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Read Ebook: Inside Illinois: Mineral Resources by Illinois State Geological Survey

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ARE THERE LAKES OR RIVERS OF OIL UNDERGROUND?

No. Oil and gas accumulate in the pores between silt and sand grains and in small openings in limestone and dolomite.

EXPLANATION Glacial drift Dolomite Shale Gas saturated zone Sandstone Oil saturated zone Limestone Water saturated zone

HOW IS OIL DISCOVERED?

Although prospect 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.

HOW MUCH OIL CAN BE OBTAINED FROM AN OIL POOL?

There is no way to tell before a hole is drilled whether or not oil will be found, how much oil is present, or what will be the best way to get it to the surface. Where subsurface pressures are great enough, oil may flow to the surface.

Generally speaking, about one-third of the oil actually present in the rocks can be pumped before the well becomes uneconomical to operate. This is called primary production. Oil operators have learned that by pumping water or gas down some wells into the oil-bearing formation, another third of the oil may be forced out through neighboring wells. This is called secondary production. Experiments that use steam or that burn some of the oil underground in an oil-bearing formation are attempts to recover the remaining third. These methods using heat are often referred to as tertiary production methods.

WHAT IS THE "BIGGEST" OIL WELL ON RECORD IN ILLINOIS?

Illinois' largest well, near Centralia, flowed 12,000 barrels of oil in a 24-hour period. Most Illinois oil wells, however, have to be pumped, and the majority of them are now producing 10 barrels or less a day. The deepest producing well, 5,354 feet, was drilled in 1960 in Wayne County, near Fairfield. In the same year the deepest oil test was drilled to a depth of 8,616 feet and was stopped in granite. This test is located in Fayette County near Beecher City and has its oil production from a zone over 4,000 feet above the bottom of the hole.

HOW MUCH OIL IS PRODUCED IN ILLINOIS AND HOW VALUABLE IS IT?

In 1963, about 75 million barrels of oil, 2.7 percent of the nation's total, were produced in Illinois . This oil is valued at over 1,000,000.

IS OIL PRODUCTION INCREASING OR DECREASING IN ILLINOIS?

In 1940, our state had its highest yield of oil when 147,647,000 barrels were produced. Although production figures remained fairly high for some time, they have declined in the past few years. Since no new large oil discoveries have been made recently, Illinois' total known oil reserves are decreasing yearly. In 1963, Illinois ranked eighth among the oil-producing states, with 420 oil fields consisting of 30,149 wells.

COAL

WHAT IS COAL AND HOW IS IT FORMED?

Coal is a combustible rock that was formed by the accumulation and partial decay of vegetation. When coal was forming millions of years ago, most of the state was a low coastal plain bordered on the west and southwest by a shallow sea. A large variety of plants grew in great swamps which covered this coastal plain . When the plants died, they accumulated in the swamps to form thick masses of peat that were eventually covered by shallow seas and buried beneath mud and sand. Periodically, the region was above sea level, new swamps developed, new peat deposits accumulated, and more sediments were laid down. This process occurred repeatedly until over 3,000 feet of sediments had been deposited. Then the sediments were slowly compacted and hardened so that sandstones, shales, limestones, and coals were formed.

Counties producing oil in January 1965 Total Production 2,464,758,000 barrels 46 counties producing

HOW DO WE KNOW THAT COAL WAS DERIVED FROM PLANT MATERIALS?

Although plant impressions or fossilized wood can be seen in coal, they are more common in shales and sandstones associated with the coal. Often roots can be seen in the clay that lies just under the coal, and in some places stumps of trees from the coal swamp forest are preserved in the sediments adjacent to the coal . When pieces of coal are examined with a microscope, carbonized plant remains can be seen.

HOW MANY COAL SEAMS ARE PRESENT IN ILLINOIS?

There are at least 40 different coal seams in Illinois, but most are relatively thin. Seven coal seams have been mined extensively, and all together 20 or more have been mined.

HOW IS ILLINOIS COAL MINED?

In Illinois there are two main ways of mining coal: strip and underground. Strip or open-cut mines usually operate where the coal is at very shallow depths, although such mining is done as much as 100 feet deep or more in some places. Many old underground mines produced coal from seams that were less than 100 feet deep because they did not have the large machinery for strip mining when these mines were started. An abandoned mine, 1,004 feet deep, near Assumption is the deepest underground coal mine in the state. Coal is now being mined at depths somewhat over 800 feet in Jefferson County.

HOW DOES ILLINOIS RANK AS A COAL PRODUCER?

Illinois ranks fourth in production of coal in the United States. It is exceeded only by West Virginia, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania. Some of the largest and most efficient mines in the country are operated in Illinois. Underground mines in Illinois have the highest rate of tons mined per man each day in the country, and this rate is increasing. Increased mining efficiency has made it possible to hold the price of coal low enough so that it can successfully compete against other fuels for many uses.

HOW MUCH COAL IS PRODUCED IN ILLINOIS ANNUALLY AND HOW VALUABLE IS IT?

In the last 10 years, an average of about 46 million tons of coal has been mined each year . In 1963, approximately 51.6 million tons were produced, which were valued at about 6,000,000 at the mine. Since 1961, strip mines have produced over half of the coal mined in Illinois.

HOW LONG WILL OUR COAL SUPPLIES LAST?

It will take well over 1,000 years at the present rate of mining in Illinois to exhaust our coal reserves. An estimated 140 billion tons of coal in seams of minable thickness remain in the ground in our state; these are the largest known reserves of bituminous coal of any state in the United States.

WHAT IS COAL USED FOR?

Electric power generation consumes the greater part of the annual coal production in Illinois. Coal is also used for home and commercial heating, for production of coke, and for manufacturing various chemical compounds from coal tar. Products derived from coal tar include drugs and medicines, plastics, synthetic fibres, perfumes, flavorings, dyes, synthetic rubbers, explosives, specialized oils, solvents, wood preservatives, tarlike paving and roofing materials, and some gas. The gas is both produced and utilized in the coke industry.

WHAT IS COKE?

Coke is a material produced by burning coal in the absence of air so that most of the gases and water are driven off without consuming the solid portion. The resulting solid coke is a strong, porous, combustible substance.

HOW IMPORTANT IS COKE AND HOW IS IT USED?

The structure and nature of coke make it a valuable fuel for blast furnace use in the production of steel. In the past, most of the coal used in the manufacture of coke has come from areas of higher quality coal outside of our state. However, at present, over 1,000,000 tons of Illinois coal are mined annually for the production of metallurgical coke.

Area underlain by coal-bearing rocks Counties producing coal in January 1965 Total Production 3,749,423,534 tons 71 counties producing

STONE AND STONE PRODUCTS

WHAT TYPES OF STONE ARE PRODUCED IN ILLINOIS?

Limestone and dolomite are the most abundant rocks quarried in Illinois. Small amounts of marble, limestone, and sandstone for building stone are also produced. In addition, some glacial boulders and cobbles are used for rock gardens and in home construction. The crushed limestone industry is Illinois' most important rock products industry.

WHAT ARE LIMESTONE AND DOLOMITE?

Limestone is a sedimentary rock that consists chiefly of calcite, which is composed of calcium, carbon, and oxygen. Dolomite is a variety of limestone that contains considerable magnesium in addition to the other elements. Limestones were deposited on the floors of ancient seas that repeatedly covered most parts of Illinois. Shelled creatures, corals, and coral reefs helped build up the thick limestone deposits .

WHERE ARE LIMESTONE AND DOLOMITE QUARRIES LOCATED IN ILLINOIS?

Limestone and dolomite quarries are located along the southern, western, and northern margins of the state where the thick deposits of these rocks crop out at the surface. Although bedrock was deposited in horizontal layers, it has since been downfolded into the Illinois Basin whose center is in southeastern Illinois. Thus, the thick limestones and dolomites that are quarried along the margins of the state are too deeply buried to be quarried in the central part of this basin .

ARE ANY STONE QUARRIES LOCATED IN THE AREA UNDERLAIN BY THE ILLINOIS BASIN?

Yes. In the area underlain by the basin, stone quarries are operated in younger, thinner rock strata of Pennsylvanian age. These strata also overlie the thick limestones and dolomites quarried along the margins of the state. The quarries located within the basin area produce stone for agricultural limestone, roads, and other purposes.

HOW AND WHERE ARE LIMESTONE AND DOLOMITE USED?

Millions of tons of stone are crushed annually to produce aggregate for use in making concrete roads and buildings, for road surfacing, and for agricultural limestone. Agstone is applied to farmlands to neutralize soil acidity, improve soil structure, add calcium and magnesium, and promote conditions favorable for the utilization of soil materials by plants. Large quantities of limestone are used in making lime and cement. There are three cement plants in northern Illinois--two at LaSalle and one at Dixon--and one in southern Illinois, at Joppa.

Small amounts of stone are used for making alkalies and glass, for railroad ballast, for building stone, for dusting coal mines to prevent coal dust explosions, and for ingredients in mineral feeds for livestock.

HOW MUCH STONE DOES ILLINOIS PRODUCE?

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