I think I saw this explained somewhere, but can't find it.

There are, for instance, multiple "HA RA SUA" units in Caddo Parish. Obviously, "HA RA SUA" is a subdivision of some larger category, such as parish, township, etc.

Is the designation HA RA SU** for a particular "field?"

Is there a good description of how these unit names are created?



What is the next higher item in the hierarchy that distinguishes one "HA RA SUA" from another.

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Mac, If I recall, HA is the Haynesville formation( depth), RA is Resevoir A. No difference beyween resevoir A, B, or C. Just a way to distinguish for the production company, the state and everyone else. SU is sand unit. Sometimes these are followed by a letter or numbers. LesB, Shale Geo and Skip are indeed the experts on this nomenclature IMHO.
Mac, Cannie has done an excellent job of explaining the nomenclature for unit names. The larger category is field so in Caddo Parish you would find the following units for example:

S22-T15N-R15W, HA RA SUA Unit, Chesapeake, Caspiana Field, Caddo Parish
S27-T15N-R16W, HA RA SUA Unit, Chesapeake, Bethany-Longstreet Field, Caddo Parish
S14-T16N-R15W, HA RA SUA Unit, Chesapeake, Metcalf Field, Caddo Parish
S29-T16N-R15W, HA RA SUA Unit, Chesapeake, Johnson Branch Field, Caddo Parish
S23-T16N-R16W, HA RA SUA Unit, Chesapeake, Greenwood-Waskom Field, Caddo Parish
So there can only be one "HA RA SUA" in a field, but there can be one in each field, correct?

The unique identifier would be "HA RA SUA - Caspiana Field," right?

What's the meaning of "Sand" in "Sand Unit?"

Thanks
Mac, you are correct in first two statements.

"Sand" has no real meaning in the context of these type units. The sand unit (SUA, SUB, etc) is the designation of the area covered by the unit. Normally for the Haynesville Units this will be a single section (~ 640 acres).
OK, I'm guessing that "sand" comes from the time when we were drilling into sand formations that carried oil or gas, and the name "Sand Unit" just stuck after we started drilling formations that aren't sand.

Thanks again.

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