PETROLEUM RESOURCES AND INDUSTRIES 

 in the State, due to the development of some deep 

 flowing wells at the west end of the Coyote Hills 

 anticline, north of Fullerton. The district com- 

 prises the Whittier, Coyote Hills, Puente and Olinda 

 (Fullerton) fields, and includes 8150 acres of 

 proven ground. The wells range in depth from 

 600 to 5725 feet; the gravity of the oil varies from 

 15 to 33 Beaume (0.9655 to 0.8589 sp. gr.). The 

 initial production of the wells, of which there are 

 now 544 producing, has ranged as high as 10,000 

 barrels in the Coyote Hills field; the average for 

 the entire district in November, 1914, was 73.9 

 barrels per well. The oil occurs in sands of the 

 Vaqueros, Monterey, and lower Fernando forma- 

 tions, all of Miocene age. The structure ranges 

 from typical anticlines to overturned anticlines, 

 fault zones and faulted monoclines. 



REFERENCES 



U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY: BULLETINS. 



By Geo. H. Eldridge, Ralph Arnold, Robert Anderson, H. 

 R. Johnson and R. W. Pack. Nos. 213, Petroleum 

 fields of California; 285, Salt Lake field, near Los 

 Angeles; 309, Santa Clara Valley, Puente Hills 

 and Los Angeles districts; 317 and 322, Santa 

 Maria district; 321, Summerland district; 340, 

 Contra Costa County field; 357 and 398, Coalinga 

 district; 406, McKittrick, Lost Hills, Midway and 

 Sunset districts; 431, Cantua-Panoche field; 471, 

 South end San Joaquin Valley. 



U. S. BUREAU OF MINES: TECHNICAL PAPERS. 



By Ralph Arnold, F. G. Clapp, V. R. Garfias and others. 

 Nos. 32, Cementing oil wells; 38, Waste of natural 

 gas; 42, Waste of oil and gas; 70, Methods of 

 oil recovery. 



GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CALIFORNIA. 



Vol. II, Oil in southern California. By S. F. Peckham. 



CALIFORNIA STATE MINING BUREAU: BULLETINS. 

 By W. L. Watts, Paul Prutzman and R. P. McLaughlin. 

 Nos. 3, Central Valley districts; 11, Los Angeles, 

 Ventura and Santa Barbara counties; 19, Oil and 

 gas yielding formations of California; 32, Pro- 

 duction and use of petroleum in California; 63, 

 Petroleum in southern California; 69, General dis- 

 cussion of California industry. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CALIFORNIA OIL RESOURCES. 

 Up to 1905, U. S. G. S., Bull. 309. In addition, articles on 

 California oil are found in the following: California 

 Oil World, semi-weekly, Bakersfield, Calif.; Califor- 

 nia Derrick, monthly, San Francisco; Oil Industry, 

 monthly, Los Angeles (no longer published) ; Oil 

 Age, weekly, Los Angeles; Petroleum Reporter, 

 weekly, Taft, Calif.; Mining and Scientific Press, 

 weekly, San Francisco; Western Engineering, 

 monthly, San Francisco; Engineering and Mining 

 Journal, weekly, New York; Bulletin American 

 Institute Mining Engineers, monthly, New York 

 (especially March and September, 1914. numbers). 



87 



