| OGSR Wireline By OGSR Library July 2018 |
Hi ,
Welcome to the third quarterly edition of OGSR Wireline 2018.
This edition is our favourite newsletter of the year, because it includes feature articles from all our summer staff (there are quite a few of them this year!). Projects and production updates paired with insights and reflections, almost as good a pairing as will be seen at our annual Industry BBQ (July 25th).
Let us know if you have any requests for future articles, and in the meantime,
Have you mapped today?
OGSR Library Team Jordan, Liz, Matt, Craig, Bayden, Evan, Ben, Shuo, Rhys, Sama & Hanna |
How Did Oil and Gas Producers Fare in
2017?
Final numbers are in!
|
OGSR Library Media Update
by Matt
|
GIS at the Library - 800 Days Later
|
Monthly Drilling Report - June 2018 by OGSR Library Team |
Summer Update: Production and Productivity
By Jordan
Welcome to the summer 2018 edition of our OGSR Library newsletter. It’s been a hot one so far in Ontario and our large summer crew has been really sizzling with all new data sets and projects for us to update you on.
First and foremost, tabulation of 2017 production numbers has concluded; production of oil was 54,463 m^4 (342,562 bbl), production of gas was 144,665 10^3m^3 (5.1 BCF). These numbers represent a reduction of only about five percent each; oil was down 4.27% from the previous year with a 2,430 m^3 (15,284 bbl) reduction and gas was down 5.9% with a 9,111 10^3m^3 (0.3 BCF)
reduction.
Staff are busy creating and updating new data sets to help all our industry members. A new open file containing tabular data from all core analyses done on Ontario petroleum wells is now available to members in MS Excel format. Over 30,000 rows of porosity and permeability data have been captured. Two new open file reports
on deepest fresh water and base of sulphur water will be released soon. New historic scans, cavern storage databases, statistical updates, GIS data sets, updated well file scans, and improved well file data entry are in the works. And our Pools and Pipelines map 2018 edition has just been released! After more than two years the Library is
sad to say goodbye to our GIS technician Liz Sutherland but we congratulate her on her new position at the Western University Map Library. Best of luck Liz! GIS services will still be available at the Library from our other talented GIS associates. Don’t miss your chance to get more updates and a delicious lunch soon at our industry
appreciation BBQ, we hope to see you all at the Library at noon on July 25th! Media Update
By
Matt
The OGSR Library has stepped up its game lately with lots of video content. We’ve been making training videos for new employees, documenting events and field trips, creating content for the EPEX
conference, and have even had some old film transferred to digital so that it can actually be seen. Our goal with this initiative is to document our activities to educate, promote, and engage with our members and the wider community. The following is a short recap of some of these efforts and what you can look forward to seeing soon.
In our last quarterly edition in April, I talked about Super
8 film from the 1980s that we were having transferred to a digital format. This is footage of various drilling rigs on Lake Erie from 1984. I’m pleased to report that this has been completed. Those who attended EPEX 2018 had a chance to see a three minute demo of the footage that I edited together with music produced by our very own Ben Somers. Ben did a great job making a track full of synth riffs that scream 1980s, which can be seen in his article below. The presentation was well
received, a few excited conference attendees even recognized some of the workers in the film. There’s about 45 minutes total of footage and we hope to show off more of it soon as it provides a great window to the past. A big thanks to Frame Discreet in Toronto for transferring the footage and doing a beautiful job. Other content created for the EPEX conference included a compilation of short interview clips of people in the industry and their thoughts on how the industry can grow. This was a fun little video set to some really nice background music by Ben, and many of the responses focused on collaboration, the main theme of the conference. It will be great to look back on this video in the near future to see how things have developed. I also got to learn a new skill by creating
some animations using Adobe After Effects for Ian Colquhoun’s presentation on the different play types in Ontario. These animations display, in a basic way, how the plays are created and could be quite useful for educational purposes. Finally, there was the countdown video made to get everyone back to their seats. People really seemed to like this one. It’s a real mishmash of clips from our archive with a timer, set to a ridiculously catchy beat, again by Ben Somers. The clips used range from a
1938 event to more recent clips, offering at great contrast between the past and present.
There were many great talks at this year’s EPEX conference and we’ve got the video to prove it. I’m in the process of editing the presentations together with their slides and audio recorded off of the soundboard. The results are very high quality and we’re very excited to be able to offer these presentations as
educational tools. These presentations highlight the value of OPI’s annual conference and will show how important it is to attend. Some of the details on how we’ll be making these videos available are still in the works so stay tuned.
We’ve also been documenting our field trips this year with lots of great video. We’ve covered Oil Springs with footage of the Fairbank Oil Properties and the Oil Museum,
then on to Formosa Ontario for some fossil collecting from the Formosa reef, and Sulfur Springs. We hope to fit a few more trips in while our summer students are with us. Ontario has so many great locations for learning about our geology and it’s impossible to visit them all every year. These videos will help us decide where to go each year and allow students to see the places we aren’t able to make it to. You’ll be able to find some of these videos on our YouTube page by the end of the summer.
Perhaps they will inspire some of our readers to visit some of these great locations too.
Visit the OGSR Library YouTube page, to check out some of the videos mentioned. We’re always looking for creative ways to show off what we do here at the Library.
Give us a ‘Like’ and a comment and stay tuned for more updates.
Ben Somers Computer Programming Analyst Program Data Entry Clerk For those of you that don’t remember me from our April quarterly, my name is Ben Somers and I am one of the summer students. I recently graduated from high school and have begun working at the OGSR Library full time. However, I have been working here since
February as a half day, co-op education student. In the fall, I will be going to Fanshawe to take the Computer Programming Analyst program.
I was initially hired as a data entry clerk and was assigned to work on the permeability database project. This was a long and hard project to complete, but with a lot of focus, dedication, and the help of a hard-working team, we managed to finish the data
entry for this extensive database. The completion of this project meant I had an opportunity to take on a new task.
The EPEX conference was coming up soon and we needed music to go along with the videos that our Media & Information Technician Matt was making. Because of my background in music producing, Jordan chose me to make the music for the conference. It was my job to
produce three tracks. The first song was supposed to be an intro song to the conference to grab everyone's attention. The next track was a loungey sounding track to go along with a series of small interviews. The last track was supposed to sound like a very upbeat 80's song. I used a software called FL Studios to produce all of this music. Every morning I would wake up excited to go to work because I was given the opportunity to do something I love for my job. When the conference came around and
my music came on with the videos Matt made, and played for a conference room full of people, I felt a way that I will never forget. I had never had that many people listen to my music before, and I couldn’t believe it. I am extremely grateful to my manager Jordan for making this possible.
We encourage you to preview the tracks used at the conference through this free download: EPEX Soundtrack
Produced by Ben Somers
Alongside all of these projects, I have also completed a number of other tasks. For example, simple maintenance and
cleanup, pulling core, refiling well files, and photocopying. These tasks can be completed very quickly and aren’t really long term jobs, but they are still important to Library operations.
Now that I am working full time, I have been assigned another very time consuming project to devote the majority of my working time to. Put simply, what I am doing is going through boxes full of donated
well cards, finding the well for each card on our website, and writing the corresponding license number on the card. Each box has hundreds of well cards in them and it takes me about a minute to find the license for the well. The purpose of this project is to take these historic well cards and incorporate them into our digital archive so that members will be able to access this information online.
So far, it has been an absolute pleasure and a joy to work at the OGSR Library. I have learned a lot about the petroleum industry and many other things that we do here. Not to mention the wonderful and always kind staff that I get to work with on a daily basis. I am very excited to find out what the rest of the summer holds in store for me and the rest of the people working here. I am sure it will be just as great as it has been thus far. Salt Cavern Inventory Project Craig
I have been working at the OGSR Library since January 2018 after completing my MSc Geography degree in late 2017. Working at the Library has provided me with a bounty of entry-level experience and expanded my knowledge of geological resources available in Ontario. I have had the opportunity to work on projects such as the Well Status and Mode Database, Permeability Database and currently the Salt Cavern
Inventory Project. I have honed my database organization skills over these last few months and am now looking forward to improving my GIS skills associated with completing the Salt Cavern Inventory Project.
The OGSR Library has been preparing a database containing all storage cavern sonar reports in Ontario. The
database contains reports from over 170 wells with approximately 350 sonar reports ranging from 1970-2018. Storage cavern sonar reports are currently in the process of being examined for max radii plots with these plots being georeferenced and digitized using QGIS software. Max radii plots visualize the horizontal extent of the underground storage caverns. It is expected that a total of 300 max radii plots will be georeferenced and digitized upon completion of this project, including at least
one for each storage cavern.
Creating the database has involved coordinating with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry to identify any missing sonar reports from the OGSR Library collection, followed by scanning and photocopying numerous sonar reports to update the OGSR Library catalogue.
Georeferencing and Digitizing of Sonar Max Radii Plots To georeference the max radii plots, existing spatial data needed to be used to identify a series of ground control points (x, y coordinates) that link the image on the plot to a real-world location. The process of georeferencing was challenging because initially there was only one point to work with, using well
coordinates to line up with the centre of the sonar report max radii plot (Image 1). Georeferencing is more accurate with additional control points, however there were no other points to accurately use. To solve this problem a buffer was created around the central well point in QGIS. The size of the buffer was determined using the scale bar and bearing on the max radii plot. This scale bar allowed for radius of the concentric circles on the plot to be determined and the circle closest to the max
radii image was used to set the extent of the buffer. In this scenario a 40-meter buffer was created using the multi buffer tool in QGIS that most closely lines up with the sonar of the cavern edges (Image 2). Once the buffer was created it allowed for four additional control points at each of the cardinal directions (N, E, S, and W). The sonar scans could then be accurately georeferenced allowing for digitization of the max radii (Images 3 and 4). Currently approximately 10% of the sonars have
been completely georeferenced and digitized.
The sonar report data will be archived at the OGSR Library with the georeferencing and digitized data providing a comprehensive visualization of the extent of cavern storage wells in Ontario.
Top left - Max radii plot from sonar reports that was used for georeferencing. Top right - Additional control points were added for georeferencing after the creation of a 40m buffer.
Bottom left - A polygon shapefile was created for each cavern, outlining the extent and capturing attributes. Bottom right - Completed digitization of a storage cavern. GIS at the Library - 800 Days Later
by Liz
Two years ago I wrote my first quarterly article for
Wireline, 27 newsletters later I write my last. In that first quarterly I wrote that, “I chose to persue GIS the moment I recognized maps as tools, and I chose to study at Western the day I saw their Map and Data Library.” That is why the only job that I could have left the OGSR Library for is a GIS Specialist position at Western University’s Map & Data Centre. I would like to thank every Library
member, each newsletter subscriber, and all the students, colleagues and mentors for an unforgettable two years. When I look back on my 26 months with the Library, I notice consistencies, progressions and projections both in Library operations as well as Library management.
The Consistencies: The knowledge-base and expertise of Library staff is the backbone of operations and root of all successes. The people are the reason the Library continues to sustain its operations, the reason the Library continues to bring in contracts, the reason the Library’s digital archive is years beyond that of other provincial-level core labs. It is the leadership of our Manager, Jordan Clark, that drives
the Library staff to these new heights. Innovations in digitization, quality assurance and database management over the last few years means that more information is available remotely than ever before, and is being presented in new ways everyday.
For those who don’t know, the role of a GIS technician is to create customized GIS applications and manipulate data to serve a
variety of purposes. They read and interpret maps, manipulate and understand digital data, and manage data entered into a GIS database.
The GIS & Database Technician at the OGSR Library provides GIS support to all clients and staff. The technician oversees OGSR mapping projects, tasks and software, as well as the promotion and development of value-added products. The GIS
technician collaborates with the Manager on the GIS goals and vision for the OGSR Library. They also provide valuable insight and opinion to overall operations.
Geological exploration is spatial and the GIS position at the Library is an integral part of all operations and administration. Library data and Ontario geologic data in general would be nothing if not for its
spatial component, and having a person with a strong knowledge of spatial systems, maintenance and theory ensures we uphold the highest quality in our databases. Many of the requests from clients deal with producing maps and solving spatial problems. As well, nearly all special projects involve creating maps, producing spreadsheets or querying spatial databases. Without a full-time employee with strong GIS-problem-solving skills these requests would not be able to be completed, especially when
they are time-sensitive.
Every employee of the Library brings a unique skillset that, when combined with the talents of the team, create a support system for our client base.
The Progressions: The goals of the
Library in 2018 are to establish the Library as a Geoscience Research Centre, expand the scope and quality and to publish and promote data holdings. Over the last two years these initiatives have been at the forefront of operations as the Library brings in new contracts, prioritizes the QA/QC of existing databases and works with researchers to improve interpretations of southwestern Ontario geology. These results have been promoted nationally, as the Library presented for the first time at the
CSPG GeoConvention this past May. There have been 7 OGSR Library open file reports released in the last 3 years, with another 2 in press to be released in the next couple months. By continuing to develop value-added products and improve the Library’s existing databases increasingly innovative applications are becoming available to our membership.
The
Projections: The Library IS a powerhouse. I have seen more dedication, perseverance and loyalty within this team than I’ve seen anywhere else. The Library’s trajectory is onwards and outwards, towards new opportunities – all within the same goal to support the data systems built over the last 150 years. When I started at the Library there were only 2 other full time staff, our office now has 11 talented contract and summer students working on various projects and
tasks. And there’s already more projects in the works for next year!
GIS continues to be a crucial part of Library operations, and I hope to see our members continue to take advantage of these services in the years to come. GIS
products on their way this summer - Updated 2018 Pools & Pipelines Map - Members base data packages - Updated Salt thickness contours
- Scanned and georeferenced historic map collections An Inside Look OGSR Library's 2018 Summer Team
Hanna Rzyszczak Honours Specialization in Geology (BSc) Geology and Laboratory Assistant
Hitting Rock Bottom (the good way)
I entered university thinking I was going to be a biological researcher but realized that goal didn’t fulfill my happiness after my first year. I did hours upon hours of
research about potential career paths and what possible jobs were out there. I couldn’t find anything that sparked my interest until I stumbled upon Western University’s Earth Sciences department page. I looked into every course, syllabus, department research projects, and field course and instantly felt relief. I grew up playing outdoors, hiking, camping, collecting rocks and always was amazed about what Earth is made out of – so this was a perfect fit for me. I enrolled in a few introductory
geology courses and they absolutely rocked (pun intended). It wasn’t until my second year of geology, after taking a sedimentology and stratigraphy course, that I fully figured out my career goal: to work in the Oil and Gas industry.
In the sedimentology course we learned about various depositional environments, the resulting rock types, structures, and stratigraphy. In labs, we worked
with seismic profiles and correlated depositional environments to determine the depositional history of basins, rivers, and other geologic features. We ended off the semester by spending 3 weeks on an “Oil Game” where we were given gamma ray logs, maps, and wells to determine where to “drill” for oil. I really enjoyed every aspect of this course. During the semester, I attended a colloquium presentation and ran into Liz Sutherland, the OGSR Library’s GIS & Database Technician, where I
learned about the OGSR Library’s summer student job opening. I quickly went home, looked up the library and the job posting. I learned that they house all Ontario’s petroleum data, they have a core warehouse which stores cores and drill cuttings dating back to the late 1800s and have access to over 17,000 scanned geophysical logs. I also learned the library stores a lot of important maps for oil and gas prospecting as well as geological research for Southwestern Ontario – all georeferenced using
GIS softwares. I started to brush up on my geology, began some GIS tutorials, and fixed up my resume to apply. I felt like the library would be a perfect fit!
I was fortunate enough to become the Geology & Laboratory Assistant at the OGSR Library this summer. So far, it has been the most interesting job I’ve had. I was trained to become fully familiar with Ontario’s geology, how to pull
core for clients, how to wash and catalogue sample cuttings, and how to make formation top picks. I am currently working on a project with Shuo Sun, a recent PhD graduate, where we are refining the salt front interpretations made by B.V. Sanford (1972) and verifying quality assurance on picks along the salt edge lines in Ontario by examining wells using their sample cuttings and geophysical logs. I love rocks already enough as it is, so being able to stare at them 8 hours a day and make
interpretations has been a great learning experience. It is truly rewarding when I hit the bottom of a well and I am able to confidently QA it based on the knowledge and skills the OGSR has given me!
I am really glad to have joined such a welcoming and fun group of people at the OGSR Library. Even though there may be only a few of us, that doesn’t stop us from having fun and exploring the
industry. We do this through special fun Friday training presentations, meetings, and field trips. We had a great time visiting Oil Springs, Formosa Reef, and have a few more trips planned before the summer is over! One of the highlights of my summer has been the Energy Prospectors Expo (EPEX) where I was able to meet people from the industry and learn more about the future plans for oil and gas in Ontario. I can’t wait to apply all the skills and geological knowledge the OGSR Library has given
me when I enter the real world and embark on my journey of being a professional geologist.
Rhys Paterson Honours Environmental Geoscience, Minor in Sustainability (HBSc) GIS and Database Assistant Finding out about the OGSR Library was in a way, meant to be. As my last year presented difficulty with picking courses, I sought an undergraduate thesis with a professor who had just transferred from the University of
Western Ontario to Brock University. After much discussion we agreed upon a topic, and a place to meet to collect samples in the later months, I made the 2-hour drive from St. Catharines to London to come to the Library, and I knew I wanted to be a part of the Library as soon as I walked through the door. Walking into the library showed just how little I knew about Ontario’s oil and gas industry,
as well as the vastness of Paleozoic Geology in Southern Ontario. My university’s courses touch on the Michigan Basin, Algonquin Arch, and other sedimentary strata, but no mention of the oil, gas and salt. There is so much focus on Western Canada and the Oil Sands, but Ontario is important too! Though we might be small, we are very mighty!
Going from a client to an employee showed me just how much work
and organization it takes to run the Library. As a client, Maia would be running to the core warehouse to find the elusive Queenston Formation, whereas now, I’m the one organizing core for clients! The database and servers that hold the Library’s valuable information are all organized and maintained, and by adding my own documents and data I take great pride in having some influence on future employees and clients.
Even though my background is Environmental Geoscience, I am currently completing GIS tasks. University courses teach you one thing, but until you are thrown into new experiences you don’t realize how much they neglect to teach you. Every day has been a new experience from thinking outside the box to get QGIS to clip a layer effectively, to navigating the many steps it takes to start ArcGIS effectively.
The annual summer field trips supplement our data crunching and map making. Going to see the Fairbank Oil property, the location of the first commercial oil well in North America, provided valuable context to the Library and Archives Canada Project we’ve been granted. Working closely with other Ministries shows how much goes on behind the scenes to create open-source data for public use. Industry professionals are constantly coming in to ask about core,
base layers, and edits to those base layers. This experience has been so rewarding, with many new experiences under my belt to advance my learning and career.
This contract position has given me confidence that there are still jobs in the oil industry, as well as the environmental sector, and solidifies my choice in degree and career. The many projects and jobs during this summer have shown me
that everyone plays an integral part in the industry, and that you never know what experience will take you somewhere. I’m excited to see where the Library will take me next!
Sama Rahimian Honours Specialization in Computer Science (BSc) Information
Systems Assistant Geopotato is not the only hot potato that the OGSR Library cares about. Just as important to the Library are data quality and privacy; two of the hottest topics these
days. The staff works hard to create and maintain high quality data, using both manual and automated quality assurance checks throughout the process, as well as staying up-to-date on new regulations, local and global, regarding data protection such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) recently implemented by the European Union in late May.
As the first Information System
Assistant at the Library, I have had the pleasure of leading a presentation on security and helping out with writing small, automated software for checking data integrity. The latter is a bit more challenging because I come from a computer science background and lack the concrete understanding of geology or geography, not to mention the guidelines and practices of the oil and gas sector (although I have friends who mix the two disciplines). Having supportive co-workers, who are knowledgeable and
well versed in the geosciences and resources industry is helpful in ensuring that I’m on the right track when creating the programs. The annual summer field trips to geologic outcrops and historic petroleum sites that the summer team participates in are also informative and help reinforce much of what I have been learning at the Library, besides also being a great way to build our team environment.
A web portal for presenting the soon-to-be digitized Brittain Archives is the main project I am working on that allows me to combine my expertise with what I have learned during my time at the Library. The web portal is organic in its development, growing as the project team consults and collaborates, with user interface & design, functionality, and privacy being kept in mind. It will allow users the flexibility to peruse the collection of digital documents and maps
at their leisure or search for specific, pertinent information. After I have finished the website, I hope to be able to look into data science and machine learning projects that can be done with the information stored here at the Library. Working here is both a wonderful and rewarding experience where I am
able to learn and expand my understanding in regards to the geosciences and Ontario’s oil, gas and salt industries (I did not know we had one!). It is a privilege to be able to work with such an enthusiastic, hard-working and diverse group of colleagues in a caring and friendly environment, all of whom are dedicated to establishing the OGSR Library within the vanguard of geoscience research centers.
The Returners Bayden & Evan
Bayden Hodgins Pre-Health Sciences Pathway to Advanced Diplomas and Degrees Data Entry Clerk This is my third summer as a summer student at the library. For the past two summers I had been working on the Core Photography project as highlighted in previous quarterly articles, but during this summer at the library I will be working on digitizing
the Brittain-Archive. This consists of scanning and cataloging thousands of; heritage documents that were donated by Charlie Fairbank. All of the records have to be scanned before being edited, to ensure the clarity and quality of the output image. So updating the guidelines and outlining the steps used ensures continuity between collections. This collection of records also has maps which are too large to be scanned by a standard scanner. To solve this, the Library recently purchased a new
plotter/scanner so that the maps could be scanned all at once and not have to be stitched together. The Library has also been able to hire a Contract Librarian/Archivist through the project funding who will be in helping to catalog, organize and summarize this collection.
My goals this summer is to have all the scanning of the files and records complete as well as to learn more about
geology through the field trips that we will be going on. For the past few years of my schooling I have been preparing to become a med student at Fanshawe, which I will be taking Pre-Health. After my one year of Pre-Health I will hopefully be Transferring over to Western where I will be taking my major in Radiology!
My Previous Articles can be found at- http://archive.aweber.com/awlist4125523/HibzK/h/OGSR_Wireline_July_2016.htm http://archive.aweber.com/awlist4125523/7LXv4/h/OGSR_Wireline_July_2017.htm
Evan
Fortner Future Western Engineering Student Data Entry Clerk This year marks my third summer returning to the OGSR library. Throughout the past two summers I have found this job not only to be incredibly diverse and challenging but also exciting and enjoyable. This summer will certainly be no exception, as in my first week back at the library I have already participated in a variety of operations. This
first week consisted of the organization and washing of samples, as well as the production of a tutorial style video in order to prepare future employees to wash samples according to the correct procedures. Sample washing has proved to be a very interesting and engaging task, one which I hope I can continue with here at the library. As well as this video I also participated in the OGSR Library's social media campaign.
Insert handles here:
Additionally, I helped wrap-up the core analysis digitization that I helped with over March Break. This database will be a useful addition to the Library data suite as it summarizes important information regarding the porosity and permeability of
drill cores. Finally, this week concluded with an industry BBQ a perfect way to end the week in good company. During the past three years I certainly have learned a lot about the oil industry, which I think will be valuable in my future as I would like to be involved in the industry some day. This September I will be attending Western University for Engineering, hopefully specializing in chemical engineering.
|
June 2017
New Licences Issued
NIL
New Well TDs Licenses Issued for Existing Wells
NIL
Wells Plugged
Licence No. | Plug Date | Operator | County | Township | Status | TD (m) | T002953 | 06/04/2018 | Enbridge Gas Distribution Inc. | Lambton | Moore | NGS/ABD | 692.5 |
| T003021 | 06/13/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 509.02 |
| T003022 | 06/09/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas
Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 510.54 |
| T003222 | 06/14/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 505.97 |
| T003414 | 06/03/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 534.92 |
| T003611 | 06/06/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 542.54 |
| T003870 | 06/20/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas
Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 483.72 |
| T003889 | 06/27/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 529.13 |
| T003891 | 06/28/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 525.17 |
| T004453 | 05/19/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 598.93 |
| T004957 | 06/02/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas
Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 584.4 |
| T005690 | 06/08/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 518 |
| T006470 | 06/16/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 488 |
| T007016 | 06/07/2018 | Enbridge Gas Distribution Inc. | Lambton | Moore | NGS/ABD | 675.7 |
| T011213 | 06/18/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas
Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GP/ABD | 522 |
| T011467 | 06/26/2018 | Dundee Oil and Gas Limited | Norfolk | Lake Erie | GS/ABD | 546 |
| T012544 | 05/21/2018 | McKeen, Laird | Haldimand | Walpole | GP/ABD |
|
|
|
If you are having trouble viewing this newsletter, it can be viewed here.
What is the OGSR Library?
The Oil, Gas & Salt Resources Library is a not-for-profit corporation that manages all of Ontario's public drilling and production data from the petroleum and solution mined salt industries. This includes processing, storing, and providing safe and convenient access
to all of the industry's drill core and rock cuttings. The Library makes as much of this data as possible available through our online portal to members all over the world. The financial support of the petroleum industry and our membership make this possible.
|
Follow:
|
|
|
|
|