266 University Geological Survey of Kansas. 
DATA CONCERNING COLLECTION OF GASES ANALYZED. 
1. Dexter, Kan. Original sample. Collected in 1905 from 
well supplying town. Depth, 310 feet. Pressure, 110 pounds. 
Capacity, six million feet. 
2. Gas from Kansas Natural Gas Company’s pipe-line at 
Lawrence, Kan. Comes from near Chanute, Kan. Composite 
from several wells. Sample taken October 23, 1905, about one 
week after gas was first turned on. 
3. Pipe-line gas. Same general source as No. 2. Sample 
taken at Lawrence, May 16, 1906. 
4. Eudora, Kan. Collected from town mains. Comes from 
wells in town, 350 feet deep. Pressure, 200 pounds. 
6. Dexter, Kan. Greenwell well. Depth and pressure sim- 
ilar to No. 1. Collected June 12, 1906. 
7. Iola, Kan. City supply. Collected from mains at office 
of Iola Gas Company, June 10, 1906. 
8. Moline, Kan. Collected June 24, 1906. From wells 
south, east and west of Moline. Average depth, 1150 feet. 
Average pressure, 380 pounds. 
9. Fredonia, Kan. Town supply. Wells from two to seven 
miles east, south and northwest of town. Depth from 1085 to 
1250 feet. Pressure from 300 to 480 pounds. 
10. Neodesha, Kan. Collected June 27, 1906. Some air in 
the sample. 
11. Lawrence, Kan. From an old well, about 1200 feet deep. 
Only slight flow of gas, escaping with salt-water. Collected 
July 4, 1906. 
12. Erie, Kan. City supply. From wells north and east of 
town, within two miles. Depth, 510 feet. Pressure, 150 
pounds. Sample collected July 3, 1906. 
14. Bartlesville, I. T. Received July 8, 1906. Air in the 
sample. 
15. Bonner Springs, Kan. Collected July 8, 1906. From 
wells averaging 600 feet in depth, and 190 pounds pressure, 
belonging to the Bonner Portland Cement Company. 
16. Parsons, Kan. Gas supplied by pipe-line to city of Par- 
sons. Comes from wells in Eson district, in southeastern part 
of Wilson county, Kansas, belonging to the Prairie Oil and Gas 
Company. 
17. Arkansas City, Kan. City supply. From well 750 feet 
deep, with pressure of 355 pounds and capacity of five to six 
million feet. 
