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Fred Meissner

Fred F. Meissner (November 10, 1931 – September 18, 2007) was an American geologist and engineer who contributed to the fields of geology, geophysics, engineering, petroleum engineering, geochemistry, mineralogy, physics, mining, economic geology, and fishing.

Fred Meissner
Grand Canyon Field Trip
BornNovember 10, 1931
DiedSeptember 18, 2007 (2007-09-19) (aged 75)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materColorado School of Mines
AwardsSidney Powers Memorial Award
Scientific career
Fieldsgeology, geophysics, and engineering

Biography edit

Meissner was an honored exploration geologist, college professor at the Colorado School of Mines and consultant, and a pioneer of the concept that methane gas could be extracted from coal beds (see coal bed methane extraction). He was the 2008 recipient of the Sidney Powers Memorial Award.[1] He also received the Grover Murray Distinguished Educator Award in 2005, the Mines Medal in 1997, and the distinguished service award in 1987.

As an independent petroleum geologist and consultant, Meissner developed exploration projects in the Rocky Mountains and other U.S. and foreign (Indonesia, Nigeria, Chile, Jordan) areas for sale and promotion to industry partners. He has consulted for a number of major and independent petroleum companies, both domestic and international.

As a Colorado School of Mines adjunct professor, Meissner taught advanced petroleum geology, a graduate level course, and was a guest or temporary replacement lecturer for courses taught by other professors. He was also a member of numerous graduate student committees.

From 1980 to 1991 Meissner was exploration manager at Bird Oil Corporation; he also served as exploration manager of the Rocky Mountain region for Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio). During his career he was associated with Webb Resources, Filon Exploration Corporation, Trend Minerals Corporation, and Shell Oil Company.

Meissner held a number of leadership positions with the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG), which honored him with the A.L. Levorson Award for the Rocky Mountain Section in 1975. He is also a member of the Geological Society of America and was elected a fellow in 1988. He served as president of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists (RMAG) in 1997 and the organization named him Scientist of the Year in 1976 and presented him with the Distinguished Service Award in 1991. In 1986 he received the Distinguished Service Medal from Colorado School of Mines.

Awards edit

The American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) awarded Meissner the A.L. Levorson Award for the Rocky Mountain Section in 1976, and awarded him an honorary AAPG membership in 2001. He was a member of the Geological Society of America and was elected a fellow in 1988. He was named Scientist of the Year by Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists (RMAG) in 1976, presented with the RMAG's Distinguished Service Award in 1991, served as president of RMAG in 1997, and is an honorary member. In 1986 he received a Distinguished Service Medal for career achievement from Colorado School of Mines and was awarded the Mines Medal for unusual and exemplary service to the School in 2000.

Meissner was active in the Freemasons at Corinthian Lodge #35 in Leadville, Colorado and was a 32 degree.

Meissner was a prolific technical writer and authored over 45 publications, papers, and poster sessions focusing primarily on hydrocarbon generation, migration and accumulation.

His 48 years of industry experience included 16 years with Shell Oil Company working the Permian Basin, Gulf Coast, Rocky Mountain and Mid-Continent Oil Province areas. He had over 20 years cumulative experience with several independents that “found oil and were sold” including Trend Exploration, Filon Exploration, Webb Resources, and Bird Oil. He was a principal in all, with professional responsibilities ranging from exploration manager to vice president.

After leaving Bird Oil in 1991 he has been an independent consultant and professor of geology at the Colorado School of Mines where he sat on thesis committees, taught a graduate course in Advanced Petroleum geology, and was a guest lecturer.

Self-described as an explorationist, he was recognized internationally for his expertise in understanding and predicting the behavior of petroleum systems, including aspects of hydrocarbon generation and migration, basin-wide hydrodynamics, abnormal pressure, and the occurrence of fractured reservoirs, especially as they relate to “basin-center” oil and gas accumulations.

His consultancy, Fred F. Meissner and Associates, undertook investigations for clients in several domestic U.S. areas as well as in West Africa, South America, Europe, Asia and Canada. He also provided public and private instruction on subsurface fluid pressures and their relation to patterns of petroleum generation, migration and accumulation worldwide, and taught several short courses for the Rocky Mountain Region of Petroleum Technology Transfer Council (PTTC).

Thinks Like Oil edit

Ray Thomasson, a past AAPG president and Meissner's prospecting partner, told a story related by Meissner's Shell friend and protégé Larry Meckel that typified Meissner's philosophy and style of teaching:

"Fred said that petroleum geology is a science and the application of petroleum geology is an art form. Just as in fly-fishing, you have to start with the right equipment and you have to know how to use that equipment – that’s the science. But to be successful you have to think like a fish – that’s the art form."

History edit

Meissner was born and raised in Denver, Colorado and graduated from South High School. Both of his parents were the first generation in their families that was not involved in the extraction of Western U.S. natural resources. It was here that his connection to the Rocky Mountains was cemented. He developed an interest in rocks and mining and attended the Colorado School of Mines, graduating with the degree in Geological Engineering in 1953. He was an ROTC cadet at Mines and received a commission upon graduation, but deferred his call to Korean War era service for one year in order to complete his master's degree, graduating in 1954, the year he joined AAPG. Funded by a Shell fellowship, his master's thesis concerned the geology of the Doctor Mine, a lead zinc replacement deposit in the Leadville Limestone, in Gunnison County, Colorado.

After completing a tour of duty with the United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1956 he began his professional career with Shell Oil Company, where he worked for the next 17 years. While enrolled in Advanced Petroleum Geology as a graduate student (a course Meissner taught at Mines), he studied the hydrodynamic work of Dr. M. King Hubbert and recognized it as a key to certain aspects of petroleum migration and trapping. While at Shell Oil Company he worked with a number of leading petroleum explorationists and, notably, with M. King Hubbert, acknowledged by Meissner as his mentor.

While with Shell he was able to apply hydrodynamic concepts to the occurrence of oil accumulations in deep-water turbidite channels that he identified and mapped in the Delaware Basin of West Texas and southeastern New Mexico. Recognizing the presence and potential of tilted oil water contacts in the turbidities, he presented his ideas to management. The manager derided them, refusing to recognize that water contacts could be anything other than horizontal. Shortly after this, the manager retired and Shell brought in a new manager that recognized the potential of the concept and encouraged Meissner to pursue his ideas. As a result, he developed several prospects, three of which subsequently “found oil fields.”

In recognition of Meissner's potential, in 1965 he was transferred to Shell Development Company in Houston where he conducted basic research on hydrocarbon origin, migration and accumulation. In Houston Meissner refined his understanding of the fundamental controls on the existence of petroleum systems. This evolved into a macro-framework understanding of hydrocarbon systems produced as a result of source rock maturity and the existence of fluid potential energy fields in a basin. This has provided a key to understanding the creation of overpressured and underpressured “basin centered” or “deep basin” oil and gas accumulations currently being exploited in the Rockies.

Bibliography edit

Meissner was a prolific technical writer and authored over 45 publications and papers focusing primarily on hydrocarbon generation, migration and accumulation.

Non-fiction edit

See also: Fred F. Meissner, Fred Franke Meissner

  • Meissner, F. F., 2002, Experiences of a Petroleum Hydrogeologist, in, Introduction to Hydrogeology by David Deming, p. 330–331: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, New York.
  • Fred Meissner. An Epsomite Occurrence in the Tintic District, Utah, Rocks & Minerals Magazine, 1950, Rocks & Minerals Magazine, 1950. Pages 132–134, [1]
  • Walter Dean, Edward Dolly, Robert McDonald, and Fred Meissner. Oil and gas from fractured shale reservoirs in Colorado and northwest New Mexico,1978
  • Fred F. Meissner. Causes of Anomalous Deep Basin Fluid Pressure in Rocky Mountain Basins and their Relation to Regional Gas Accumulation, 2000
  • Woodward, Jane, Fred F. Meissner, and Jerry L. Clayton. Hydrocarbon Source Rocks of the Greater Rocky Mountain Region. Denver, Colo: Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, 1984.
  • Thomasson, M. R., & Meissner, F. F. (2001). Exploration & Development – Rocky Mountain Giants-1: Rockies dominates US onshore in 'discovery' of 1990s giants. The Oil and Gas Journal. 99, 44.
  • Thomasson, M. R., & Meissner, F. F. (2001). Exploration & Development – Rocky Mountain Giants-2: US Rockies 'discoveries': Analogs for the future. The Oil and Gas Journal. 99, 44.
  • AAPG Convention, Warme, J. E., Meissner, F. F., & Chamberlain, A. (1994). Field trip guidebook trip #16, RMAG : petroleum geology and sequence stratigraphy of Devonian carbonates of eastern Nevada, and the catastrophic Alamo Breccia. [Denver?], AAPG Annual Convention.
  • Meissner, F.F., 1987, Mechanisms and patterns of gas generation/ storage/ expulsion-migration/accumulation associated with coal measures in the Green River and San Juan Basins, Rocky Mountain Region, U.S.A., in Doligez, B., ed., Migration of hydrocarbons in sedimentary basins, 2nd IFP Exploration Research Conf., Carcais France, June 15–19, 1987: Editions Technip, Paris, p. 79–112.
  • Thomasson, M.R. and Meissner, F., 2002, Rocky mountain giants: Rockies region dominates US in the 'discovery' of 1990s giant fields; Houston Geological Society Bulletin, Volume 45, No. 4, December 2002. Pages 43–50.

Academic and other works edit

  • Fred F. Meissner and Richard B. Banks. Computer Simulation of Hydrocarbon Generation, Migration, and Accumulation under Hydrodynamic Conditions—Examples from the Williston and San Juan Basins, USA*, Search and Discovery Article #40179 November 10, 2005
  • Why There is so Much Gas in The Rockies & Where Future Supplies Will be Found , Society of Independent Professional Earth Scientists (SIPES) Newsletter, February 2004
  • Fred Meissner. Relation of Fractures to Fluid Pressure and Hydrocarbon Generation, Migration and Accumulation", "WeimerFest” Symposium 3 – 5 November 2004 Petroleum Hall, Green Center, Colorado School of Mines Technical and Social Program
  • AAPG Hedberg Conference, Fred F. Meissner. Petroleum Systems Related to Source Rocks in the Mississippian Antler Foredeep of Eastern Nevada and Western Utah—Emphasis on Source Rocks, Oil Generation, Migration, Entrapment and Timing, AAPG Hedberg Conference "Late Paleozoic Tectonics and Hydrocarbon Systems of Western North America-The Greater Ancestral Rocky Mountains" July 21–26, 2002, Vail, Colorado [3]

References edit

  1. ^ AAPG Explorer. November 2007. Meissner Could ‘Think Like Oil’
  • Computer Simulation of Hydrocarbon Generation, Migration, and Accumulation under Hydrodynamic Conditions – Examples from the Williston and San Juan Basins, USA, SearchandDiscovery.net
  • Norton emphasizes balance of resources, Durango Herald
  • Rocky Mountain Gas Boom, Boise Weekly
  • "Meissner Could 'Think Like Oil'". AAPG Explorer. 28 (11): 58–59. November 2007.
  • AAPG Sidney Powers Memorial Award Winner, AAPG
  • , Colorado School of Mines
  • (PDF). PTTC Rockies Newsletter. 9 (2). Colorado School of Mines: 4–6. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 20, 2006.
  • M. King Hubbert as a Teacher, 2003 GSA Annual Meeting Seattle
  • Geological Society Membership, Geological Society of America
  • Petroleum Technology Transfer Council, PTTC

External links edit

  • CSM Geology and Geological Engineering Faculty, Colorado School of Mines
  • Rocky Mountain high: the Rockies may be the next important source of natural gas for the U.S., AccessMyLibrary.com
  • , Colorado School of Mines
  • , Appalachian Region PTTC Newsletter
  • , PTTC 2000 BASIN-CENTERED GAS SYMPOSIUM
  • , Statement of Walter Cruickshank Deputy Director, Minerals Management Service and Tom Lonnie Before the House Committee on Small Business Subcommittee on Tax, Finance, and Exports Oversight Hearing
  • , Statement of Dr. Robert W. Middleton, Director, Office of Indian Energy and Economic Development Office of the Assistant Secretary – Indian Affairs, Department of Interior at the Oversight Hearing Before the Committee on Indian Affairs, U.S. Senate
  • Rocky Mountain Giants, Colorado School of Mines
  • Weimerfest, Colorado School of Mines
  • Causes of Anomalous Deep Basin Fluid Pressure in Rocky Mountain Basins and their Relation to Regional Gas Accumulations[permanent dead link], Rockies PTTC Newsletter
  • Tapping "Unconventional" Gas, Energy Pipeline News
  • Call for Prayer[permanent dead link], St. James Cathedral, Orlando, Florida
  • Prayers for Fred, The Messenger, St. Andrews United Methodist Church
  • , Groundwater Resources Association of California
  • , Colorado School of Mines
  • LogGeoChem, Evaluations Inc.
  • Fred Meissner Memorial PictoMovie on YouTube

fred, meissner, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Fred Meissner news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Fred F Meissner November 10 1931 September 18 2007 was an American geologist and engineer who contributed to the fields of geology geophysics engineering petroleum engineering geochemistry mineralogy physics mining economic geology and fishing Fred MeissnerGrand Canyon Field TripBornNovember 10 1931DenverDiedSeptember 18 2007 2007 09 19 aged 75 NationalityAmericanAlma materColorado School of MinesAwardsSidney Powers Memorial AwardScientific careerFieldsgeology geophysics and engineering Contents 1 Biography 2 Awards 3 Thinks Like Oil 4 History 5 Bibliography 5 1 Non fiction 5 2 Academic and other works 6 References 7 External linksBiography editMeissner was an honored exploration geologist college professor at the Colorado School of Mines and consultant and a pioneer of the concept that methane gas could be extracted from coal beds see coal bed methane extraction He was the 2008 recipient of the Sidney Powers Memorial Award 1 He also received the Grover Murray Distinguished Educator Award in 2005 the Mines Medal in 1997 and the distinguished service award in 1987 As an independent petroleum geologist and consultant Meissner developed exploration projects in the Rocky Mountains and other U S and foreign Indonesia Nigeria Chile Jordan areas for sale and promotion to industry partners He has consulted for a number of major and independent petroleum companies both domestic and international As a Colorado School of Mines adjunct professor Meissner taught advanced petroleum geology a graduate level course and was a guest or temporary replacement lecturer for courses taught by other professors He was also a member of numerous graduate student committees From 1980 to 1991 Meissner was exploration manager at Bird Oil Corporation he also served as exploration manager of the Rocky Mountain region for Standard Oil of Ohio Sohio During his career he was associated with Webb Resources Filon Exploration Corporation Trend Minerals Corporation and Shell Oil Company Meissner held a number of leadership positions with the American Association of Petroleum Geologists AAPG which honored him with the A L Levorson Award for the Rocky Mountain Section in 1975 He is also a member of the Geological Society of America and was elected a fellow in 1988 He served as president of the Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists RMAG in 1997 and the organization named him Scientist of the Year in 1976 and presented him with the Distinguished Service Award in 1991 In 1986 he received the Distinguished Service Medal from Colorado School of Mines Awards editThe American Association of Petroleum Geologists AAPG awarded Meissner the A L Levorson Award for the Rocky Mountain Section in 1976 and awarded him an honorary AAPG membership in 2001 He was a member of the Geological Society of America and was elected a fellow in 1988 He was named Scientist of the Year by Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists RMAG in 1976 presented with the RMAG s Distinguished Service Award in 1991 served as president of RMAG in 1997 and is an honorary member In 1986 he received a Distinguished Service Medal for career achievement from Colorado School of Mines and was awarded the Mines Medal for unusual and exemplary service to the School in 2000 Meissner was active in the Freemasons at Corinthian Lodge 35 in Leadville Colorado and was a 32 degree Meissner was a prolific technical writer and authored over 45 publications papers and poster sessions focusing primarily on hydrocarbon generation migration and accumulation His 48 years of industry experience included 16 years with Shell Oil Company working the Permian Basin Gulf Coast Rocky Mountain and Mid Continent Oil Province areas He had over 20 years cumulative experience with several independents that found oil and were sold including Trend Exploration Filon Exploration Webb Resources and Bird Oil He was a principal in all with professional responsibilities ranging from exploration manager to vice president After leaving Bird Oil in 1991 he has been an independent consultant and professor of geology at the Colorado School of Mines where he sat on thesis committees taught a graduate course in Advanced Petroleum geology and was a guest lecturer Self described as an explorationist he was recognized internationally for his expertise in understanding and predicting the behavior of petroleum systems including aspects of hydrocarbon generation and migration basin wide hydrodynamics abnormal pressure and the occurrence of fractured reservoirs especially as they relate to basin center oil and gas accumulations His consultancy Fred F Meissner and Associates undertook investigations for clients in several domestic U S areas as well as in West Africa South America Europe Asia and Canada He also provided public and private instruction on subsurface fluid pressures and their relation to patterns of petroleum generation migration and accumulation worldwide and taught several short courses for the Rocky Mountain Region of Petroleum Technology Transfer Council PTTC Thinks Like Oil editRay Thomasson a past AAPG president and Meissner s prospecting partner told a story related by Meissner s Shell friend and protege Larry Meckel that typified Meissner s philosophy and style of teaching Fred said that petroleum geology is a science and the application of petroleum geology is an art form Just as in fly fishing you have to start with the right equipment and you have to know how to use that equipment that s the science But to be successful you have to think like a fish that s the art form History editMeissner was born and raised in Denver Colorado and graduated from South High School Both of his parents were the first generation in their families that was not involved in the extraction of Western U S natural resources It was here that his connection to the Rocky Mountains was cemented He developed an interest in rocks and mining and attended the Colorado School of Mines graduating with the degree in Geological Engineering in 1953 He was an ROTC cadet at Mines and received a commission upon graduation but deferred his call to Korean War era service for one year in order to complete his master s degree graduating in 1954 the year he joined AAPG Funded by a Shell fellowship his master s thesis concerned the geology of the Doctor Mine a lead zinc replacement deposit in the Leadville Limestone in Gunnison County Colorado After completing a tour of duty with the United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1956 he began his professional career with Shell Oil Company where he worked for the next 17 years While enrolled in Advanced Petroleum Geology as a graduate student a course Meissner taught at Mines he studied the hydrodynamic work of Dr M King Hubbert and recognized it as a key to certain aspects of petroleum migration and trapping While at Shell Oil Company he worked with a number of leading petroleum explorationists and notably with M King Hubbert acknowledged by Meissner as his mentor While with Shell he was able to apply hydrodynamic concepts to the occurrence of oil accumulations in deep water turbidite channels that he identified and mapped in the Delaware Basin of West Texas and southeastern New Mexico Recognizing the presence and potential of tilted oil water contacts in the turbidities he presented his ideas to management The manager derided them refusing to recognize that water contacts could be anything other than horizontal Shortly after this the manager retired and Shell brought in a new manager that recognized the potential of the concept and encouraged Meissner to pursue his ideas As a result he developed several prospects three of which subsequently found oil fields In recognition of Meissner s potential in 1965 he was transferred to Shell Development Company in Houston where he conducted basic research on hydrocarbon origin migration and accumulation In Houston Meissner refined his understanding of the fundamental controls on the existence of petroleum systems This evolved into a macro framework understanding of hydrocarbon systems produced as a result of source rock maturity and the existence of fluid potential energy fields in a basin This has provided a key to understanding the creation of overpressured and underpressured basin centered or deep basin oil and gas accumulations currently being exploited in the Rockies Bibliography editMeissner was a prolific technical writer and authored over 45 publications and papers focusing primarily on hydrocarbon generation migration and accumulation Non fiction edit See also Fred F Meissner Fred Franke Meissner Meissner F F 2002 Experiences of a Petroleum Hydrogeologist in Introduction to Hydrogeology by David Deming p 330 331 McGraw Hill Higher Education New York Fred Meissner An Epsomite Occurrence in the Tintic District Utah Rocks amp Minerals Magazine 1950 Rocks amp Minerals Magazine 1950 Pages 132 134 1 Walter Dean Edward Dolly Robert McDonald and Fred Meissner Oil and gas from fractured shale reservoirs in Colorado and northwest New Mexico 1978 Fred F Meissner Causes of Anomalous Deep Basin Fluid Pressure in Rocky Mountain Basins and their Relation to Regional Gas Accumulation 2000 Woodward Jane Fred F Meissner and Jerry L Clayton Hydrocarbon Source Rocks of the Greater Rocky Mountain Region Denver Colo Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists 1984 Thomasson M R amp Meissner F F 2001 Exploration amp Development Rocky Mountain Giants 1 Rockies dominates US onshore in discovery of 1990s giants The Oil and Gas Journal 99 44 Thomasson M R amp Meissner F F 2001 Exploration amp Development Rocky Mountain Giants 2 US Rockies discoveries Analogs for the future The Oil and Gas Journal 99 44 AAPG Convention Warme J E Meissner F F amp Chamberlain A 1994 Field trip guidebook trip 16 RMAG petroleum geology and sequence stratigraphy of Devonian carbonates of eastern Nevada and the catastrophic Alamo Breccia Denver AAPG Annual Convention Meissner F F 1987 Mechanisms and patterns of gas generation storage expulsion migration accumulation associated with coal measures in the Green River and San Juan Basins Rocky Mountain Region U S A in Doligez B ed Migration of hydrocarbons in sedimentary basins 2nd IFP Exploration Research Conf Carcais France June 15 19 1987 Editions Technip Paris p 79 112 Thomasson M R and Meissner F 2002 Rocky mountain giants Rockies region dominates US in the discovery of 1990s giant fields Houston Geological Society Bulletin Volume 45 No 4 December 2002 Pages 43 50 Academic and other works edit Fred F Meissner and Richard B Banks Computer Simulation of Hydrocarbon Generation Migration and Accumulation under Hydrodynamic Conditions Examples from the Williston and San Juan Basins USA Search and Discovery Article 40179 November 10 2005 Why There is so Much Gas in The Rockies amp Where Future Supplies Will be Found 2 Society of Independent Professional Earth Scientists SIPES Newsletter February 2004 Fred Meissner Relation of Fractures to Fluid Pressure and Hydrocarbon Generation Migration and Accumulation WeimerFest Symposium 3 5 November 2004 Petroleum Hall Green Center Colorado School of Mines Technical and Social Program AAPG Hedberg Conference Fred F Meissner Petroleum Systems Related to Source Rocks in the Mississippian Antler Foredeep of Eastern Nevada and Western Utah Emphasis on Source Rocks Oil Generation Migration Entrapment and Timing AAPG Hedberg Conference Late Paleozoic Tectonics and Hydrocarbon Systems of Western North America The Greater Ancestral Rocky Mountains July 21 26 2002 Vail Colorado 3 References editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message AAPG Explorer November 2007 Meissner Could Think Like Oil Computer Simulation of Hydrocarbon Generation Migration and Accumulation under Hydrodynamic Conditions Examples from the Williston and San Juan Basins USA SearchandDiscovery net Norton emphasizes balance of resources Durango Herald Rocky Mountain Gas Boom Boise Weekly Meissner Could Think Like Oil AAPG Explorer 28 11 58 59 November 2007 AAPG Sidney Powers Memorial Award Winner AAPG Mines Alumni Colorado School of Mines PTTC PAG Member Interview Fred Meissner PDF PTTC Rockies Newsletter 9 2 Colorado School of Mines 4 6 2004 Archived from the original PDF on September 20 2006 M King Hubbert as a Teacher 2003 GSA Annual Meeting Seattle Geological Society Membership Geological Society of America Petroleum Technology Transfer Council PTTCExternal links editCSM Geology and Geological Engineering Faculty Colorado School of Mines Rocky Mountain high the Rockies may be the next important source of natural gas for the U S AccessMyLibrary com Early Building Blocks of Engineering Education Colorado School of Mines Subsurface Fluid Pressures and their Relation to Oil and Gas Generation Migration and Accumulation Appalachian Region PTTC Newsletter Causes of Anomalous Deep Basin Fluid Pressure in Rocky Mountain Basins and their Relation to Regional Gas Accumulation PTTC 2000 BASIN CENTERED GAS SYMPOSIUM The Effects of High Cost of Natural Gas on Small Businesses and Future Energy Technologies Statement of Walter Cruickshank Deputy Director Minerals Management Service and Tom Lonnie Before the House Committee on Small Business Subcommittee on Tax Finance and Exports Oversight Hearing Economic Development in Indian Country Statement of Dr Robert W Middleton Director Office of Indian Energy and Economic Development Office of the Assistant Secretary Indian Affairs Department of Interior at the Oversight Hearing Before the Committee on Indian Affairs U S Senate Rocky Mountain Giants Colorado School of Mines Weimerfest Colorado School of Mines Causes of Anomalous Deep Basin Fluid Pressure in Rocky Mountain Basins and their Relation to Regional Gas Accumulations permanent dead link Rockies PTTC Newsletter Tapping Unconventional Gas Energy Pipeline News Call for Prayer permanent dead link St James Cathedral Orlando Florida Prayers for Fred The Messenger St Andrews United Methodist Church Longevity of Fossil Fuel Resources Groundwater Resources Association of California Crystal Paul Keating Colorado School of Mines LogGeoChem Evaluations Inc Fred Meissner Memorial PictoMovie on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fred Meissner amp oldid 1200793213, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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