Call 1800-123-2003
who invented the hydro carbons |
| The first discovery of oil seeps in the Gaspé Peninsula in 1836,
hydrocarbon exploration activity has varied and can
be subdivided into five time intervals. 1) In the
1860–1950 interval, nearly 70 shallow holes were drilled, and oil
recovery
was modest. Nevertheless, a small oil refinery was
built in 1900, but dismantled in 1904. 2) In the 1950–1970 interval,
hydrocarbon
exploration in the Gaspé Peninsula declined. The
only noteworthy exploration effort was between 1967 and 1970 by Gulf Oil
Ltd., who drilled the 3536 m deep Gulf Sunny Bank
No. 1 well in 1970. Although dry, this well became a valuable source of
information on the Devonian succession of eastern
Gaspé. 3) In the 1970s, there was a renewed interest in hydrocarbon
exploration
in the peninsula, and the Québec Government founded
the Société Québécoise d’Initiative Pétrolière (SOQUIP). At the same
time,
a research centre, the Institut National de la
Recherche Scientifique (INRS-Pétrole), was formed to support SOQUIP’s
exploration
activities. Seismic profiling, drilling, and
various laboratory investigations, mainly in northeastern Gaspé,
resulted in
a much better understanding of the area, but no
significant hydrocarbons were discovered. 4) In the 1980–95 interval,
there
was a precipitous decline in exploration activity.
SOQUIP and other major hydrocarbon corporations left the peninsula.
Although
some land was acquired by junior exploration
companies, they had limited exploration programs and minimal success. 5)
Since
1995, hydrocarbon exploration activity has
increased significantly, in part due to an important oil discovery in
1995 in western
Newfoundland. Shell Canada acquired the exploration
rights to a large area of the Silurian–Devonian Gaspé Belt in the
northeastern
part of the peninsula. They initiated a large-scale
research project in order to evaluate the reservoir potential of the
Silurian–Devonian
carbonates and coarse-grained siliciclastics and to
understand source rock distribution in the peninsula. The results of
this
research constitute the main part of this special
issue of the Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology. |