About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 84. Chapters: Oil wells, List of oil field acronyms, Hydraulic fracturing, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, Blowout preventer, Wireline, Completion, Core sample, Drill string, Artificial lift, Coiled tubing, Subsea, Christmas tree, Well control, Well kill, THUMS Islands, Archie's law, Submersible pump, Casing, Snubbing, Welltec, Downhole safety valve, Schlumberger brothers, Well stimulation, Formation evaluation neutron porosity, Cameron ram-type blowout preventer, Gamma ray logging, Well intervention, Production packer, Wellhead, Workover, Spontaneous potential logging, MAASP, Well integrity, Well services, Pumping, Annulus, Carbon dioxide flooding, Density logging, Resistivity logging, Top kill, Drilling fluid invasion, Exploration Logging Company, Cement bond log, Sliding sleeve, Thorla-McKee Well, Production tubing, Brigham Young Oil Well, Caliper log, Mudrock line, Log ASCII Standard, Sonic logging, Coiled tubing umbilical, Soviet nuclear well collapses, Relief well, Tubing hanger, Franek, Cyberbase. Excerpt: The Oil and Gas industry uses many acronyms and abbreviations. Obviously, this list is not anywhere near exhaustive or definitive. It is an amalgam of user contributions. It is contextual and is meant for indicative purposes only. It should not be relied upon for anything but general information. Hydraulic fracturing, often called fracking, fracing or hydrofracking, is the process of initiating and subsequently propagating a fracture in a rock layer, employing the pressure of a fluid as the source of energy. The fracturing, known as a frack job (or frac job), is done from a wellbore drilled into reservoir rock formations, in order to increase the extraction rates and ultimate recovery of oil and natural gas. Hydraulic fractures may be natural or man-made and are extended by internal fl...