Journal of the Japanese Association for Petroleum Technology
Online ISSN : 1881-4131
Print ISSN : 0370-9868
ISSN-L : 0370-9868
Volume 26, Issue 1
Displaying 1-6 of 6 articles from this issue
  • Studies on the Resource-Rocks of Petroleum-6th report
    Masahiro ARE
    1961 Volume 26 Issue 1 Pages 1-8
    Published: January 30, 1961
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Concerning petroleum formation, the writer has made petrrological, sedimentological and geochemical studies On the organic substances contained in the Neogeize sediments developed in and around the region of the barkbone ranges between Akita and Iwate Prefectures, namely, from Masuda Town inrlkita Prefecture to the northwest of lchinoseki City in lwate Prefectare.
    The extractable organic eonstituents of the black mudstone_??_siltstone and partly tuffaceous and sandymudstones were determined and some discussions Were given On the relation between the distributions Of the extracted hydrocarhons and the litholoaic, sedimentologic and petrologic features.
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  • Satoshi JUGE
    1961 Volume 26 Issue 1 Pages 9-19
    Published: January 30, 1961
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The writer has been studying on clay mineral composition of some of the tertiary sedimentary rocks in Northeast Honshu, Japan, for the purpose of organization of new method to be useful for petroleum exploration based on mineralogy and sedimentology. Fundermental problems and experiments to determine standard conditions of pre-treatment and X-ray diffraction measurement, are described and some of the results of analysis is considered.
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  • Sadajiro TSUCHIDA
    1961 Volume 26 Issue 1 Pages 20-28
    Published: January 30, 1961
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The middle part of Ishikari Plane (or Sapporo Lowland) is situated in Lat. 40°00'-43°25' N. and Long. 141°12'-141°53' E. In this plane, there are the Neogene Tertiary formations which are overlaid with the Quaternary formations of about 100m in thick.
    1. The Neogene Tertiary formations cropping out in the surrounding mountains district are overlaid with unconformity on the Paleogene coal-bearing formations, the Cretaceous System, and so-called “Pale-ozoic” formations.
    2. In the Neogene formations of this plane, according to the stage of depositon, there are marked variations in the density of deposits and distribution of fossils. There is no remarkable unconformity, however, in the Neogene Tertiary formations and each formation distributes in all the area, but the thickness of formations is changeable and most thick between the Nopporo Hill and Umaoi Hill.
    3. On the land surface or near the surface of this plane, igneous rocks have not been discovered and will not be discovered in future.
    4. The Neogene formations have folded structures with axes of approximately north-south direction and they are thought to have been resulted from upheavals of the Hokkaido Backbone Mountain Lands or Hidaka Mts.
    5. While the synclinal parts of folding structures are large and broad, their anticlinal parts make steep dip wings and narrow forms. Anticlinal parts are assymmetrical forms and thir axial planes are inclined to west ; that is, they show the nature of “west steep-east slow.”
    6. The axial planes of anticlinal structures in the eastern area are extreamly dipping. The angle of dip is smaller in the western area and it takes almost the similar shape of symmetrical anticline structure in the Ishikari coastal region. On the contrary, in the northern mountainous districts of the plane, the axial planes are inclined to east and the anticlinal structures show “east steep-west slow” character. In these mountain regions where crops out of basement complex as Kobato Paleozoic sediments, folding waves are pushed back for eastern side against the lateral forces caused by the upheaval of backbone mountains. Consequently, these folding waves advanced towards the Neogene basin axis (10) (Tomakomai-Takikawa Line) from both sides of east and west mountains (Fig. 12).
    7. In the plane, each anticline structure is continuous without faults or echelon arrangement, and there are some upheavals making dome-like structures. On the contaary, however, there are some sinking areas making structural depressions along the synclinal axes. These depressons are distributed at regular intervals, and the distribution of the recent rivers are related to these depressions.
    8. The meander zones of rivers distribute centering around Masarikappu near Ishikari Coast elliptically and radially. This distribution shows that the southern mountains slow upheave contrary to the northern mountains (Kobato Mts.).
    9. Accordingly, it is revealed that each basement complex (pre-Neogene) of mountains in the northern, southern, and eastern parts of the plane belongs to different geologic structural unit. It is thought that these three blocks made different block movements and these geological movements produced effects on the Neogene Tertiary structure in this plane.
    The above are interpreted as follow.
    (1) Southern mountains to which the Ezo-Fuji Volcanics belong are a range from the Central Mountains in North-East Japan where is the Nasu Volcanic Zone.
    (2) The eastern mountain range is not connected with the land of North-East Japan.
    (3) The Abukuma and Kitagami ranges in North-East Japan belong to tne same mountain series with Kobato range in the north of Sapporo Lowland.
    (4) There are geological structure lines between Sapporo Lowland and mountainous districts.
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  • Sen'ichi MATSUMOTO, Masami IGARASHI
    1961 Volume 26 Issue 1 Pages 29-36
    Published: January 30, 1961
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Hiroshi SHIBAMIYA
    1961 Volume 26 Issue 1 Pages 37-44
    Published: January 30, 1961
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The factor connected most closely with the effect of fracturing is the permeability of fracture made in oil reoervoir by fracturing. In this treatise, therefore, I showed the effect of fracturing in numerical value, based on the permeability of the fracturing sand. Of course, the real condition of oil reservoir is very complex and the flowing condition of oil in oil reservoir is very complicated. Under such real conditions, it is impossible to indicate the effect of fracturing mathematically. So I computed the effect of fracturing on the assumption that the oil reservoir condition and the flowing condition in oil reservoir are simplified. Consequently, we cannot believe that these figures gained on such supposition would exactly coincide with experimental results. But they must he excellent guides to know some tendency of the effect of fracturing.
    According to the result of this reseach, fracturing has increased producing capacities of deep wells in Yabase oil field to some three times as much as before, and the effect has been greater where wells were affected with mud invasion. It is to be desired that the permeability of the fracturing sand is more than 100 darcy, and using large grains of sand at the end of the fracturing is not so effective. What should be avoided most is the ill effect of overfiush. In some case, calculation showed that overflush reduced more than 50 per cent of the effect of fracturing.
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  • 1961 Volume 26 Issue 1 Pages 50
    Published: 1961
    Released on J-STAGE: December 25, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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