The Impact Craters that Texaco Hid for 50+ years and the current arguments for fracking. Senator Inhofe is so corrupt that he poisons the lakes he swims in.
Meeker Crater Approx. 13.5 miles in diameter. 35.557N, -96.871W
Choctaw Crater Approx 66.0+ miles in diameter 36.060N, -97.315W
Jeanne d'Arc Crater Approx. 101 miles in diameter 35.250N,-100.800 It is mostly in the Texas Panhandle and I know how much the Texans love France.
The rule change Oklahoma Corporate Commission 3-205 Who got this approved? Without the smeared lime and sand and the other anomalies listed on a geologist log, you could hide these craters nearly forever. The companies who knew about them could quietly and cheaply buy up the leases over decades. Bribe and manipulate the state Geological societies to keep geologists from snooping around. Meanwhile they could have the old data slowly disappear out of the public domain.
Jeanne d'Arc Crater also shows up as an empty semi circular space on the western part of map GM-36.
Download the Map GM-36
http://www.ogs.ou.edu/level3-oilgas.php MAP GM36 Link is about half way down the page.
Download Granite Wash Play Texas And Oklahoma
Texas Data : like The Granite Wash Map Showing Jeanne d'Arc Crater outlined by oil and gas wells.
http://www.eia.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/analysis_publications/maps/maps.htm
Also on GM-36 can be seen the affects that Choctaw Impact Crater had on oil and gas production, by the change from solid colors to freckles in the center of the state.
On the Northern Part of GM-36 Can be seen 2 more potential impact craters. One appears to be around Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Another, smaller one appears to overlap the southwest portion of the Bartlesville crater.
These are the holes into the Bartlesville Crater that got Texaco the prize. I would also bet they were able to drill wells that were never documented. Or Any documentation that was stripped of meaning , like getting Oklahoma Corporation Commission Rule OCC Rule 3-205 passed to hide the truth.
11305840 TEXAS CO. 1624N07E 1957 4300 36.56207,-96.56302
11302733 NRIS/J TEXAS CO 2124N07 E 1958 4251 36.54959,-96.55560
11316778 PI/J&S TEXAS COMPANY 2824N07E 1952 3772 36.52783,-96.55382
The first Number is the API Number
I would consider Meeker, Choctaw, and Jeanne d'Arc Craters to be 90% probable.
The Bartlesville and the smaller (Tulsa?) crater are strong possibilities.
Did at least some of the Oil Companies know about the Jeanne d"Arc Impact Structure?
See this link:
http://www.eia.gov/pub/oil_gas/natural_gas/analysis_publications/maps/maps.htm
Click on Granite Wash Play Texas Oklahoma
http://www.eia.gov/oil_gas/rpd/shaleusa10.pdf
Who got there first, and who got their leases the cheapest?
Was it the little guy, or Texaco and the BP's?
Anybody for a quick trial, and a slow hanging?
The rich get richer, and the poor get a greater surplus of lies.
What is the lifespan of man made concrete in a subsurface environment?
What is the distance between high pressure salt strata and fresh water aquifers?
How much time does that give us?
At least some of the oil companies knew about the asteroid impact structures and the affects that these structures had on finding oil. Some of the structures I have listed have significant outlines on topographic maps. Underground using the oil well logs, I have found raised crater rims, ejecta blankets, (some over a thousand feet high). The chances that at least some of the oil companies did not know about these impact structures is incredulously remote.
Texaco appears to be one of the first to know. I can see why that Dinosaur killing crater in the Yucatan had such a battle for recognition (once you prove one crater it is easier to prove the next). A simple way to determine which companies knew, is to analyze their history of lease purchases. Did they show remarkable foresight in purchasing leases and then waiting for the technology and the demand to arrive? The wells are much deeper and they are mostly natural gas.
Once I had found the first Impact Crater at Meeker (by just following all those earthquakes), I wondered why the big companies didn't just fess up to the fracking causing the damage, and protect their reputations.
It seems they had a much bigger secret (problem) that they were hiding. I soon found another anomaly while looking at the ejecta blanket of Meeker Crater. I found Choctaw Crater using some of the earthquakes that Meeker didn't cause, combined with that strange area I saw on Map GM-36. I saw the blank semi-circular spot in western Oklahoma, but couldn't believe it was an impact crater until I got some better topographic views, and that map on Granite Plays in Texas and Oklahoma. A circular surface feature that also shows up thousands of feet underground. Duh, it's an impact crater!
The following links (which might work) will show you the craters outlined with dots at 30 degree intervals.
Each crater data paragraph has to copied in its entirety to the address line of your browser to show the craters. Press the Reload it will then show (or not).
Jeanne d'Arc Crater Approx. 101 miles in diameter 35.250N,-100.800
http://www.geocommunicator.gov/blmM...rence:states&Points=-100.8,35.25&LABEL=Jeanne d Arc Crater&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-99.907,35.25&LABEL=0&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-100.027,35.615&LABEL=30&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-100.354,35.883&LABEL=60&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-100.8,35.981&LABEL=90&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-101.246,35.883&LABEL=120&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-101.693,35.25&LABEL=180&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-101.573,34.885&LABEL=210&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-101.246,34.617&LABEL=240&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-100.8,34.519&LABEL=270&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-100.354,34.617&LABEL=300&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-100.027,34.885&LABEL=330&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-101.573,35.615&LABEL=150&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point
Choctaw Crater Approx 66.0+ miles in diameter 36.060N, -97.315W
http://www.geocommunicator.gov/blmM...nce:states&Points=-97.315,35.06&LABEL=Choctaw Crater&DESCRIPTION= &Points=-96.803,35.302&LABEL=30&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.019,35.479&LABEL=60&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.315,35.544&LABEL=90&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.611,35.479&LABEL=120&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.827,35.302&LABEL=150&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.906,35.06&LABEL=180&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.827,34.818&LABEL=210&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.611,34.641&LABEL=240&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.315,34.576&LABEL=270&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.803,34.818&LABEL=330&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.724,35.06&LABEL=0&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-97.019,34.641&LABEL=300&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point
Meeker Crater Approx. 13.5 miles in diameter. 35.557N, -96.871W
http://www.geocommunicator.gov/blmM...s=-96.755,35.557&LABEL=0&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.771,35.604&LABEL=30&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.813,35.638&LABEL=60&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.871,35.651&LABEL=90&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.929,35.638&LABEL=120&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.971,35.604&LABEL=150&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.987,35.557&LABEL=180&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.971,35.51&LABEL=210&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.929,35.476&LABEL=240&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.871,35.463&LABEL=270&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.813,35.476&LABEL=300&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.771,35.51&LABEL=330&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point&Points=-96.871,35.557&LABEL=Meeker Crater&DESCRIPTION=Lat/Long Point
I am an amateur so do not have any credentials. You will need to find someone who does.
I love the line from (Flight of the Phoenix) "I design model airplanes."
If you have any questions, or you would like some hard data, such as well logs (PDF), please contact me.