired a few months ago. Should I reach out to a land man (if so, any recommendation would be appreciated), call a company like CHK directly, or wait for a phone call?
Thanks for any suggestions.
Thanks Skip for the response. That sounds like very good advice. Also, the Jeffries report that started this thread identifies the Webster Parish well as completed in the "Smackover 'C'," and the Claiborne Parish well being in the "Smackover 'A'." Is the "C" formation synonomous with the "Lower Smackover" or "Brown Dense"?
There is some confusion on that matter. It has been stated that the Brown Dense is the Smackover D. However the D designation has also been used for commingling production from the B and C. While reservoir names may be misleading, True Vertical Depth (TVD) is a better determinant of the reservoir being produced. I have a print out on my desk with several vertical SMK wells in Lafayette and Columbia counties. The TDD's for those wells vary from 7300' to 8286'. I believe that the Brown Dense in this area is the same as the Lower SMK which has a True Vertical Depth of ~9950' as reported in the Watson-Scott 1 - 12H (Horizontal) well in Columbia County. The Jeffries report, IMO, has strung together some unrelated bits and pieces and made overly general assertions. Their list of operators "exposed" to this supposed play is every major oil company or mid-major independent gas company with leasehold within a 60 or so mile radius of this general area. This report could have been written by someone with no more factual information than that contained in our GHS discussions. Just because it is on the Internet does not make it necessarily accurate.
Don't forget that terms like "Haynesville Shale" are fictional terms anyway. If you slice down through the rock strata and look at a cross section in the real world, the various strata aren't color coded and labeled with names. There isn't necessarily a black and white dividing line between two formations. Formation A may gradually transition to formation B with no clearcut physical distinction between them.
Even if a rock formation is "the same" formation in two different places, it doesn't mean the mineral potentials are the same.
The "Haynesville Shale" may be a clearer division than some geological terms, but it's still a human characterization rather than a definite physical boundary.
A "single formation" in one person's definition could be called something else, it could be broken into an upper and lower layer with different names, or have the name changed in areas where it's shallower, doesn't have as much gas, is less dense, has more sand, different fossils, etc. It could be called something different on two sides of a fault. There could be two non-contiguous areas of similar rock formations with the same name, etc. If it had been discovered separately in two different regions and named before we figured out it was all "the same" formation, we might very well call the eastern name one thing and the western end something else.
I'm mostly pointing out that the earth isn't like a car where you can find discrete parts and say, "this is the cylinder block, and this is the cylinder head." The terms are useful, but the terms are generalizations created by man, not hard, fast distinctions created by God.
Also, some people have tried to play hanky panky by trying to stretch the definitions of one stratum vs. another.
Shale drilling and lithium extraction are seemingly distinct activities, but there is a growing connection between the two as the world moves towards cleaner energy solutions. While shale drilling primarily targets…
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AboutAs exciting as this is, we know that we have a responsibility to do this thing correctly. After all, we want the farm to remain a place where the family can gather for another 80 years and beyond. This site was born out of these desires. Before we started this site, googling "shale' brought up little information. Certainly nothing that was useful as we negotiated a lease. Read More |
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