Report of the Geological Survey of Ohio, Volume 6Nevins & Myers State Printers, 1888 |
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Page 125
... kilns already in operation on his land at no great dis- tance . Inasmuch as this business demands fuel only through the sum- mer months , the well was connected with city mains , so that all sur- plus could be turned to account . The ...
... kilns already in operation on his land at no great dis- tance . Inasmuch as this business demands fuel only through the sum- mer months , the well was connected with city mains , so that all sur- plus could be turned to account . The ...
Page 139
... kilns .. ..... $ 1.00 per month . $ 1.50 per month . $ 2.00 to $ 2.50 per month . 15 to 30 cents . from $ 150 upwards per year . $ 100 per year . These rates would not elswhere be counted unreasonable , but it was apparent that the ...
... kilns .. ..... $ 1.00 per month . $ 1.50 per month . $ 2.00 to $ 2.50 per month . 15 to 30 cents . from $ 150 upwards per year . $ 100 per year . These rates would not elswhere be counted unreasonable , but it was apparent that the ...
Page 144
... kilns of the old pattern . His kilns are to the south of town and a little west . The quality of his lime has never been more acceptable . Mr. C. B. Hall has two patent or draw kilns on the same side of the town , and he also reports ...
... kilns of the old pattern . His kilns are to the south of town and a little west . The quality of his lime has never been more acceptable . Mr. C. B. Hall has two patent or draw kilns on the same side of the town , and he also reports ...
Page 163
... kilns have now been put in operation , each of which will yield 75 to 100 barrels of lime per day . A. E. Royce has two kilns of the most modern type , with all the acces- sory equipment for a large production . W. Stanley Thurstin has ...
... kilns have now been put in operation , each of which will yield 75 to 100 barrels of lime per day . A. E. Royce has two kilns of the most modern type , with all the acces- sory equipment for a large production . W. Stanley Thurstin has ...
Page 165
... kilns , and 800,000 for the surplus , but the amount named for the kilns is far in excess of their use . Mr. McMahan has built two patent lime - kilns , with a capacity of 100 barrels each day . He burns the Niagara limestone , which he ...
... kilns , and 800,000 for the surplus , but the amount named for the kilns is far in excess of their use . Mr. McMahan has built two patent lime - kilns , with a capacity of 100 barrels each day . He burns the Niagara limestone , which he ...
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Common terms and phrases
already Alumina anticlinal Athens county barrels beds Berea grit Berea shale black shale bottom burned Carbonate of lime Carbonate of magnesia cement cent clay Clinton limestone composition Creek cubic feet Cuyahoga shale depth Devonian dolomite Drift drilled driller facts farm feet above tide feet below tide feet per day feet thick field Findlay follows formation furnished gas-rock gas-wells Helderberg Helderberg limestone horizon Hudson River inches kilns Lima lime located Lower Helderberg Macksburg magnesia manufacture measured Medina Meigs county miles Morgan county natural gas Niagara limestone northern Ohio obtained Ohio Geological Ohio Geological Survey Ohio shale oil and gas outcrops petroleum pipe Pitot tube Pomeroy pounds pressure production quantity quarries record reported rock roof coal salt salt-water sand sandstone slate soapstone stone strata stratum struck supply surface temperature tion town township Trenton limestone tube upper limestones Utica Utica shale Waterlime
Popular passages
Page 63 - With such sources ready formed in the earth's crust, it seems to me, to say the least, unphilosophical to search elsewhere for the origin of petroleum, and to suppose it to be derived by some unexplained process from rocks which are destitute of this substance.
Page 90 - ... had been bored in the synclines on either side furnished little or no gas, but in many cases large quantities of salt water. Further observation showed that the gas wells were confined to a narrow belt, only one.fourth to one mile wide, along the crests of the anticlinal folds. These facts seemed to connect gas territory unmistakably with the disturbance in the rocks caused by their upheaval into arches, but the crucial test was yet to be made in the actual location of good gas territory on this...
Page 90 - ... gas territory on this theory. During the last two years, I have submitted it to all manner of tests, both in locating and condemning gas territory, and the general result has been to confirm the anticlinal theory beyond a reasonable doubt.
Page 90 - In a theory of this kind, the limitations become quite as important as, or even more so than the theory itself ; and hence I have given considerable thought to this side of the question, having formulated them into three or four general rules (which include practically all the limitations known to me, up to the present time, that should be placed on the statement that large...
Page 90 - Probably very few or none of the grand arches along the mountain ranges will be found holding gas in large quantity, since in such cases the disturbance of the stratification has been so profound that all the natural gas generated in the past would long ago have escaped into the air through fissures that traverse all the beds. (d) Another limitation might possibly be added, which would confine the areas where great gas flows may be obtained to those underlain by a considerable thickness of bituminous...
Page 96 - In other words, the term rock-pressure is considered to be descriptive of a cause as well as of a fact. That a column of rock, 1,000 or 1,500 feet deep, has great weight, is obvious. It is assumed that this weight, whatever it is, is available in driving accumulations of gas out of rocks that contain them, whenever communication is opened between the deeplyburied reservoir and the surface.
Page 96 - Solid or liquid materials in the reservoir are supposed to be converted into gas as water is converted into steam. The resulting gas occupies many times more space than the bodies from which it was derived, and in seeking to obtain the space demanded by the change through which it has passed, it exerts the pressure which we note.
Page 66 - Huron shale from New York to Tennessee. The rock itself is frequently found saturated with petroleum, and the overlying strata, if porous, are sure to be more or less impregnated with it. "Third. The wells on Oil Creek penetrate the strata immediately overlying the Huron shale, and the oil is obtained from the fissured and porous sheets of sandstone of the Portage and Chemung groups, which lie just above the Huron, and offer convenient reservoirs for the oil it furnishes.
Page 80 - A large percentage of natural gas is light carburetted hydrogen, one of the simplest and most stable products of decomposition. Petroleum readily gives rise to marsh gas when subjected to destructive agencies, but we have no known experience in which the higher compound results from synthesis of the lower. It seems, therefore, safe to count petroleum first in the order of nature.
Page 71 - ... by the facts that our experience affords. Any other way of reaching an answer is assumption, pure and simple. "In the third place, this theory would seem to necessitate a coke or carbonized residue in the rocks which give rise to the petroleum. Inability to point out such a residue seems to have been one of the reasons that led our author to locate the source of the oil-distilling heat at such great depth. He counts a carbon residue a necessity, but he buries the rock from which the petroleum...