HOW IS OIL DISCOVERED?

Although prospect (test) drilling is still the only way to prove the presence or absence of commercial quantities of oil beneath the surface, careful study by a geologist of all available information may indicate the most favorable places for testing. Since oil and gas migrate to the highest parts of the porous rock zones, the geologist tries to find these high places even though they may be several hundred feet underground. Sometimes dipping rocks can be seen in outcrops, and several geophysical methods have been used to indicate where such high places may occur underground. At other times, high places are found by studying with a microscope samples of rocks collected from wells already drilled in the surrounding area. The geologist notes the type and order of the formations which have been drilled. Many holes have been drilled based on such information.

Whether or not the test drilling is successful as a producing well, small samples of cuttings of the rock being drilled are collected and saved to be studied at a later time. Various instruments are also put down into the hole to record temperatures, pressures, electrical properties, and other characteristics of the rocks. This type of information, when carefully plotted on maps, serves to locate new areas for test drilling.