Abstract
The Nagylengyel oil field, discovered in 1951, has oil-producing formations mostly in the Upper-Triassic dolomites, in the Norian-Ractian transition formations, in the Upper-Cretaceous limestones and shales, and in the Miocene. The formation of the reservoir space occurred in many stages. A porous, cavernous fractured reservoir is developed in the Norian principal dolomite. A cavernous fractured reservoir exists in the Cretaceous limestone and in the Cretaceous shale and porous fractured reservoir is developed in the Miocene. The derivation of the model of the reservoir, and the conservative evaluation of the volume of the reservoir made it possible to use secondary recovery.
Citation Formats
Dedinszky, J.
Nagylengyel: an interesting reservoir. [Yugoslovia].
Yugoslavia: N. p.,
1971.
Web.
Dedinszky, J.
Nagylengyel: an interesting reservoir. [Yugoslovia].
Yugoslavia.
Dedinszky, J.
1971.
"Nagylengyel: an interesting reservoir. [Yugoslovia]."
Yugoslavia.
@misc{etde_5708160,
title = {Nagylengyel: an interesting reservoir. [Yugoslovia]}
author = {Dedinszky, J}
abstractNote = {The Nagylengyel oil field, discovered in 1951, has oil-producing formations mostly in the Upper-Triassic dolomites, in the Norian-Ractian transition formations, in the Upper-Cretaceous limestones and shales, and in the Miocene. The formation of the reservoir space occurred in many stages. A porous, cavernous fractured reservoir is developed in the Norian principal dolomite. A cavernous fractured reservoir exists in the Cretaceous limestone and in the Cretaceous shale and porous fractured reservoir is developed in the Miocene. The derivation of the model of the reservoir, and the conservative evaluation of the volume of the reservoir made it possible to use secondary recovery.}
journal = []
volume = {22}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Yugoslavia}
year = {1971}
month = {Apr}
}
title = {Nagylengyel: an interesting reservoir. [Yugoslovia]}
author = {Dedinszky, J}
abstractNote = {The Nagylengyel oil field, discovered in 1951, has oil-producing formations mostly in the Upper-Triassic dolomites, in the Norian-Ractian transition formations, in the Upper-Cretaceous limestones and shales, and in the Miocene. The formation of the reservoir space occurred in many stages. A porous, cavernous fractured reservoir is developed in the Norian principal dolomite. A cavernous fractured reservoir exists in the Cretaceous limestone and in the Cretaceous shale and porous fractured reservoir is developed in the Miocene. The derivation of the model of the reservoir, and the conservative evaluation of the volume of the reservoir made it possible to use secondary recovery.}
journal = []
volume = {22}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Yugoslavia}
year = {1971}
month = {Apr}
}