Citation
Part I, 1988 and 1989 Florida petroleum production and exploration ( FGS: Information circular 107 )

Material Information

Title:
Part I, 1988 and 1989 Florida petroleum production and exploration ( FGS: Information circular 107 )
Series Title:
FGS: Information circular
Added title page title:
1988 and 1989 Florida petroleum production and exploration
Added title page title:
Florida petroleum reserve estimates
Added title page title:
Petroleum exploration and development policies in Florida
Added title page title:
Petrology and provenance of the Norphlet Formation, Panhandle, Florida
Creator:
Lloyd, Jacqueline M
Tootle, Charles H
Ragland, Joan M
Scott, Greg W
Florida Geological Survey
Place of Publication:
Tallahassee
Publisher:
Published for the Florida Geological Survey [by] State of Florida, Dept. of Natural Resources, Division of Resource Management, Florida Geological Survey
Publication Date:
Language:
English
Physical Description:
x, 121 p. : ill. (some col.), maps ; 28 cm.

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Petroleum reserves -- Florida ( lcsh )
Petroleum -- Prospecting -- Florida ( lcsh )
Petroleum industry and trade -- Government policy -- Florida ( lcsh )
Oil fields -- Florida ( lcsh )
South Florida ( flgeo )
City of Destin ( flgeo )
Water wells ( jstor )
Barrels ( jstor )
Leases ( jstor )
Genre:
bibliography ( marcgt )

Notes

Bibliography:
Includes bibliographical references.
Statement of Responsibility:
by Jacqueline M. Lloyd. Including Florida petroleum reserve estimates / by Charles H. Tootle. Part II, Petroleum exploration and development policies in Florida : response to public concern for sensitive environments / by Jacqueline M. Lloyd and Joan M. Ragland. Part III, Petrology and provenance of the Norphlet Formation, Panhandle, Florida / by Greg W. Scott.

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Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
The author dedicated the work to the public domain by waiving all of his or her rights to the work worldwide under copyright law and all related or neighboring legal rights he or she had in the work, to the extent allowable by law.
Resource Identifier:
022124586 ( aleph )
26676299 ( oclc )
AJG7270 ( notis )

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Full Text


STATE OF FLORIDA
DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES
Tom Gardner, Executive Director



DIVISION OF RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Jeremy A. Craft, Director



FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
Walter Schmidt, State Geologist and Chief




INFORMATION CIRCULAR NO. 107
PART 1: 1988 AND 1989 FLORIDA PETROLEUM
PRODUCTION AND EXPLORATION
By
Jacqueline M. Lloyd

INCLUDING FLORIDA PETROLEUM RESERVE ESTIMATES
By
Charles H. Tootle




PART II: PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICIES IN FLORIDA:
RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONCERN FOR SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS
By
Jacqueline M. Lloyd
and


Joan M. Ragland


UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LIRAE


PART III: PETROLOGY AND PROVENANCE OF THE
NORPHLET FORMATION, PANHANDLE, FLORIDA
By
Greg W. Scott



Published for the
FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
Tallahassee
1991











DEPARTMENT
OF
NATURAL RESOURCES


LAWTON CHILES
Governor


JIM SMITH
Secretary of State

TOM GALLAGHER
State Treasurer

BETTY CASTOR
Commissioner of Education


BOB BUTTERWORTH
Attorney General

GERALD LEWIS
State Comptroller

BOB CRAWFORD
Commissioner of Agriculture


TOM GARDNER
Executive Director







LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL


Florida Geological Survey
Tallahassee
June 1991




Governor Lawton Chiles, Chairman
Florida Department of Natural Resources
Tallahassee, Florida 32301


Dear Governor Chiles:


The Florida Geological Survey, Division of Resource Management, Department of Natural Resources,
is publishing three petroleum-related reports as its Information Circular 107. Part I is "1988 and 1989
Florida Petroleum Production and Exploration;" Part II, "Petroleum Exploration and Development Policies
in Florida: Response to Public Concern for Sensitive Environments;" and Part III: "Petrology and
Provenance of the Norphlet Formation, Panhandle, Florida." These reports discuss 1988 and 1989 oil
and gas production and exploration, the history of Florida's petroleum policy and legislation, and the
geology of the gas-producing Norphlet Formation, respectively. This information is useful to the oil and
gas industry and to the state in planning wise development of Florida's oil and gas resources.




Respectfully yours,


Walter Schmidt, Ph.D., P.G.
State Geologist and Chief
Florida Geological Survey












































Printed for the
Florida Geological Survey

Tallahassee
1991

ISSN 0085-0616






CONTENTS


Page
Part I: 1988 and 1989 Florida Petroleum Production and Exploration.......................................... vi

Part II: Petroleum Exploration and Development Policies in Florida:
Response to Public Concern for Sensitive Environments .................................................. 63

Part III: Petrology and Provenance of the Norphlet Formation, Panhandle, Florida....................... 83

































PART I


1988 AND 1989 FLORIDA PETROLEUM
PRODUCTION AND EXPLORATION

By
Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. #74






TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page

Abstract.................................................................................................................................................. x
Acknowledgements................................................................................................................................ x
Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 1
1988 and 1989 Production.................................................................................................................. 1
1988 and 1989 Onshore Drilling Activity.............................................................................................. 8
Offshore Drilling Activity......................................................................................................................... 8
Exploratory Drilling in State W aters ............................................................................................... 8
1988 and 1989 Exploratory Drilling in Federal W aters,Offshore Florida........................................ 11
Geophysical Exploration Activity.......................................................................................................... 12
Florida Oil Field Descriptions.............................................................................................................. 12
North Florida Oil Field Sum marines ................................................................................................. 15
Introduction.................................................................................................................................... 15
Bluff Springs Field ......................................................................................................................... 15
McDavid Field................................................................................................................................ 17
Jay Field ........................................................................................................................................ 19
Coldwater Creek Field................................................................................................................ 19
Blackjack Creek Field.............................................................................................................. 22
Mt. Carmel Field ............................................................................................................................ 22
McLellan Field ............................................................................................................................... 25
Sweetwater Creek Field ............................................................................................................. 25
South Florida Oil Field Summaries ................................................................................................ 28
Introduction.................................................................................................................................... 28
Lehigh Park Field .......................................................................................................................... 28
Townsend Canal Field................................................................................................................ 28
W est Felda Field ........................................................................................................................... 30
M id-Felda Field.............................................................................................................................. 30
Sunoco Felda Field ....................................................................................................................... 30
Corkscrew Field............................................................................................................................. 32
Lake Trafford Field ........................................................................................................................ 32
Sunniland Field.............................................................................................................................. 34
Seminole Field............................................................................................................................... 34
Bear Island Field ........................................................................................................................... 34
Pepper Ham mock Field.............................................................................................................. 37
Baxter Island Field......................................................................................................................... 37
Raccoon Point Field ................................................................................................................ 37
Forty Mile Bend Field ................................................................................................................. 37
Sum mary................................................................................................................................................ 39
References............................................................................................................................................. 40

ILLUSTRATIONS

Figure Page

1. South Florida oil field location map.............................................................................................. 2

2. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, south Florida....................... 3






3. Northwest Florida oil field location map....................................................................................... 4

4. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Middle Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, northwest Florida............... 5

5. Oil production, 1970 through 1989 .............................................................................................. 6

6. 1987, 1988, and 1989 oil production comparison........................................................................ 7

7. Oil exploration wells, Florida state waters .................................................................................. 9

8. Mesozoic structural features in Florida and offshore................................................................... 10

9. 1988 and 1989 oil exploration wells and active leases, federal waters, offshore Florida............ 13

10. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity .......................................................................... 14

11. Bluff Springs and McDavid fields structure map, top of Smackover Formation........................... 16

12. Geophysical log correlation, Bluff Springs and McDavid fields.................................................... 18

13. McDavid field production curve.................................................................................................... 20

14. Jay field structure map, top of Smackover Formation ................................................................ 21

15. Blackjack Creek structure map, top of Smackover Formation..................................................... 23

16. Mt. Carmel field structure map, top of Norphlet Sandstone......................................................... 24

17. McLellan and Sweetwater Creek fields well location map........................................................... 26

18. Geophysical log correlation, McLellan field ................................................................................. 27

19. Lehigh Park field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation...................................................... 29

20. Sunoco Felda, West Felda, and Mid-Felda fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation....... 31

21. Corkscrew and Lake Trafford fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation......................... 33

22. Sunniland field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation......................................................... 35

23. Bear Island field structure map, base of anhydrite in Upper Sunniland Formation...................... 36

24. Raccoon Point field preliminary structure map, top of Sunniland Formation............................... 38







APPENDICES

Appendix Page

1. Florida oil field discovery well data .............................................................................................. 43

2. 1988, 1989 and cumulative production data................................................................................ 45

3. 1988 and 1989 field well statistics ............................................................................................... 47

4. 1988 and 1989 field wells drilled.................................................................................................. 49

5. 1988 and 1989 wildcat wells drilled ............................................................................................. 51

6. Oil exploration wells drilled in Florida state waters...................................................................... 54

7. 1988 and 1989 oil exploration wells drilled in federal waters, offshore Florida............................ 57

8. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity .......................................................................... 59

9. Florida oil and gas reserve estimates.......................................................................................... 61






ABSTRACT


Florida oil production began to decline in 1979 and continued to do so during 1988 and 1989. Jay
field, as the leading producing field for Florida, controls the rate of decline.
Onshore exploratory drilling during 1988 and 1989 resulted in the discovery of McDavid field in
Escambia County and Coldwater Creek field in Santa Rosa County. Offshore exploratory drilling
included six wells which were completed in federal waters off Florida during 1988 and 1989; one of these
was the second Norphlet discovery in the Destin Dome area and was classified by the federal
government as a producible field.
Geophysical exploration during 1988 and 1989 concentrated in the Florida panhandle and the south
Florida peninsula. The panhandle exploration included the known oil-producing Santa Rosa and
Escambia Counties, an area offshore from Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, and the Apalachicola
Embayment area. South Florida seismic activity was east of the known Sunniland-producing trend in
Broward, Dade, Hendry and Palm Beach Counties.
In addition to 1988 and 1989 data, a summary of offshore exploratory drilling in state waters, from 1947
through 1983, is included in this report. This information may be useful in evaluating future offshore and
onshore development and exploration. Of similar value are descriptions of each of Florida's 22 oil fields.
Descriptions include discovery data, geologic information, and production totals.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Several Florida Geological Survey staff members contributed to this report. Charles Tootle compiled
oil field data and production statistics. The Oil and Gas Section maintains files on permitted exploratory
and development drilling. Joan Ragland and Charles Tootle provided comments and assistance in using
these files. Joan Ragland tabulated and assisted with the interpretation of the geophysical exploration
permit data. Joel Duncan assisted with the interpretation of geophysical logs from the recently-
discovered McDavid field. Jim Jones and Ted Kiper drafted and photographed the figures. Walt
Schmidt, Tom Scott, Ed Lane, Joan Ragland, and Joel Duncan edited the manuscript and suggested
improvements.







Information Circular 107


1988 AND 1989 FLORIDA PETROLEUM PRODUCTION AND EXPLORATION
By
Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. #74


INTRODUCTION

There are two major oil producing areas in
Florida. One is the Sunniland trend in South
Florida, the other is in the western panhandle
area. The Sunniland trend includes 14 oil fields;
the western panhandle includes eight. Appendix
1 lists the discovery well data for these fields.
The Sunniland trend production began with
Florida's first oil discovery at Sunniland field in
September, 1943. Of the 14 Sunniland trend oil
fields, 10 are active, one is temporarily shut-in,
and three are plugged and abandoned. These
fields are oriented along a northwest-southeast
trend through Lee, Hendry, Collier, and Dade
Counties (Figure 1). Production is principally
from rudistid reefs found in the upper one
hundred feet of the Lower Cretaceous Sunniland
Formation (Figure 2).
Production in the western panhandle began
with the discovery of Jay field in June, 1970. The
eight panhandle oil fields are located in
Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida
(Figure 3). Seven fields are active and one is
plugged and abandoned. Production is from
Upper Jurassic Smackover Formation
carbonates and Norphlet Sandstone sands
(Figure 4).


1988 AND 1989 PRODUCTION

Florida oil production began to decline in 1979
and has continued to do so since then (Figure 5).
Total oil production for 1988 was 7,746,048
barrels, down 6% from 1987. Production
dropped another 6% during 1989 for a 1989 total
of 7,289,390 barrels. Appendix 2 lists 1988,
1989, and cumulative production statistics for
each of Florida's oil fields including oil, gas, and
water production data. Appendix 3 lists 1988
and 1989 field well statistics including the


number of production, injection, shut-in, and
temporarily abandoned wells for each field.
Jay field dominates Florida production. The
field was discovered in 1970 and reached peak
production in 1978. It accounts for about 61
percent of the 1988 oil production total, about 66
percent of the 1989 total, and about 70 percent
of the cumulative total. Figure 5 graphically
illustrates both state wide annual oil production
and Jay field annual oil production for 1970
through 1989, clearly showing Jay field's
dominance in Florida oil production trends. The
Jay field production curve is typical of oil fields
produced with tertiary recovery methods (David
Curry, Oil and Gas Section Administrator, Florida
Geological Survey, personal communication,
1990). Production has leveled off during the last
three years (1987, 1988, and 1989, Figure 5).
This generally agrees with the projections made
by Christian, et al. (1981) in their discussion of
tertiary recovery estimates for Jay field. They
predicted a production plateau of about 10,000
barrels/day for about 12 years (1984 through
1996). They estimated that tertiary recovery
would be terminated in 1996, followed by rapid
decline to depletion in about 2004. Total
production will be about 84.7 million barrels; 37.5
million would have been produced through
waterflood alone (Christian, et al., 1981).
Figure 6 is a histogram comparing 1987, 1988,
and 1989 oil production for all Florida oil fields
except Jay field. Jay field data would obscure
the information for all other fields since its
production for 1987 was five times greater than
that of West Felda field, the next most productive
field in Florida during 1987. Northwest Florida
production increased by one percent from 1987
to 1988 and by two percent from 1988 to 1989.
South Florida production decreased by 18
percent from 1987 to 1988 and by 24 percent
from 1988 to 1989.






Florida Geological Survey


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ACTIVE OIL FIELD J
0 INACTIVE OIL FIELD
Fgr 1 St10 KM .
0 10 MILES

I FOS050491







Figure 1. South Florida oil field location map.






Information Circular 107


LIMESTONE


DOLOMITE


CLASTICS IhIA4I


ANHYDRITE FGS060491


Figure 2. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, south Florida.


BROWN
DOLOMITE
ZONE


BASAL
CLASTICS


11


SHALE







Florida Geological Survey


EXPLANATION
ACTIVE OIL FIELD
INACTIVE OIL FIELD

5 0 5 KM
5 0 5 MILES


Figure 3. Northwest Florida oil field location map.






Information Circular 107


SANDSTONE


SILTSTONE


LIMESTONE


DOLOMITE


CONGLOMERATE


CLASTICS


AA ANHYDRITE


Lii


SALT


FGS070491

Figure 4. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Middle Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, northwest Florida.


SYSTEM STAGE GROUPS AND FORMATIONS LITHOLOGY
LOW ER ................
CRETACEOUS BERRIASIAN
COTTON VALLEY .......
GROUP
TITHONIAN UNDIFFERENTIATED :::::::...........



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UPPER .;
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FORMATION)

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FORMATION. .. ....

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NORPHLET SANDSTONE .. ...

MIDDLE CALLOVIAN LOUANN SALT
JURASSIC + + + +
K + + +


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Florida Geological Survey


FLORIDA OIL PRODUCTION

1970 THROUGH 1989


1971 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989
YEAR
0 Jaoy Field + State Wide FGS080491


Figure 5. Oil production, 1970 through 1989.


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Information Circular 107


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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

ACTIVE FLORIDA OIL FIELDS EXCLUDING JAY
S1987 1988 1989 FGS90491
FGS090491






FIELD PLOT CODE
West Felda 1
Raccoon Point 2
Blackjack Creek 3
Bear Island 4
Corkscrew 5
Lehigh Park 6
Sunoco Felda 7
Mid-Felda 8
Townsend Canal 9
Bluff Springs 10
Mt. Carmel 11
Sunni land 12
McLellan 13
Lake Trafford 14
McDavid 15
Coldwater Creek 16




Figure 6.1987,1988, and 1989 oil production comparison.






Florida Geological Survey


1988 and 1989 ONSHORE DRILLING
ACTIVITY

Only three development wells were drilled
during 1988 and 1989. A description of these
wells is given in Appendix 4. One of these was
an injection well drilled at Jay field in Santa Rosa
County. One was the first offset to the McDavid
field discovery well in Escambia County and was
plugged and abandoned as a dry hole. The
McDavid field discovery and this offset are
discussed under the "Florida oil fields
descriptions" section of this report. The third
development well was completed as a potential
producer at Raccoon Point field in Collier County.
Sixteen exploratory wells were drilled during
1988 and 1989 (Appendix 5). Eleven of these
were drilled in northwest Florida; the remaining
five were drilled in south Florida. Only one well
was completed as a potential producer. This
was the discovery well for McDavid field
(Escambia County).
Coldwater Creek field was also discovered in
1988 with the first production test of the Red
Rock Oil and Minerals Corporation Pittman
Estate No. 26-2A in Santa Rosa County. Further
discussion of this field is in the "Florida oil field
descriptions" section of this report.


OFFSHORE DRILLING ACTIVITY

State ownership of the continental shelf off
Florida extends three miles into the Atlantic
Ocean and about 10.5 miles (three marine
leagues) into the Gulf of Mexico. The federal
government controls resources beyond these
state boundaries out to 200 miles. The Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) is a jurisdictional term
that describes the offshore area which is under
control of the federal government. "Federal
waters," in this context, does not refer to
ownership, but rather to responsibility (Johnson
and Tucker, 1987).


Exploratory Drilling in State Waters

A total of 19 wells have been drilled in Florida
state waters from 1947 through 1983 (Appendix
6 and Figure 7). Effective July, 1990, all drilling
activity was prohibited in Florida state waters
(details are discussed in Part II of this
publication); however, the information obtained
from the wells that were drilled in state waters
may be useful in future decisions concerning
offshore exploration and development in federal
waters.
The 19 offshore wells tested three different
potential oil horizons. Ten of the wells are within
the South Florida Basin (off Charlotte and Lee
Counties and off the Florida Keys, Monroe
County, Figure 8) and targeted the Lower
Cretaceous. The six wells drilled off the Florida
panhandle sought to extend the onshore (and
offshore Alabama) Jurassic production (Figure
4). The remaining three wells drilled off the
northern portion of the Gulf coast (Permits 304,
382 and 383) were Cretaceous or possibly
Paleozoic tests (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985).
As shown in Appendix 6, only one of the wells
drilled in state waters had a significant oil show.
A drill stem test of the Gulf Oil-Florida State
Lease 826-Y (permit 275), located near the
Marquesas Keys off Monroe County, recovered
15 barrels of 220 A.P.I. gravity oil and 14.1
barrels of saltwater from the Lake Trafford (?)
Formation. Another well, which was drilled in
federal waters near the Marquesas, tested black
saltwater in the Lake Trafford and Sunniland
Formations and in the Brown Dolomite interval
(Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). Charles Tootle
(1985, Florida Geological Survey, personal
communication, in Applegate and Lloyd, 1985)
believed this well could be a low volume oil
producer from the Lake Trafford and Sunniland
Formations.
Applegate (1987) conducted an extensive
study of the Brown Dolomite Zone of the Lehigh
Acres Formation in the South Florida Basin. He
concluded that this zone could be a potentially
prolific producing horizon offshore. He found that









Information Circular 107


P-251 17,;981'
7,479 1983
1956


> P P-293
p-281 10,526
P-43 P-87 7,004 1961
7,009 14332 1959
1947 1968





-N-







LEGEND

APPROXIMATE WELL LOCATION

P-280 FLORIDA PERMIT NUMBER

6,09 TOTAL DEPTH OF WELL,
FEET BELOW MSL

1959 WELL COMPLETION DATE







SCALE

0 50 100 150 MILES


0 80 160 240 KILOMETERS




FGS020491


Figure 7. Oil exploration wells, Florida state waters.


10,563
1963


P-297---
12,560 "
1961 P-289
13,961
1960


P-275
15,422
1959

P-292 "'*
7,686 P-298
1961 12,793
1962


P-22
15,432
1947






Florida Geological Survey


FGS100491


Figure 8. Mesozoic structural features in Florida and offshore (after Applegate, 1987).







Information Circular 107


the best development of the Brown Dolomite
onshore is in Charlotte and surrounding counties
in the northern part of the South Florida Basin at
a depth of about 12,000 feet. Here, the Brown
Dolomite Zone attains a maximum thickness of
100 feet, of Which about one-half is porous and
capable of high volume fluid production.
Offshore, the maximum thickness occurs near
the Marquesas Keys, where about 400 feet of
mostly porous dolostone has been found. Very
little oil staining has been found in the Charlotte
County area, but staining has been observed in
the Marquesas area, as discussed above.
Applegate (1987) concluded that the best
possibility for finding oil in the Brown Dolomite
Zone appears to be in the offshore portion of the
South Florida Basin. Brown Dolomite is present
in at least three wells on the Sarasota Arch
(Figure 8) and probably continues around the rim
of the basin southeast to the Marquesas, where
thick porous dolostone is present. Applegate
(1987) believed that stratigraphic and structural
traps associated with this dolostone, which is
capped by dense limestone and anhydrite, may
have led to the formation of giant oil fields.
In addition to this South Florida Basin
potential, there has been interest in extending
Jurassic production in the Florida panhandle
area. Jurassic production occurs onshore in the
Jay trend area (Figure 3) from the Smackover
Formation and Norphlet Sandstone (Figure 4).
There is also Jurassic production twenty miles to
the west of the Florida Alabama boundary
where several natural gas fields produce from
the Norphlet Sandstone in Alabama state waters
in Mobile Bay. The Mary Ann gas field was the
first of these to be discovered in 1979. An
additional six natural gas fields have been
established in Alabama state waters since then
(Masingill, 1989). Recoverable reserves have
been estimated at 4.93 to 8.12 trillion cubic feet
of natural gas (Mink, et al., 1987).
A Jurassic test, the Getty Oil-Florida State
Lease 2338, Well No. 1 (permit 1097), was
drilled in 1983 to a total depth of 18,011 feet
(-17,981 feet MSL) in East Bay, Santa Rosa


County, Florida (Appendix 6, Figure 7). Two
tests in the Smackover Formation produced only
saltwater. The Norphlet Sandstone and
underlying Louann Salt, which together are
responsible for production in the Mobile Bay
fields, were very thin in this well (Applegate and
Lloyd, 1985).
The three wells drilled off Levy, Citrus, and
Pinellas Counties do not fall within the obvious
target areas discussed above. None of these
wells had significant oil shows or porous zones.
Two of the three penetrated Paleozoic rocks; the
third bottomed in the Lower Cretaceous
(Appendix 6). These may have been drilled with
interest in both the Lower Cretaceous and the
Paleozoic potential. Amoco drilled five Paleozoic
wildcat wells to the north of this area (Taylor,
Madison, Lafayette, and Dixie Counties) in the
early 1980's (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). All
were dry holes and none had any shows of oil.
Paleozoics in Florida range from Devonian to
Ordovician or Cambrian in age, and are faunally
related to African rocks (Cramer, 1971, 1973).
Production from the West African rocks spurred
interest in Florida; however, the Florida
Paleozoic sandstones are extremely indurated
and have very little porosity or permeability
(Applegate and Lloyd, 1985).


1988 and 1989 Exploratory Drilling in Federal
Waters, Offshore Florida

The first federal oil and gas lease sale off
Florida was conducted in May, 1959 off the
Florida Keys in what is now the Straits of Florida
Planning Area. Ten additional OCS lease sales
have occurred since then; seven in the Eastern
Gulf of Mexico Planning Area and three in the
South Atlantic Planning Area. There have been
no sales in the Straits of Florida Planning Area
off Florida since the 1959 sale. The last lease
sale in the South Atlantic Planning Area off
Florida was Sale 78 in July, 1983.
The two most recent lease sales off Florida
were in the Eastern Planning Area. They were






Florida Geological Survey


Sales 79 and 94, held in January, 1984 and
January, 1985, respectively. Eastern Planning
Area Sale 116, held in November 1988, excluded
all areas originally proposed off the Florida coast
(see Part II of this publication for more details).
Lease sales 79 and 94 are discussed in
Applegate and Lloyd (1985) and Lloyd and
Applegate (1987). Historic leases in the Eastern
Planning Area are shown on Figure 9.
Six wells were completed off the Florida
panhandle during 1988 and 1989 (Figure 9).
Appendix 7 includes data on these wells (Gould,
1989). Three of the wells were in the Pensacola
area; three were in the Destin Dome area. The
principal drilling targets in these areas are the
Smackover Formation and the Norphlet
Sandstone (Figure 4); however, three of the
wells were drilled to less than 3,000 feet, which is
too shallow to have penetrated these potential
targets. One of the Destin Dome area wells
(Chevron-6406, block 56, Figure 9) was a
Norphlet discovery and is described as a
producible field by Gould (1989). The Amoco-
8338 well, which was completed in Destin Dome
block 111 in 1987, was also a Norphlet discovery
described by Gould (1989) as a producible field.
This was the first commercial discovery in the
Eastern Gulf of Mexico Planning Area (Gould,
1989). The Oil and Gas Journal (1989)
discusses the Chevron-6406 well and quotes
Chevron USA Inc. as stating that "the well was
not tested due to safety and cost considerations.
However, analysis of cores and wireline logs
indicates the presence of gas in the Norphlet
sandstone." These two discoveries extend the
offshore Norphlet gas trend seaward and
eastward from the Mobile map area of the
Central Gulf of Mexico Planning Area, offshore
Alabama, into the Florida offshore.


GEOPHYSICAL EXPLORATION ACTIVITY

Twenty-two geophysical permits applications
were received by the Florida Geological Survey
during 1988; 15 were received during 1989. Of
these 37 applications, 31 have been permitted,


five were withdrawn or canceled by the
applicants, and four were placed on hold by the
applicants. Appendix 8 summarizes the data for
these applications, including total survey mileage
by area (panhandle onshore, panhandle
offshore, and south Florida) and by survey
method (vibrator, airgun, and seismic gel).
Geophysical exploration was concentrated in
the Florida panhandle and the south Florida
peninsula (Figure 10). The panhandle
exploration included the known oil-producing
Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, an area
offshore from Santa Rosa and Escambia
Counties, and an area east of the known
production covering Okaloosa, Bay, Gadsden,
Holmes, Jackson, Leon, Wakulla and
Washington Counties. This activity indicates
interest in potential east of the known production
including the Apalachicola Embayment area.
The Apalachicola Embayment area was
discussed by Applegate, et al. (1978) as an area
with significant Smackover oil potential. South
Florida seismic activity was east of the known
Sunniland-producing trend in Broward, Dade,
Hendry and Palm Beach Counties.


FLORIDA OIL FIELD DESCRIPTIONS

Applegate and Lloyd (1985) provided a brief
history of each of Florida's oil fields including
discovery data, geologic information, and
production totals. Structure maps were
presented whenever possible. This publication is
now out-of-print; therefore, this information is
summarized again and presented in this report.
Somewhat more detailed information is
presented for the five oil fields discovered since
1985. These are Bluff Springs, McDavid,
Coldwater Creek, and McLellan fields in north
Florida and Corkscrew field in south Florida.
Fields are discussed in approximate geographic
order from north to south and west to east
(Figures 1 and 3).







Information Circular 107


0 25 50 MILES \
0 40 80 KILOMETERS STRAITS OF FLORIDA
FGS110491 SCALE PLANNING AREA


Figure 9. 1988 and 1989 oil exploration wells and historic leases, federal waters, offshore Florida
(Gould, 1989).







Florida Geological Survey


N-










LEGEND

S PERMITTED AND SURVEYED

PERMITTED) NOT SURVEYED

E APPLICATION RECEIVED) NOT PERMITTED




SCALE

0 50 100 150 MILES

0 80 160 240 KILOMETERS


F09120491
Figure 10. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity.




Figure 10. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity.


.4






Information Circular 107


North Florida Oil Field Summaries
INTRODUCTION

Production in north Florida began with the
discovery of Jay field in June, 1970. There are
now eight panhandle oil fields located in
Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida
(Figure 3). Seven fields are active and one is
plugged and abandoned. Production is from
Upper Jurassic Smackover Formation
carbonates and Norphlet Sandstone sands
(Figure 4).
Jay field is located within a trend which
extends through Escambia and Santa Rosa
Counties in Florida, and Escambia County,
Alabama. Other fields within the trend include
Mt. Carmel, Coldwater Creek, and Blackjack
Creek fields in Florida and Fanny Church,
Flomaton, and Big Escambia Creek fields in
Alabama. The fields are located along a normal
fault complex which rims the Gulf Coast through
Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and
Texas (Moore, 1984).
Bluff Springs and McDavid fields are located
west and southwest of the Jay trend in an area
known to be underlain by Louann Salt, with
seismic studies indicating salt-induced fault
structures in the overlying formations (Lloyd and
Applegate, 1987). The remaining two north
Florida oil fields, McLellan and Sweetwater
Creek, are located east of the Jay trend, near the
approximate updip limits of the Smackover
Formation (Lloyd, 1989; Applegate et al., 1978;
Ottman et al., 1973 and 1976) and could be the
result of stratigraphic pinchouts. They are also
located within the area known to be underlain by
the Louann Salt and may have salt-related trap
structures. Current data does not reveal which
trapping mechanism produced the Smackover
reservoirs for these fields.

BLUFF SPRINGS FIELD


Bluff Springs field was discovered on March
25, 1984. The discovery well, the Stone


Petroleum Corp. St Regis Paper Co. number 29-
4 (permit 1125), was a rank wildcat located in
Section 29, Township 5 North, Range 31 West,
Escambia County (Appendix 1). It is
approximately 10 miles west-southwest of Jay
field and approximately four miles southeast of
the nearest previously drilled wildcat, permit
1177 (Figures 3 and 11). This area, west and
southwest of Jay, is known to be underlain by
Louann Salt, with seismic studies indicating salt-
induced fault structures in the overlying
formations (Lloyd and Applegate, 1987). Seismic
data has been interpreted by Hughes Eastern
Corporation (1988) (Figure 11) to indicate
several small structures in a northwest-to-
southeast trend in this specific area.
The discovery well produced 477 barrels of oil
and 170 barrels of saltwater per day. Oil gravity
was 57.0 A.P.I.. Production is from Jurassic-
age Smackover Formation dolostones from
-16,154 to -16,161 feet MSL. These dolostones
are dark brownish-gray to brownish-black, fine
grained, microcrystalline, and show evidence of
recrystallization from originally oolitic and
possibly pelletal facies (Lloyd, 1986; Lloyd and
Applegate, 1987).
The first offset, permit 1136 (Stone Petroleum
Corporation St. Regis Paper Company number
29-3) is located about one-half mile northwest of
the discovery well (Figure 11). The Smackover
Formation was encountered at -16,171 feet MSL,
structurally 17 feet lower than in the discovery
well (Figure 12). The well produced only
saltwater from two thin zones (-16,182 to -16,185
feet MSL and -16,192 to -16,195 feet MSL;
Figure 12) within the upper Smackover. Core
analysis by Location Sample Service, Inc. (LSS),
Jackson, Mississippi, yielded mean porosity
estimates for these zones of 11.4 and 8.4
percent, respectively. LSS found a trace of oil in
one sample at -16,185 feet MSL. This well may
be located too low on the structure. Alternatively,
as shown on the structure map (Figure 11) drawn
by Hughes Eastern Corporation (1988; based on
geophysical and well data), Hughes believes
there may be a permeability barrier between the
discovery well and this well.






BLUFF SPRINGS
AND McDAVID FIELDS
ESCAMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA
STRUCTURE MAP
TOP OF SMACKOVER FORMATION P
(AFTER HUGHES EASTERN CORP., 1988)
7



i'1ea?. ~POSSIBLE 0:
:Z 00- \e OIL/WATER 0 1
20 0oo "so CONTACT 0 |.
" P1234-161 V 36 -
0 -16099 16700
_;0 ,, -


Figure 11. Bluff Springs and McDavid fields structure map, top of Smackover Formation (after Hughes Eastern Corporation, 1988).






Information Circular 107


Ownership of the discovery well transferred to
Hughes Eastern Corporation in 1985. Permits
were issued to Hughes Eastern to drill two
additional offsets, one east and one southeast of
the discovery well (permits 1204 and 1205,
Figure 11). Permit 1204 was completed in
August 1986. The Smackover was again found
at a structurally lower position (Figure 12), this
time 44 feet lower. Two zones of saltwater
production were also encountered (-16,208 to
-16,211 feet MSL and -16,215 to -16,233 feet
MSL; Figure 12). LSS core analysis yielded
mean porosity estimates of 23.9 and 13.6
percent, respectively, and no indications of oil.
As interpreted by Hughes Eastern Corporation
(1988) (Figure 11), the Smackover in this well is
below the probable oil-water contact. The third
offset, permit 1205, has not been drilled. This
well is now actually closer to the more recently
discovered McDavid field (discussed below) and
is outside the potential productive limits drawn by
Hughes Eastern Corporation (1988) (Figure 11).
Production to date at Bluff Springs is solely
from the discovery well. Total production for
Bluff Springs field, as of the end of 1989, was
220,000 barrels of oil (Appendix 2).


MCDAVID FIELD

McDavid field was discovered on June 14,
1988 with the first production test of the
discovery well, the Hughes Eastern Corp.
Walker-Baley number 34-2 (permit 1230). The
well is located in Section 34, Township 5 North,
Range 31 West, Escambia County (Appendix 1).
It is about one and one-half miles southeast of
the Bluff Springs discovery well (Figures 3 and
11). As discussed above for Bluff Springs field,
this area, west and southwest of Jay, is known to
be underlain by Louann Salt, with seismic studies
indicating salt-induced fault structures in the
overlying formations (Lloyd and Applegate,
1987). Seismic data has been interpreted by
Hughes Petroleum Corp (1988) (Figure 11) to
indicate several small structures in a northwest to


southeast trend in this specific area.
The discovery well produced 235 barrels of oil
per day and no saltwater. Oil gravity was 53.80
A.P.I.. Production is (as it is for Bluff Springs
field) from Jurassic-age Smackover Formation
dolostones from -16,075 to -16,089 feet MSL.
These dolostones were described by LSS as
gray to dark gray, sucrosic to granular, with poor
to fair porosity and permeability. Examination of
core chips with a binocular microscope concurs
with this description. Core analysis by LSS
yielded a mean porosity estimate of 15.9 percent
for this zone. Geophysical log analyses by
Charles Tootle (Appendix 9) yielded a mean
porosity estimate of 12.8 percent, an original oil
in place estimate of 4,987,347 barrels, and a
recoverable oil estimate of 498,736 barrels.
The first offset, permit 1234 (Hughes Eastern
Corporation Jones Estate number 34-1) is
located about one-half mile southeast of the
discovery well (Figure 11, Appendix 4). The
offset was completed in June 1989. The
Smackover Formation was encountered at
-16,099 feet MSL, structurally 24 feet lower than
in the discovery well (Figure 12). The structure
map (Figure 11) was drawn prior to the time this
well was drilled. In fact, the map was submitted
to the Florida Geological Survey in support of a
request for an non-regular location for this well.
As shown on the map, Hughes Eastern
Corporation expected to encounter the
Smackover at about -16,050 feet MSL in this
well. Based on the actual depth (-16,099 feet
MSL), the McDavid structure is probably smaller
than that shown. The productive limit expected
by Hughes is still below this depth (at about
-16,200 feet, Figure 11); however, analysis of
geophysical logs from this well indicate that the
oil-water contact may actually be at about
-16,102 feet MSL (Joel Duncan, Florida
Geological Survey, personal communication,
1991). In addition, production from the discovery
well appears to have peaked around December
1988 and may have depleted this small structure
enough to move the potential productive limits
above the level of the Smackover in the offset


















BLUFF SPRINGS FIELD


.4. .4-






00





S1 C 4
S--- n at f








se ae s*u-mae &"









Figure 12. Geophysical log correlation, Bluff Springs and McDavid fields.


MCDAVID FIELD







Information Circular 107


(Figure 13) (Joel Duncan, Florida Geological
Survey, personal communication, 1991).
As with Bluff Springs field, production from
McDavid field is solely from the discovery well.
Production from this one-well field, as of
December 1989, totaled about 121,000 barrels of
oil (Appendix 2).


JAY FIELD

Jay field was discovered in June, 1970, by the
drilling of the Humble St. Regis number 1 (permit
417) in Section 43, Township 5 North, Range 29
West, Santa Rosa County (Figures 3 and 14 and
Appendix 1). The well produced from the
Smackover Formation from -15,264 to -15,318
feet MSL. The initial production test yielded
1712 barrels of 50.70 A.P.I. gravity oil and 23
barrels of saltwater per day.
Jay field is located within the "Jay trend" of
Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida and
Escambia County, Alabama (discussed in north
Florida oil fields introduction above). The
northern extension of Jay, in Escambia County,
Alabama, is the Little Escambia Creek (LEC)
field. Oil accumulation at Jay is within an
asymmetric anticline with the fault complex
forming the eastern barrier to oil migration
(Figure 14) (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985).
The northern limit of Jay field is a porosity
barrier in Alabama where the lithology changes
from porous dolostone to dense, micritic
limestone. The porosity at Jay field is due to
dolomitization of the pelletal grainstones in the
upper, regressive section of the Smackover
Formation. Dolomitization, fresh water leaching,
and an anhydrite cap rock (Buckner Member of
the Haynesville Formation, Figure 4) have
formed a complex, extensive reservoir.
Numerous analyses of the Jay area Smackover
Formation, including comparisons with modern
carbonate environments, have been made in
attempts to understand this complex reservoir
(Ottman et al., 1973 and 1976; Sigsby, 1976;
Mancini and Benson, 1980; Lomando et al.,


1981; Vinet, 1984; Moore, 1984; Bradford, 1984;
Lloyd et al., 1986).
Despite the complexity of the Jay field
Smackover Formation reservoir, exploration and
development of the field have been extremely
successful. Core analyses were combined with
bottom hole pressure data, porosity log
information, and other geologic data to arrive at a
highly successful reservoir management program
(Shirer et al., 1978; Langston et al., 1981;
Langston and Shirer, 1985).
As of December 1989, Jay field was producing
from a total of 44 wells, 43 wells were temporarily
shut-in, and there were 27 injection wells. One
of these injection wells was completed in 1989
(Appendix 4). Total production for Jay field, as of
the end of 1989, was 365,479,000 barrels of oil
(Appendix 2).


COLDWATER CREEK FIELD

Coldwater Creek field was discovered on June
4, 1988. The discovery well was a reentry of a
Smackover wildcat. The original permit was
issued to Inexco Oil Company (permit 1173).
The location is about two miles east of the
southern portion of Jay field in Section 26,
Township 5 North, Range 29 West, Santa Rosa
County (Figure 3). Inexco began drilling in
November, 1985. They drilled the well to a total
depth of -15,407 feet MSL, logged the well, and
recommended plugging and abandonment.
The top of the Smackover Formation had
been encountered at -14,969 feet MSL; the
Norphlet Sandstone at -15,331 feet MSL. Side
wall core analyses by Location Sample Service,
Inc. (Jackson, Mississippi) indicated a potential
oil productive zone from -14,985 to -15,016 feet
MSL. Mean porosity of the zone was about 14.8
percent. Analysis of the same interval by
Charles Tootle yielded a mean porosity of about
12 percent, an original oil in place estimate of
2,080,107 barrels, and a recoverable oil estimate
of 312,016 barrels (Appendix 9).
Louisiana Land and Exploration Company







Florida Geological Survey










McDavid Field Production


C

o1 0
1-1
W
m0
C
0


D Oil Production + Water Production


FGS160491


Figure 13. McDavid field production curve.







Information Circular 107


i I 1 JAY FIELD

25 0 1/2-- 9 2 6 27 I \ 1 "ad Crl A Wib"iU
I
r"--"."" V STRUCTURE MAP
-_ ____ -. TOP OF SMACKOVER-NORPHLET
--- -------------------- 'i OL POOL

I / I- o (Joy-LC FnldUt i t oe Cooical tco iets., 1r4)




A ... .. I -'
-A T 0A / '.474 463 450 4 493 "'
573 0
s-,, iii1 \ -_ I ",40A /
5231 9 7 7 091 ei / 27
S 528 \ / 0 96A \DI 35 / 37
5715' I 494 5 3/
530 -1--5214 495 -15144 -0 *1*14.
\1 / -16147 161
15 5i7 0 -883 481
-1677 -*5310 *-Islas 15197 443 IifI 3







43 4 43-- -, 0 -4-9
\ \ \ \ 918 514 -1516106 509 6 '469
0 676 \- 991 618 -1*-471 M 470 A 2

-1 -126
01r -16354 1663-\ a 51 -162 0 0-- 1 4








14 0 H --15177 543 0_ -\ 1 9161 i 2 \--
0117 1 1253 M
1 708 706 __ 70
114 -1637 5 -503 -417 I52
S WA % 5I C541ON WELL214 -1221 473 10
.- CONTACT, 1974 1 *-. 1




























C. 50 FEET20
Committee, 1974). 101 1054
0-15354 &5 4522l 04 6097 48 U
444 479 -16226 -1102 4 -
"' "\ .\ _-__ __ .1002 '",o/a
,k483 II'/a 6
11 414 -3 1073 537 602 9
59. 419110 `16 1 S2 ,0,,5











6 -_ )W C O N T A C T,-10 7 42-1602- O Weh
0, .2 iEEP U
24 21 2
635 5,',8, 58 I .5'" 6






Figue 14 Ja fied sructre ap, op f Smd~oer Frmaton afte Ja-/FFieds Uit eoloica






Florida Geological Survey


(LL&E) took over operations on January 10, 1986
and plugged and abandoned the well. Bruxoil,
Inc. then took over responsibility for the well.
They conducted a geophysical survey across the
area (geophysical permit G-70-86; see Lloyd,
1989). The stated purpose was to determine
whether to reenter the existing well or drill at a
new location. They decided not to reenter the
well and have not submitted any permit
applications to drill in the vicinity.
In 1987, Red Rock Oil and Minerals
Corporation, received permit 1220 (Appendix 1)
to reenter the well. They completed redrilling on
May 24, 1987 and ran the first production test on
June 4, 1988. This test yielded 152 barrels per
day of 46.5 A.P.I. gravity oil and 280 barrels per
day of saltwater. In a retest on December 27,
1988, the well flowed 259 barrels per day of
46.5' A.P.I. gravity oil with no saltwater
production. Production is from the zone
discussed above, from -14,984 to -15,006 feet
MSL in the Smackover Formation. Judging from
the field's location within the Jay trend, it appears
that reservoir formation may have been
structurally related to the Foshee Fault System;
however, a single well does not yield sufficient
information to test this hypothesis.
No additional wells have been drilled at
Coldwater Creek field. Total production, as of
December 1989, from Coldwater Creek field was
9,000 barrels of oil from this single well
(Appendix 2).


BLACKJACK CREEK FIELD

The Blackjack Creek field discovery well was
the Humble Oil and Refining Company St.
Regis Paper Company number 13-3 well (permit
523) drilled in Section 13, Township 4 North,
Range 29 West, Santa Rosa County, about eight
miles southeast of Jay field. The well was
completed February 14, 1972, as a producer in
the Norphlet Sandstone from -15,965 to -15,975
feet MSL. Initial production was 371 barrels of
51.30 A.P.I. gravity oil and 4.5 barrels of
saltwater per day. Due to limited productivity and


water production from the Norphlet Sandstone,
the well was recompleted as a Smackover
Formation producer from -15,633 to -15,743
feet MSL. The initial production test from the
Smackover, on January 22, 1975, yielded 1,428
barrels of 51.2 A.P.I. gravity oil and no
saltwater.
Blackjack Creek field now produces primarily
from oolitic dolostones of the Smackover
Formation (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). The
trapping structure is an anticline located on the
downthrown, southwest side of the regional
Foshee Fault System (Figure 15). Similar to Jay
field, Blackjack Creek has been carefully cored
and analyzed to achieve a successful reservoir
management and development program.
About 160,000 barrels of oil have been
produced from the Norphlet Sandstone at
Blackjack Creek field. The remaining production,
54,322,000 barrels through December 1989
(Appendix 2), is from the Smackover. Through
January 1990, 20 producing wells had been
drilled at Blackjack Creek; only five dry holes had
been drilled. Nine wells were actively being
produced as of December 1989 (Appendix 3).


MT. CARMEL FIELD

Mt. Carmel field was discovered in December
1971 by LL&E. The discovery well was the LL&E
Finley Heirs number 39-3 (permit 504), located
about one mile east of Jay field in Section 39,
Township 5 North, Range 29 West, Santa Rosa
County (Figures 3 and 16). Initial production was
1,440 barrels of 470 A.P.I. gravity oil per day with
no saltwater.
Mt. Carmel field is separated from Jay field by
the Foshee Fault System (Figure 16). Mt.
Carmel field produces both oil and gas from the
Smackover Formation and the Norphlet
Sandstone. Complex reservoir geometry has
apparently made development of this field more
difficult. As of January 1990, three producing
wells and 10 dry holes had been drilled at Mt.
Carmel field.






Information Circular 107


Figure 15. Blackjack Creek structure map, top of Smackover Formation (after Blackjack Creek Geological
Committee, 1974).






Florida Geological Survey


632 PERMIT NUMBER
-14770 DEPTH


MOUNT CARMEL FIELD
35 Santa Rosa County, Forlda

u STRUCTURE MAP TOP
D OF NORPHLET SANDSTONE
\ \ I (Jim Miller, 1974)
\ABAMA1
.ORIDA- T 6N "
1 28 ^V0 2000 FEET

682 0 600 METERS
% -14930 -


% I N
D U 1219 660 1


-14770 %
+ \ \ 00












-15345
\504
1 14770 \ \
T 5N -- --

S73939


PRODUCER N
BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION
+ DRY HOLE
d ABANDONED LOCATION
-.- OIL/WATER CONTACT, 1974
C.I. 100 FEET


FQ8tl0491


Figure 16. Mt. Carmel field structure map, top of Norphlet Sandstone (after Miller, 1974).






Information Circular 107


There is currently one producing well in the Mt.
Carmel field. As of the end of 1989, the field had
produced 4,666,000 barrels of oil (Appendix 2).


MCLELLAN FIELD

McLellan field was discovered on February 15,
1986, with the initial testing of the Exxon
Corporation State of Florida number 33-1
(permit 1194, Appendix 1, Figures 3 and 17).
The well is located about 3.25 miles north of the
abandoned Sweetwater Creek field in Section
33, Township 6 North, Range 26 West, Santa
Rosa County.
An initial flowing test of the discovery well
produced 152 barrels of 410 A.P.I. gravity oil per
day and no saltwater. Production is from
Smackover Formation dolostones from -13,827
to -13,845 feet MSL (Figure 18). Core analysis
of a potential oil and gas productive zone from
-13,819 to -13,845 feet MSL by Core
Laboratories, Inc. (Dallas, Texas) indicated a
mean porosity of 12.3 percent. The analysis
showed additional oil and gas production
potential between -13,854 and -13,863 feet MSL.
Mean porosity is about 15 percent for this zone.
Both of the analyzed zones contained dark, fine
grained, microcrystalline dolostones with vuggy
porosity.
McLellan field is located within the area known
to be underlain by the Louann Salt and may have
a salt-related trap structure. It is also located
within a few miles of the approximate updip limits
of the Smackover Formation (Lloyd, 1989;
Applegate et al., 1978; Ottman et al., 1973,
1976); thus, the trap could be a stratigraphic
pinchout. Current data does not reveal which
trap mechanism produced the Smackover
reservoir for this field.
The first offset and confirmation well for the
field was the Exxon Corporation State of Florida
number 34-2 (permit 1206). It is located about
one-half mile east of the discovery well (Figure
17). It was tested on March 9, 1987 and flowed
641 barrels of 43.40 A.P.I. gravity oil and 24


barrels of saltwater per day. The Smackover
Formation was encountered at -13,788 feet MSL,
27 feet higher than in the discovery well (Figure
18). Production is from the Smackover
Formation from -13,797 to -13,847 feet MSL.
Core analysis by All Points, Inc. (Houston,
Texas) yielded a mean porosity of 11.5 percent
for the productive zone.
A second offset to the discovery well, Exxon
Corporation State of Florida number 28-4
(permit 1226) was drilled about one-half mile
north of the discovery well (Figure 17). During
initial production tests, in February 1988, the well
flowed 154 barrels of oil (gravity not reported)
and 171 barrels of saltwater per day. The
Smackover was encountered 42 feet higher in
this well than in the discovery well (Figure 17),
indicating a fairly steep gradient between these
wells.
Operations at the second offset well were
suspended in March 1988 and the well has since
been temporarily abandoned. As of December
1989, production for McLellan field was from the
two remaining wells and totaled 174,000 barrels
of oil (Appendix 2).


SWEETWATER CREEK FIELD

Sweetwater Creek field was discovered on
April 22, 1977, with the successful flow test of the
Houston Oil and Minerals Corporation W. M.
Stokes number 15-2 well (permit 881, Appendix
1, Figures 3 and 17). The well is located in
Section 15, Township 5 North, Range 26 West,
Santa Rosa County. In the initial test the well
produced 624 barrels of 43.50 A.P.I. gravity oil
and only a trace of saltwater from a Smackover
limestone interval from -14,044 to -14,085 feet
MSL. This test data spurred rumors that a "new
Jay" field had been discovered. Rumors proved
to be false and an offset drilled in 1978 to the
south of the discovery well was dry (permit 890,
Figure 17). Core analyses of the Smackover
Formation in the offset well by Core Laboratories,
Inc. (Dallas, Texas) indicated very fine





Florida Geological Survey


ALABAMA

FLORIDA
29


32


P175
8


P1226*
-13773
P153 0
4 P1194
-13815


27


* P1206
-13788


* P881
-14045

+ P890
-14071


26


McLELLAN FIELD


1 0 1 Ml
i -I -I --I


1.6


1.6 KM


SCALE

EXPLANATION
P1136 PERMIT NUMBER


-16176 DEPTH TO TOP OF SMACKOVER
FORMATION (FEET BELOW MSL)
PRODUCER
-4 DRY HOLE


11


23


R26W R25W
25


36

T 6 N
T 5 N


12

I


6

13
01

F-
24 Z
(n


0

0
0
-j


0

FGS200491
wain se


Figure 17. McLellan and Sweetwater Creek fields well location map.


30


-N-

LI


o1 SWEETWATER
I I
CREEK FIELD


,














:^::!:t .^ ==::i ;^ ^
^m:;^ ~ ~ ~ 11 i:;:j;;: ?
..7... --. 3 -- ,

i .....
d t : .
^ams^-i~~~r^; -o lw ,^ ?Tn'5
r~f'i T^ .....TV


11.5%


1IIl : :!


i 1i


t i illll


1W1~E


* -
K ii .1.

as/


R
i,': 1?


Dual Induction-SFL/Gamma Ray


FGS220491


Figure 18. Geophysical log correlation, McLellan field.


BUCKNER
ANHYDRITE


12.3%


14100










14200


Dual Inductlon-SFL/Gamma Ray


.f. 7 rl T rrooo-r-T"I-~'m "TTHTTIL;;i;l: -;J5...6A A 11111T 111 m-


MEAN
POROSITY




SMACKOVER
FORMATION


~-~c~U -- -= ---- ----- --


idiij: ij-
"ii' i^Lii i -
*.IrK SI;-Z ^ i~i: -;: i
-- -ff ^ t.:.---- -J


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,,,.. .......

=;=!t *^ ^ ; H!
i i R.V It
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i ii i:::: \\i ='i
^ ^ -- ^ tt -t *
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i i (j ^SS

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_...| 1 L-?.
14 0 :: -JH :; -L -
_" Z _.1
__ Zg:i -..
: : : : ; l '* "~ '* ; : : : I


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- F ,r *


%-1 4.L.vi ;


l l ll ll t '


1' (


|K/


P-1194


|P-I206|


I.






Florida Geological Survey


crystalline, gray brown limestone and dolostone,
with low porosity and permeability, and potential
for only saltwater production. The field produced
a total of 13,695 barrels of oil during its entire
lifetime (Appendix 2). The discovery well was
the only producer at Sweetwater Creek field and
was plugged and abandoned in December 1980,
after it began producing 100 percent saltwater.


South Florida Oil Field Summaries
INTRODUCTION
South Florida oil production began with
Florida's first oil discovery at Sunniland field in
September, 1943. There are now a total of 14 oil
fields in South Florida, oriented in a northwest-
southeast trend through Lee, Hendry, Collier and
Dade Counties (Figure 1). Of these 14
Sunniland trend oil fields, 10 are active, one is
temporarily shut-in, and three are plugged and
abandoned.
Reservoirs found along the Sunniland trend
are composed of localized buildups of organic
debris into mounds or pods which formed porous
grainstones within the upper Sunniland
Formation (Figure 2). The fauna which make up
these bioherms include rudistids, algal plates,
gastropods, and foraminifera. Dolomitization has
enhanced the porosity of these grainstones. The
grainstones grade laterally into nonporous,
miliolid-rich mudstones (Means, 1977, Mitchell-
Tapping, 1984, 1985, and 1986). These miliolid
mudstones often provide the trapping
mechanism for these reservoirs.
The exception to the above general description
of south Florida oil fields is Lake Trafford field.
Lake Trafford produces oil from a fractured
limestone in the lower Sunniland Formation
(Means, 1977).


LEHIGH PARK FIELD

The discovery well for the Lehigh Park field
was the Exxon Consolidated Tomoka number


22-4 (permit 712) drilled in Section 22, Township
44 South, Range 26 East, Lee County. This is
the most northwesterly field in the Sunniland
trend (Figure 1). The discovery well was
completed on July 30, 1974, in the -11,349 to
-11,354 foot MSL interval of the Sunniland
Formation. Initial production was 490 barrels of
27.60 A.P.I. gravity oil and 48 barrels of saltwater
per day. This well was later abandoned and a
deviated well (permit 712A) was drilled at the
same surface location to produce higher on the
structure. A total of nine dry holes were drilled to
delineate this field. All of the producing wells
were directionally drilled because bottom hole
locations are beneath the town of Lehigh Acres.
Figure 19 is a structure map on the top of the
Sunniland Formation (Ferber, 1985) at Lehigh
Park field. The reservoir appears to be typical of
the south Florida Sunniland trend fields -a
leached limestone bioherm. Core analysis by R.
E. Laboratories, Inc. (Dallas, Texas) yielded an
average porosity of 19.7 percent for the
Sunniland Formation from -11,337 to -11,364
feet MSL. They described this interval as a tan
to brown, fossiliferous, partially dolomitized
limestone.
Two wells were actively producing and
production totaled 5,165,000 barrels of oil at the
end of December 1989 for this field (Appendices
2 and 3).


TOWNSEND CANAL FIELD

Townsend Canal field is located in Section 2,
Township 45 South, Range 28 East, Hendry
County, approximately three miles north of Mid-
Felda field, within the Sunniland trend (Figure 3).
It was discovered on June 27, 1982, with the first
production test of the Natural Resources
Management Corporation A. Duda & Sons
number 2-3 well (permit 1070). The test
produced 160 barrels of 28.40 A.P.I. gravity oil
and 42 barrels of saltwater per day. Production is
from the Sunniland Formation between -11,363
and -11,368 feet MSL (Appendix 1).






Information Circular 107


Figure 19. Lehigh Park field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation (after Ferber, 1985).






Florida Geological Survey


Two wells were producing at Townsend Canal
field at the end of 1989 (Appendix 3). Production
totaled 406,000 barrels of oil at the end of 1989
(Appendix 2).


WEST FELDA FIELD

West Felda field was discovered on August 2,
1966, with the drilling of the Sun Red Cattle
number 21-3 well (permit 371) in Section 21,
Township 45 South, Range 28 East, Hendry
County (Appendix 1, Figures 1 and 20). The first
production test yielded 56 barrels of 24.60 A.P.I.
gravity oil and 148 barrels of saltwater per day
from the -11,437 to -11,440 foot MSL interval of
the Sunniland Formation.
The field is mainly a stratigraphic trap;
however, structural closure is more evident than
at Sunoco Felda field (Figure 20). The main
producing unit has a composition typical of the
south Florida Sunniland trend fields (Means,
1977, Mitchell-Tapping, 1986). Means (1977)
summarized the reservoir characteristics for
West Felda field as follows: average pay
thickness of 17 feet, average porosity of 20
percent, average water saturation of 35 percent,
A.P.I. oil gravity of 260, and average daily oil
production of 4,600 barrels. Values indicate
improved reservoir quality over Sunoco Felda
field.
Means (1977) believed that the reservoir
quality was improved because West Felda field
"experienced higher energy and more-normal
marine conditions" than did Sunoco Felda field.
Alternatively, Mitchell-Tapping (1986) considered
the energy levels about the same for both fields
and believed that the improved quality is "due to
greater sub-aerial exposure as the mound
structure is larger and topographically higher" at
West Felda field.
At the end of December 1989, eleven wells
were producing at West Felda field and
cumulative production totaled 41,226 barrels of
oil (Appendices 2 and 3).


MID-FELDA FIELD

The Mid-Felda field discovery well was the R.
L. Burns Red Cattle number 27-4 (permit 904)
in Section 27, Township 45 South, Range 28
East in Hendry County, Florida. The well was
completed in the -11,433 to -11,437 foot MSL
interval of the Sunniland Formation on October
13, 1977. An initial production test on October
24, 1977 yielded 281 barrels of 260 A.P.I. gravity
oil and 53.6 barrels of saltwater per day
(Appendix 1).
The well is located on a small subsurface
feature between West Felda field and Sunoco
Felda field (Figure 20). Samples from the
producing zone show a partially dolomitized
fossil hash with about ten feet of oil staining.
Geophysical log analysis indicated approximately
20 percent porosity for an eight-foot interval
(Applegate and Lloyd, 1985).
At the end of 1989, two wells were actively
producing (Appendix 3). Cumulative production,
as of the end of December, 1989 was 1,239,000
barrels of oil (Appendix 2).


SUNOCO FELDA FIELD

The Sunoco Felda field, located in Hendry and
Collier Counties, was discovered in July 1964 by
Sunoco, when they drilled the discovery well
(Appendix 1). The well (the Sun Red Cattle
number 32-1; permit 315) is located in Section
32, Township 45 South, Range 29 East. Sunoco
Felda was the second commercial oil field
discovered in Florida and was discovered 21
years after the first commercial discovery
(Sunniland field). Forty Mile Bend field was
discovered in 1954 but turned out to be non-
commercial and was abandoned in 1956. The
Sunoco Felda discovery well location was based
on a combination of subsurface and seismic data
(Tyler and Erwin, 1976).
In an initial pumping test in November 1964,
the discovery well produced 427 barrels of 25.40
A.P.I. gravity oil and 11 barrels of saltwater per
















I I 1 1 SUNOCO FELDA, WEST FELDA, AND MID-FELDA FIELDS
S1I0NAI 5 I CIC W O Ii
WEST FELDA- -- -. --.- --- .--- M
.,,1\, I I TOP OF SUNNLAND

I -
'as ,/ I ,




10 111 I. 7I5
I-- R a 0- ..
if --ft Is I, 1 i39

1T '- I-. I M1, + -


-I I1 1
Ts75 1




"---... .. .-- .. __ [ -- -- 1 I
F ------.; -7+1a
6 "5 *-37 -- SUN O C O-. ELD A =
I119" s 1153 rT I I1ri,


..5 -nsw I I -- 3' Itss)
11 I1 1o I
a s jt m I M -- -..

I1 I -

( if 991 l 1 1 = I l. 1i I 1





442 f46- -, -


Figure 20. Sunoco Felda, West Felda, and Mid-Felda fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation.






Florida Geological Survey


day. Production is from the Sunniland Formation
from -11,417 to -11,430 feet MSL from a leached
limestone bioherm. The faunal composition of
the bioherm is somewhat typical of the Sunniland
reservoirs (as described in the south Florida oil
fields introduction above) (Means, 1977, Mitchell-
Tapping, 1986). Mitchell-Tapping (1986)
observed faunal differences at Sunoco Felda
field which indicated formation in "the shallow
lagoonal zone of the back-reef environment."
The reservoir has a permeability barrier to the
northeast which prevents migration of the oil up-
dip (Tyler and Erwin, 1977).
Means (1977) summarized the reservoir
characteristics of Sunoco Felda field. These
include an average pay zone thickness of 11
feet, average porosity of 18 percent, average
water saturation of 50 percent, A.P.I. oil gravity of
25', and average daily oil production of 1,700
barrels.
As of December 1989, Sunoco Felda field was
producing from 18 wells (Appendix 3). Total
production was 11,529,000 barrels of oil
(Appendix 2).


CORKSCREW FIELD

Corkscrew field was discovered on November
10, 1985 with an initial swab test of the R. K.
Petroleum Rex Properties number 33-2 (permit
1170). Corkscrew field is located about two and
one-half miles north and slightly west of the one-
well Lake Trafford field in Collier County, Florida
(Figures 1 and 21). In its initial test, the
discovery well produced 435 barrels of 250 A.P.I.
gravity oil per day with no saltwater. Production
was from open hole in the Sunniland at -11,502
to -11,520 feet MSL.
Core analysis by Analytical Logging, Inc. (Ft.
Myers, Florida) indicated an oil producing zone
from -11,506 to -11,515 feet MSL. The zone was
described as a "fossil-hash" of dolomitic
limestone with an average porosity of 15.25
percent. This description, and the small closed
structure drawn by Cheeseman (1988) (Figure


21), are again consistent with a bioherm
formation for the reservoir.
Two successful offsets have been drilled at
Corkscrew field (Figure 21, permits 1199 and
1201A) (Lloyd, 1989). These two wells and the
discovery well were all producing at the end of
1989 (Appendix 3). Total oil production as of
January 1, 1990 was 524,000 barrels (Appendix
2).


LAKE TRAFFORD FIELD

Lake Trafford field was discovered by Mobil Oil
Corporation on the Baron Collier Jr. lease in
Section 9, Township 47 South, Range 28 East in
Collier County (Figures 1 and 21). The discovery
well (permit 401) was completed on March 30,
1969 (Appendix 1). During initial production tests
the well pumped 118 barrels of 25.60 A.P.I.
gravity oil and 78 barrels of saltwater per day.
Production was from the Sunniland Formation
from -11,830 to -11,892 feet MSL. The well was
later squeeze cemented to shut off water from
above the perforations. The well is unique in
south Florida in that it has not produced water
since that time.
Lake Trafford field is also unique in south
Florida as the only field which produces oil from
a fractured limestone in the lower Sunniland
Formation (Means, 1977). Core material from
the discovery well has been described as an
argillaceous, burrowed, limestone "rubble." The
combination of burrowing and fracturing was
believed to be responsible for the development of
producible permeability and porosity (Jim
Richter, Mobil Oil Corporation, personal
communication, in Applegate and Lloyd, 1985).
Offsets drilled northwest and south of the
discovery well were dry holes. The discovery
well remains the single producing well for Lake
Trafford field. The well was shut-in in March
1988 and remained shut-in for the rest of 1988
and all of 1989. Total oil production for this field,
as of the end of 1989 was 278,000 barrels
(Appendix 2).






Information Circular 107


CORKSCREW AND
LAKE TRAFFORD FIELDS
COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA
STRUCTURE MAP
TOP OF SUNNILAND FORMATION
(CHEESMAN,1988)


2


408 PERMIT NUMBER
-11573 DEPTH
0 PRODUCER
BOTTOM HOLE L
-DRY HOLE


C.I. 20 FEET


1200


Figure 21. Corkscrew and Lake Trafford fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation (after M.
Cheeseman, independent petroleum geologist, Pensacola, Florida, 1988, personal
communication).






Florida Geological Survey


SUNNILAND FIELD

In September 1943, Humble Oil and Refining
Company discovered Sunniland field in Collier
County, Florida (Figure 1); this was the first
commercial oil discovered in Florida. The
discovery well was the Humble Oil and Refining
Company Gulf Coast Realties number 1 (permit
42) located in Section 29, Township 48 South,
Range 30 East. The well was completed in an
open hole interval between -11,568 and
-11,592 feet MSL. Initial production was 97
barrels of 260 A.P.I. gravity oil and 425 barrels of
saltwater per day by pumping.
The well was drilled on a prospect outlined by
magnetic, gravity, seismic, and core data.
Production in the field is from various porous
zones in rudistid mounds in the upper 60 feet of
the formation. Mitchell-Tapping (1985) described
the producing horizon as consisting of leached
rudist and algal particles together with pellets
and foraminifers. Mitchell-Tapping's (1985)
study of Sunniland, Bear Island, and Forty Mile
Bend fields concluded that the depositional
environment of these fields was that of a tidal
shoal with a landward (east-northeast) mud-flat
area and a seaward (west-southwest) shallow-
water back-reef area. The structure map (Figure
22) for the Sunniland field shows a northwest-
southeast trending dome that formed as these
rudistid beds grew with slowly-rising sea level
during the Lower Cretaceous. The dome is
about four miles long and two miles wide with
closure of about 40 feet.
Twenty-six producing wells and ten dry holes
have been drilled at Sunniland field. Sunniland
field has been producing oil for almost 50 years;
increased saltwater production has forced
abandonment of many of the old Sunniland wells.
Eighteen of the producers had been abandoned
by the end of 1989. Of the remaining eight
producers, five were shut-in during 1988 and
1989. The other three produced intermittently
during 1988 and 1989 and were all also shut-in
as of December 1989 (Appendix 3). Oil


production totaled 18,445,000 barrels at the end
of December 1989 (Appendix 2).


SEMINOLE FIELD

The discovery well for the Seminole field was
the Weiner-Oleum Corporation well number 12-1
(permit 662) in Section 12, Township 48 South,
Range 32 East, Hendry County (Figure 1). The
well was completed in the -11,379 to -11,384 foot
MSL interval of the Sunniland Formation on
November 14, 1973. Initial production was 26
barrels of 25.40 A.P.I. gravity oil and eight barrels
of saltwater per day. This three-well oil field was
abandoned in 1978 after producing a total of
85,000 barrels of oil (Appendix 2).


BEAR ISLAND FIELD

Bear Island field was discovered on December
5, 1972, with the completion of the Exxon Gulf
Coast Realties number 2-4 well (permit 563) in
Section 2, Township 49 South, Range 30 East
(Figure 23). The field is located about two miles
southeast of Sunniland field (Figure 1). The
discovery well pumped 132 barrels of 260 A.P.I.
gravity oil and 545 barrels of saltwater per day
from perforations between -11,558 and -11,564
feet MSL in Sunniland carbonates.
The structure map of Bear Island field (Figure
23) indicates a northwest-southeast trending
dome about 4.5 miles long and 2.5 miles wide
with a closure of about 55 feet. Mitchell-Tapping
(1985) found this field to have the same faunal
assemblage as Sunniland field; his conclusion
concerning the general depositional environment
is listed above in the description of Sunniland
field. Despite the generally similar origin,
Mitchell-Tapping (1985) found Bear Island field to
be lithologically different than Sunniland field.
Most of the Sunniland Formation at Bear Island
field is dolomitized and is more leached than at
Sunniland field. Anhydrite and some secondary
dolomitization has reduced the effective







Information Circular 107


Figure 22. Sunniland field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation.


35






Florida Geological Survey


BEAR ISLAND FIELD
Colr County, Floria


STRUCTURE MAP
BASE OF ANHYDRITE IN UPPER SUNNILAND FORMATION
~----< (From Bwr mlm Geologol Conmitte,1978)


0 4000 FEET

0 1200 METERS


N


BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION
DRY HOLE
WATER INJECTION WELL
OIL/WATER CONTACT, 1978
C. I. 8 FEET


*4*,- I 4
-11543



802 800 |
23 -11525 'o-11534 \$ |1

I 19 962 \ 6

779 733 838B
3\ *-11529 *-11532 -11547 I


1 4\1118
1060 1 \ 640
64 563 -11542 7
-611643 -1 52462



824 727
-11536 -11540


1825
0-118 52



733 PERMIT NUMBER I
-11532 DEPTH I


I i FGS250491


Figure 23. Bear Island field structure map, base of anhydrite in Upper Sunniland Formation (after Bear
Island Geological Committee, 1978).


T 48 8
T 49 8







4













+

@
Ol






Information Circular 107


permeability in some sections. Dolomitization in
the lower units of the upper Sunniland, however,
enhanced both porosity and permeability
(Mitchell-Tapping, 1985).
A total of 25 producing wells have been drilled
at Bear Island field; seven of these were active at
the end of 1989 (Appendix 3). Total oil
production, through December 1989, was
10,575,000 barrels (Appendix 2).


PEPPER HAMMOCK FIELD

Pepper Hammock field was discovered on
September 28, 1978. The discovery well, the
Exxon Corporation Collier Company number
23-1 well (permit 897) is located in Section 23,
Township 29 South, Range 30 East,
approximately one and one-half miles south of
Bear Island field (Figure 1). The initial production
test yielded 20 barrels of 270 A.P.I. gravity oil and
206 barrels of saltwater per day. Production was
from Sunniland limestones between -11,586 and
-11,590 feet MSL. The discovery well is the only
well at Pepper Hammock and is shut-in. A total
of 323 barrels of oil were produced before the
well was shut-in in October 1978 (Appendix 2).


BAXTER ISLAND FIELD

Baxter Island field is a one-well, abandoned
field located approximately eight miles southeast
of Bear Island field (Figure 1). The single
producer and discovery well was the Diamond
Shamrock Gerry Brothers Ltd. number 31-3 well
(permit 865) located in Section 31, Township 49
South, Range 32 East, Collier County. In its
initial production test on August 11, 1977, the
well pumped 35 barrels of 22.4 A.P.I. gravity oil
and 220 barrels of saltwater per day. Production
was from the Sunniland Formation from -11,482
to -11,485 feet MSL. The field produced a total
of 1,859 barrels of oil before the well was shut-in
in 1978 (Appendix 2). The well was plugged and
abandoned on January 12, 1980.


RACCOON POINT FIELD

Raccoon Point field is the southeastern-most
active field in the Sunniland trend (Figure 1). Its
discovery well was the Exxon -Oleum
Corporation number 33-4 (permit 829) drilled in
Section 33, Township 51 South, Range 43 East,
Collier County (Figure 24). Initial production was
from the -11,371 to -11,375 foot MSL interval of
the Sunniland Formation. In a production test on
June 20, 1978, the well pumped 57 barrels of
23.30 A.P.I. gravity oil and 845 barrels of
saltwater per day.
Figure 24 is a preliminary structure map for
Raccoon Point field. The map indicates an
elongated series of small highs trending north-
south. The limits of the field are still not
completely defined since no dry holes have been
drilled at Raccoon Point to date. A total of 15
producing wells have been drilled, one during
1989 (Appendix 4).
At the end of 1989, 12 of the 15 wells were
active (Appendix 3). Oil production totaled
4,444,000 barrels at the end of December 1989
(Appendix 2).


FORTY MILE BEND FIELD

Commonwealth Oil Company drilled the
Wiseheart State Board of Education number 1
wildcat (permit 167) in Section 16, Township 45
South, Range 35 East, Dade County. It was
located 50 miles southeast of Sunniland field
(Figure 1). The well was completed in the
-11,298 to -11,315 foot MSL interval of the
Sunniland Formation and was initially tested on
February 5, 1954. In this initial test, the well
pumped an estimated 76 barrels of 21.30 A.P.I.
gravity oil and 96 barrels of saltwater per day.
Core examination (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985) in
the open interval showed a partially to fully oil-
saturated, finely crystalline dolostone and
limestone with pin-point porosity, which did not
appear to be commercial.
The second well in the Forty Mile Bend field,






Florida Geological Survey


22


P998 P1190
-11360
EXPLANATION
P1136 PERMIT NUMBER
-16176 DEPTH TO TOP OF SUNNILAND
FEET BELOW MSL 11
BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION
4A SALT WATER DISPOSAL


141 1 0
329 0 LL

0




12 -


FGS280491


Figure 24. Raccoon Point field preliminary structure map, top of Sunniland Formation.


I


-~I


RACCOON POINT FIELD
COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA
STRUCTURE MAP
TOP OF SUNNILAND
0 1 MI
tH I I
0 SCALE 1.6 KM --

015 26
02 0

/ A 35 Q

P -P928 36
-11352
//*/ d







Information Circular 107


the Gulf Oil State of Florida number 1 well
(permit 182), was completed in 1954. The well is
located about three and one-quarter miles east of
the discovery well (Figure 1). It was completed
as a pumping well in the -11,309 to -11,316 foot
MSL interval of the Sunniland Formation. Initial
production was 112 barrels of 21.70 A.P.I. gravity
oil per day. Water production was not tabulated.
The distance between the two wells
comprising Forty Mile Bend field indicate that
they probably did not produce from the same
reservoir. Mitchell-Tapping (1985) studied the
fauna and lithology of Sunniland, Bear Island,
and Forty Mile Bend fields. His description of the
depositional environment for these fields is
discussed above in the Sunniland field
description. He found the lithology and fauna at
Forty Mile Bend to be similar to that of Sunniland
field, except for the presence of anhydrite in the
pore space and an increase in the dolomite
content.
Low oil gravity and low porosity and
permeability in the Sunniland at both well
locations made this field non-commercial. In
addition, a half-inch hole was found in the casing
of the Gulf well (permit 182) at -10,027 feet MSL.
This could have caused excessive water flow,
and thus shortened the productive life of this
well. Both of the Forty Mile Bend wells were
abandoned in 1956, after producing only 32,888
barrels of oil in about 17 months in 1954 and
1955 (Appendix 2) (Gunter, 1955 and 1956).


SUMMARY

Florida oil production continued to decline
during 1988 and 1989. Jay field, as the leading
producing field for Florida, controls the rate of
decline. The field appears to be following the
production curve predicted by Christian, et al.
(1981) in their discussion of tertiary recovery
estimates for Jay field.
Three development wells and sixteen
exploratory wells were drilled during 1988 and
1989. One exploratory well was completed as a


producer and was the discovery well for McDavid
field (Escambia County). Coldwater Creek field
was also discovered in 1988 with the first
production test of the Red Rock Oil and Minerals
Corporation Pittman Estate No. 26-2A in Santa
Rosa County.
Six wells were completed in federal waters off
Florida during 1988 and 1989. Three of the wells
were in the Pensacola area; three were in the
Destin Dome area. The principal drilling targets
in these areas are the Smackover Formation and
the Norphlet Sandstone (Figure 4). One of the
Destin Dome area wells (Chevron-6406) is the
second offshore Norphlet discovery in this area.
Geophysical exploration during 1988 and 1989
concentrated in the Florida panhandle and the
south Florida peninsula. The panhandle
exploration included the known oil-producing
Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, an area
offshore from Santa Rosa and Escambia
Counties, and the Apalachicola Embayment
area. South Florida seismic activity was east of
the known Sunniland producing trend in Broward,
Dade, Hendry and Palm Beach Counties.






Florida Geological Survey


REFERENCES

Applegate, A. V., 1987, The Brown Dolomite Zone of the Lehigh Acres Formation (Aptian) in the South
Florida Basin A potentially prolific producing horizon offshore: Florida Geological Survey Information
Circular no. 104, Part II, p. 46-66.

and Lloyd, J. M., 1985, Summary of Florida petroleum production and exploration,onshore
and offshore, through 1984: Florida Geological Survey Information Circular no. 101, 69 p.

Pontigo, F. A., Jr., and Rooke, J. H., 1978, Jurassic Smackover oil prospects in the
Apalachicola embayment: Oil a*id Gas Journal, January 23, 1978, p. 80-84.

Bear Island Geological Committee, 1978, Bear Island field structure map, Exxon Corporation Sunniland
oil pool report: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 40.

Blackjack Creek Geological Committee, 1974, Blackjack Creek field unit, Exhibit M-1: Florida
Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 38.

Bradford, C. A., 1984, Transgressive-regressive carbonate of the Smackover Formation, Escambia
County, Alabama: in Ventress, W. P. S., Bebout, D. G., Perkins, B. F., and Moore, C. H. (editors), The
Jurassic of the Gulf Rim: Proceedings of the third annual research conference, Gulf Coast Section,
Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, p. 27-39.

Christian, L. D., Shirer, J. A., Kimbel, E. L., and Blackwell, R. J., 1981, Planning a tertiary oil-recovery
project for Jay/LEC fields unit: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 33, p. 1535-1544.

Cramer, F. H., 1971, Position of the north Florida Lower Paleozoic block in Silurian time; phytoplankton
evidence: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 76, no. 20, p. 4754-4757.

1973, Middle and Upper Silurian chitinozoan succession in Florida subsurface: Journal of
Paleontology, v. 47, no. 2, p. 279-288.

Ferber, R., 1985, Depositional and diagenetic history of the Sunniland Formation, Lower Cretaceous,
Lehigh Park field, Lee County, Florida: Master's thesis, University of Southwestern Louisiana,
Lafayette, Louisiana.

Gould, G. J., 1989, Gulf of Mexico Update: May 1988 July 1989, U. S. Department of the Interior
Minerals Management Service: OCS Information Report, MMS 89-0079, 51 p.

Gunter, H., 1955, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1954 Supplement to
Information Circular no. 1, 35 p.

1956, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1955 Supplement to
Information Circular no. 1, 31 p.






Information Circular 107


Hughes Eastern Corporation, 1988, McDavid Prospect, Escambia County, Florida, top Smackover,
Geophysical Map: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 42.

Jay-LEC Fields Unit Geological Committee, 1974, Structure map-top of Smackover-Norphlet oil pool,
Exhibit no. G-1: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 36.

Johnson, P. G. and Tucker, D. L., 1987, The federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing program;
a Florida perspective, February, 1987: Office of the Governor, Office of Planning and Budgeting,
Intergovernmental Unit, 16 p.

Langston, E. P., and Shirer, J. A., 1985, Performance of the Jay-LEC field unit under mature waterflood
and early tertiary operations: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 37, p. 261-268.

Shirer, J. A., and Nelson, D. E., 1981, Innovative reservoir management key to highly
successful Jay-LEC waterflood: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 33, p. 783-791.

Lloyd, J. M., 1986, Bluff Springs field discovery renews interest in Florida's western panhandle: Oil and
Gas Journal, June 30, 1986, p. 105-108.

1989, 1986 and 1987 Florida petroleum production and exploration: Florida Geological
Survey Information Circular no. 106, 39 p.

and Applegate, A. V., 1987, 1985 Florida petroleum production and exploration: Florida
Geological Survey Information Circular no. 104, Part I, p. 1-42.

Ragland, P. C., Ragland, J. M., and Parker, W. C., 1986, Diagenesis of the Jurassic
Smackover Formation, Jay field, Florida: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions,
v. 36, p. 201-211.

Lomando, A. J., Jr., Schreiber, C., and Nurmi, R. D., 1981, Sedimentation and diagenesis of Upper
Smackover grainstone, Jay-field area, west Florida (abstract): American Association of Petroleum
Geologists Bulletin, v. 65, no. 5, p. 950.

Mancini, E. A., and Benson, D. J., 1980, Regional stratigraphy of Upper Jurassic Smackover carbonates
of southwest Alabama: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 30, p. 151-165.

Masingill, J. H., 1989, The petroleum industry in Alabama, 1988: Alabama State Oil and Gas Board, Oil
and Gas Report 3-L, 100 p.

Means, J. A., 1977, Southern Florida needs another look: The Oil and Gas Journal, v. 75, no. 5, p. 212-
225.

Miller, J., 1974, Mount Carmel field structure map: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no.
27.






Florida Geological Survey


Mink, R. M., Hamilton, R. P., Bearden, B. L., and Mancini, E. A., 1987, Determination of recoverable
natural gas reserves for the Alabama coastal waters area: Alabama State Oil and Gas Board, Oil and
Gas Report 13, 74 p.

Mitchell-Tapping, H., 1984, Petrology and depositional environment of the Sunniland producing fields of
south Florida: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 34, p. 157-173.

1985, Petrology of the Sunniland, Forty Mile Bend, and Bear Island fields of south Florida:
Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 35, p. 233-242.

1986, Exploration petrology of the Sunoco Felda trend of south Florida: Gulf Coast
Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 36, p. 241-256.

Moore, C. H., 1984, The Upper Smackover of the Gulf Rim: depositional systems, diagenesis, porosity
evolution and hydrocarbon development: in Ventress, W. P. S., Bebout, D. G., Perkins, B. F., and
Moore, C. H. (editors), The Jurassic of the Gulf Rim: Proceedings of the third annual research
conference, Gulf Coast Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, p.
283-307.

Ottman, R. D., Keyes, P. L., and Ziegler, M. A., 1973, Jay field a Jurassic stratigraphic trap: Gulf Coast
Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 23, p. 146-157.

1976, Jay field a Jurassic stratigraphic trap: in Braunstein, J. (editor), North American oil
and gas fields: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir 24, p. 276-286.

Shirer, J. A., Langston, E. P., and Strong, R. B., 1978, Application of field-wide conventional coring in the
Jay-Little Escambia Creek Unit: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 30, p. 1774-1780.

Sigsby, R. J., 1976, Paleoenvironmental analysis of the Big Escambia Creek-Jay-Blackjack Creek field
area: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 26, p. 258-278.

Tyler, A. N. and Erwin, W. L., 1976, Sunoco-Felda field, Hendry and Collier Counties, Florida: in
Braunstein, J. (editor), North American oil and gas fields: American Association of Petroleum
Geologists Memoir 24, p. 287-299.

Vinet, M. J., 1984, Geochemistry and origin of Smackover and Buckner dolomites (Upper Jurassic), Jay
field area, Alabama-Florida: in Ventress, W. P. S., Bebout, D. G., Perkins, B. F., and Moore, C. H.
(editors), The Jurassic of the Gulf Rim: Proceedings of the third annual research conference, Gulf
Coast Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, p. 365-374.






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 1

FLORIDA OIL FIELD DISCOVERY WELL DATA








Florida Geological Survey




FLORIDA OIL FIELD DISCOVERY WELL DATA


DISCOVERY PERMIT
DATE NO. FIELD


PERFORATIONS
DATUM FOR DEPTH OR OPEN HOLE
MEASUREMENTS, DEPTH BELOW
COUNTY FT. MSL (1) DATUM, FT.


TOTAL DEPTH
BELOU DATUM,NAME OF PRODU- DISCOVERY


FT. CING FORMATION STATUS DEGREES API


9-26- '.43

2-5-54

7-22-64

8-2-66

3-30-69

6-15-70

12-19-71


2- 14-72

12-5-72

11-14-73

7-30-74

4-22-77

8-11-77

10-13-77

6-20-78

9-28-78

6-27-82

3-25-84

11-10-85

2- 19-86

6-4-88

6-14-88


42

167

315

371

401

417

504


523

563

662

712

881

865

904

829

897

1070

1125

1170

1194

1220

1230


1. This is usually the kelly bushing elevation; where this was unavailable, drill floor (DF) elevation is given.


OIL GRAVITY,


Sunniltand

Forty Mite Bend

Sunoco Felda

West Felda

Lake Trafford

Jay

Mt. Carmel


Blackjack Creek

Bear Island

Seminole

Lehigh Park

Sweetwater Creek

Baxter Island

Mid-Felda

Raccoon Point

Pepper Hammock

Townsend Canal

BStuff Springs

Corkscrew

McLettan

Coldwater Creek

McDavid


Cot t ier

Dade

Hendry

Hendry

Cot tier

Santa Rosa

Santa Rosa


Santa Rosa

Collier

Hendry

Lee

Santa Rosa

Collier

Hendry

Collier

Collier

Hendry

Escambia

Collier

Santa Rosa

Santa Rosa

Escanbia


34 (DF)

24 (DF)

55

49

40

206

274


157

31

36

40

255

30

59

39

43

53

178

45

245

166

271


11,602-11,626

11,322-11,339

11,472-11,485

11,486-11,489

11,870-11,892

15,470-15,524

15,260-15,280


15,790-15,900

11,589-11,595

11,415-11,420

11,389-11,394

14,299-14,340

11,512-11,515

11,492-11,496

11,410-11,414

11,629-11,633

11,416-11,421

16,332-16,339

11,547-11,565

14,072-14,090

15,150-15,170

16,346-16,360


11,626

11,557

11,485

11,675

11,987

15,984

15,399


16,235

11,817

11,651

11,630

14,611

11,823

11,686

11,658

11,897

11,462

16,800

11,565

14,475

15,407

16,800


Sunnitand

Sunnitand

Sunnitand

Sunnitand

Sunni and

Smackover

Smackover
& Norphlet

Smackover

Sunnitand

Sunnitand

Sunniland

Snackover

Sunnitand

Sunnitand

Sunni and

Sunnitand

Sunni land

Smackover

Sunnit and

Smackover

Smackover

Smackover


Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Flowing

Flowing


Flowing

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Pumping

Flowing

Pumping

F lowing

Flowing

Flowing






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 2

1988,1989 AND CUMULATIVE PRODUCTION DATA


45








Florida Geological Survey



1988, 1989 AND CUMULATIVE PRODUCTION DATA (1)


1988 PRODUCTION
Gas Water
(MCF) (Bbts)


Oil
(Bbls)


1989 PRODUCTION CUMULATIVE PRODUCTION
Gas Water Oil Gas
(MCF) (Bbts) (MBbts) (MMCF)


NORTHWEST FLORIDA

Bluff Springs 26,737 13,993 171,510 15,889 5,369 158,041 220 122
McOavid 38,417 12,478 7,536 82,789 35,886 33,566 121 48
Jay 4,729,067 7,443,364 46,050,785 4,814,354 7,595,813 51,452,328 365,479 466,858
Coldwater Creek 5,759 238 11,485 1,766 203 700 9 0
Blackjack Creek 462,464 740,047 6,252,039 517,142 1,016,557 9,581,475 54,482 51,989
Mt. Carmel 63,081 17,138 483,995 12,520 0 55,147 4,666 4,797
HcLettan 64,107 29,549 17,981 44,541 20,302 15,313 174 77
Swetwater Creek (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 15

Subtotal 5,389,632 8,256,807 52,995,331 5,489,001 8,674,130 61,296,570 425,165 523,906

SOUTH FLORIDA

Lehigh Park 168,605 16,493 1,297,670 104,109 8,956 1,510,456 5,165 519
Townsend Canal 30,283 0 156,898 46,590 0 216,085 406 0
West Felda 634,923 44,879 4,954,270 494,652 34,818 3,404,318 41,226 3,427
Mid-Felds 79,221 0 222,258 77,195 0 243,795 1,239 10
Sunoco F*lda 82,636 4,513 1,046,974 36,591 1,308 404,823 11,529 980
Corkscrew 159,838 0 5,505 108,037 0 33,616 524 0
Lake Trafford 1,790 0 0 0 0 0 278 0
Seminole (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 85 0
Sunnitand 30,459 2,629 726,203 5,325 482 124,390 18,445 1,824
Bear Island 337,823 27,815 2,450,255 245,024 19,609 2,443,173 10,575 837
Pepper Hammock 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Baxter Island (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
Raccoon Point 830,838 99,863 643,621 682,866 81,989 626,993 4,444 529
Forty Mile Bend (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 33 2

Subtotal 2,356,416 196,192 11,503,654 1,800,389 147,162 9,007,649 93,951 8,128

STATEWIDE TOTAL 7,746,048 8,452,999 64,498,985 7,289,390 8,821,292 70,304,219 519,116 532,034


1. Statistics compiled by Charles Tootle, Florida Geological Survey, Oil and Gas Section.
2. Fields are listed in approximate order from north to south and west to east.
3. Plugged and abandoned oil fields.

Abbreviations: 8bts Barrels (42 US Gallons)
NBbts Thousand Barrels
NCF Thousand Cubic Feet
MMCF Million Cubic Feet


FIELD (2)


Oil
(Bbts)






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 3

1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELL STATISTICS


47







Florida Geological Survey


1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELL STATISTICS (1)


1988
Number of Wells
PRO INJ SI TA TOT


1989
Number of Wells
PRO INJ SI TA TOT


NORTHWEST FLORIDA

Bluff Springs 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1
McOavid 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1
Jay 38 22 59 0 119 44 27 43 0 114
Coldwter Creek 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1
Blackjack Creek 7 7 11 0 25 9 7 10 0 26
t. Carmel 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 2
McLellan 2 0 1 0 3 2 0 1 0 3
Sweetwater Creek (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Subtotal 49 29 74 0 152 59 34 55 0 148

SOUTH FLORIDA

Lehigh Park 1 0 3 0 4 2 0 2 0 4
Townsend Canal 1 0 3 0 4 2 0 2 0 4
West Felda 13 0 27 0 40 11 0 21 0 32
Mid-Felda 1 0 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 2
Sunoco Fetda 2 0 19 0 21 1 1 16 0 18
Corkscrew 3 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 3
Lake Trafford 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1
Seminole (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sunni land 0 0 13 0 13 0 0 8 0 8
Bear Island 10 0 17 0 27 7 2 17 0 26
Pepper Hamock 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1
Baxter island (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Raccoon Point 12 0 3 0 15 12 0 3 0 15
Forty Mile Bend (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Subtotal 27 0 54 0 81 23 3 46 0 72

STATEWIDE TOTAL 92 29 162 0 283 99 37 126 16 262


1. Statistics compiled by Charles Tootle, Florida Geological Survey,
Oil and Gas Section.
2. Fields are listed in approximate order from north to south and west to east.
3. Plugged and abandoned oil fields.


Abbreviations:


PRO Producing Wells
INJ Injection Weltls
SI Shut In Wells
TA Temporarily Abandoned Wells
TOT Total No. Welts


FIELD (2)






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 4

1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELLS DRILLED


49







Florida Geological Survey



1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELLS DRILLED


Well (1) and Operator-Well
Permit No. Name & No. Location (2)


Drill Floor Total
Completion Elev., Ft. Depth,
Date Above MSL Ft. (3)


Escambia W-16368 Hughes Eastern
P-1234 Corp.-Jones Estate
No. 34-1


JAY FIELD

Santa Rosa W-16369 Exxon Corp.- Jones
P-1249 McDavid No. 7-8



RACCOON POINT FIELD

Collier W-16121 Exxon Corp.-
P-1215 Collier Land &
Cattle Corp.
No. 27-4


2420' FNL &R
1637' FEL
Sec. 34,
T5N, R31U


2,337.66' FSL &
3,381.86' FEL
Sec. 7,
T5N, R29U



SHL:
2,651' FNL &
1,738' FEL
BHL:
1,320' FSL &
1,320' FEL
Sec. 27,
T51S, R34E


6/13/89


8/04/89


1/07/89


20 16,750 Plugged and abandoned
as a dry hole, 6/16/88.


235 15,735 Injection well.


34 MO: 11,796 Completed as a potential
TVD: 11,542 producer.


FIELD
County


MC DAVID FIELD


Status


1. Florida Geological Survey wll number for samples (cuttings or core chips).
2. For directionally drilled wells, SHL is surface hole location, BHL is bottom hole location.
3. For directionally drilled wells, MD: measured depth; TVD: true vertical depth.







Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 5

1988 AND 1989 WILDCAT WELLS DRILLED








Florida Geological Survey




1988 AND 1989 WILDCAT WELLS DRILLED


Drill Floor Total
Well (1) and Operator-Welltt Completion Etev., Ft. Depth
Permit No. Name No. Location (2) Date Above MSL Ft. (3)


Status


IORTHMEST FLORIDA


Cathoun U-16298 Zlkha Energy Co.-
P-1235 Donald Leonard
No. 15-3


Escambia W-16126 ARCO Oil &
P-1228 Co.- R. H.
No. 34-3


1049' FSL &
1330' FUL.
Sec. 15,
T2S, R8U


Gas 1029' FSL &
Sherritt 1050' FUL
Sec. 34,
T5N, R33U


Escambia U-16406 Hughes Eastern
P-1230 Corp.-Walker-lotey
No. 34-2


1500' FNL &
1050' FWL
Sec. 34,
T5N, R31W


Escambia W--16506 ARCO Oil & Gas 977' FSL &
P-1250 Co.- A. Grimes 976' FEL
No. 8-4 Sec. 8,
T4N, R32U


Okatoosa W-16503 Hardy Oil & Gas
P-1253 U.S.A., Inc.-
State of Florida
No. 30-4

Santa Rosa U-16180 Louisiana Land &
P-1232 Exploration Co.-
Jeffreys No. 20-1


Santa Rosa W-16244 Exxon Corp.-
P-1244 Exxon-Champion
International
No. 5-1

Santa Rosa W-16301 Harkins & Co.-
P-1245 Champion No. 16-2


Santa Rosa U-16302 Exxon Corp.-
P-1246 Shrinera Hospital
et at. No. 28-1


Santa Rosa No WO (4) Hardy Oil & Gas
P-1252 U.S.A., Inc.-
T.R. Miller HMittll
Co. No. 13-4

Santa Rosa U-16498 Cation Petrol.
P-1257 Co.-B. Decker
Ellis No. 18-4-3


1320' FSL &
1650' FEL
Sec. 30,
T6N, R25U

1600' FNL &
1100' FEL
Sec. 20,
T4N, R28U

1330.75' FNL &
923.22' FEL
Sec. 5,
T2N, R29U

SHL:
1988.7' FSL &
186.7' FWL
Sec. 15,
BHL:
2220' FSL &
660' FEL
Sec. 16,
T5N, R30U

1600' FNL &
1100' FEL
Sec. 28,
T4N, R26W

1200' FSL &
1200' FEL
Sec. 13,
T5N, R27W

859' FSL &
1783' FEL
Sec. 18,
T4N, R28U


08/26/88 141 9,758 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 10/24/88.


03/17/88 193 17,262 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 3/17/88.


07/14/88 269 16,800 Completed as a potential
producer, 7/14/88.
(McDavld Field)


08/11/89 30 17,500 Plugged and abandoned
as a dry hole, 8/11/89.


10/12/89 22 14,105 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 10/12/89.


06/24/88 182 16,080 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 6/24/88.


01/28/89


25 17,400 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 1/28/89.


03/20/89 76 MD: 16,236 Plugged & abandoned
TVDt: 16,123 as a dry hole, 3/20/89.


04/26/89 25 15,589 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 4/26/89.



10/12/89 25 14,970 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 10/12/89.


12/21/89 191 6,600 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 12/21/89.


County








Information Circular 107




1988 AND 1989 WILDCAT WELLS DRILLED


Well (1) and Operator-Well
Permit No. Name & No.


Drill Floor Total
Completion Elev., Ft. Depth
Location (2) Date Above MSL Ft. (3)


W-16122 Sabine Corp.- 1320' FNL &
P-1208 Collier Co. 1600' FWL
No. 4-2 Sec. 4,
T47S, R28E

W-16165 Sabine Corp.- 1042.81' FNL &
P-1216 Collier Co. 1027.51' FWL
No. 18-2 Sec. 18,
T5OS, R33E

W-16195 Sabine Corp.- 1584.97' FNL &
P-1217 Collier Co. 1644.89' FWL
No. 29-2 Sec. 29,
T47S, R29E


W-16457 Sabine Corp.-
P-1238 Alico Land
Development
No. 3-1


1081.92' FNL &
1398.02' FEL
Sec. 3,
T46S, R28E


Collier



Collier



Collier



Collier




Collier


01/28/88 43 11,850 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 2/1/88.


05/27/88



07/09/88



11/13/89


36 11,750 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 6/13/88.


46 12,000 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 7/9/88.


51 11,620 Plugged & abandoned
as a dry hole, 11/13/89.


12/10/88 38 MD: 12,345 Plugged & abandoned
TVD: 11,879 as a dry hole, 12/10/88.


County


SOUTH FLORIDA


Status


W-16243 Sabine Corp.- SHL:
P-1240 Collier Co. 656' FNL &
No. 5-5 868' FWL
Sec. 9,
BHL:
967' FSL &
967' FEL
Sec. 5,
T49S, R30E


1. Florida Geological Survey well number for samples (cuttings or core chips).
2. For directionally drilled wells, SHL is surface hole location; BHL is bottom hole location.
3. MD: measured depth; TVD: true vertical depth (determined by directional survey).
4. Well samples have not been submitted yet.






Florida Geological Survey


APPENDIX 6

OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN FLORIDA STATE WATERS








Information Circular 107


OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN STATE WATERS


Well (1) and
Year Permit No. Operator


Lease No.
and Area


Rotary
Table Elev.
County Ft. above MSL


1947 P-16 Gulf Oil State of Florida
W-1413 Corp. Lease 374 No. 1
Sugarloaf Key Area
1947 P-22 Gulf Oil State of Florida
W-972 Corp. Lease 373 No. 1
Big Pine Key Area




1947 P-43 Magnolia State of Florida
W-1502 Petroleum Block 5-B No. 1-A
Co. St. Vincent Sound

1955 P-232 Gulf Oil State of Florida
W-3510C Corp. Lease 826-G No. 1
Florida Bay


1956 P-251
W-4122


HORC State of Florida
Lease 833 No. 1
Pensacola Bay


1959 P-275 Gulf Oilt State of Florida
W-5094 Corp. Lease 826-Y No. 1
Marquesas










1959 P-280 California State of Florida
W-5152 Coastal Lease 1011 No. 1
Big Pine Key Area
1959 P-281 California State of FLorida
W-5103 Coastal Lease 224-A No. 1
St. George Island
Area

1960 P-289 California State of Florida
W-5574 Coastal Lease 224-B No. 1
Boca Grande Area
1961 P-292 California State of Florida
W-5713 Coastal Lease 1011 No. 2
Marquesas
1961 P-293 California State of Florida
W-5654 Coastal Lease 224-A No. 2
South of Alligator
Point
1961 P-297 California State of Florida
W-5785 Coastal Lease 224-B No. 2
Boca Grande Area


offshore
Monroe


offshore
Monroe





offshore
Franklin


offshore
Monroe



offshore
Santa Rosa

offshore
Monroe











offshore
Monroe

offshore
Franklin



offshore
Lee


offshore
Monroe

offshore
Franklin


offshore
Lee


23 6,100 Bottomed in Upper Cretaceous(?).


23 15,455 No porosity in Sunnitand Fm.
Well bottomed in Pumpkin Bay
(Late Coahuitan). Very difficult
to correlate this well because of
anhydrite development. Structur-
ally very low.


7,019 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous.


32 12,631 Well cored from 11,661-12,544'
in SunniLand and Punta Gorda.
Encountered some salt stringers
in Punta Gorda. Only 60' of dark,
dense calcilutite in Sunnitand.
26 7,505 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous.


56 15,478 Four drill stem tests:
12,474-12,533'(Lake Trafford?)
12,534-12,544'(Sunniland)
12,582-12,822'(Sunnitand)
14,642-14,702'(Brown Dolomite)
The 12,474-12,533' test recovered
15 barrels of 22 degree API
gravity oil and 14.1 barrels of
saltwater. Brown Dolomite from
14,650-15,036' was somewhat vuggy.
This may be the principal target
in this area. Net dolomite esti-
mated at 400'.

21 6,030 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous.


7,030 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous.


39 14,000 Brown Dolomite: 12,485-12,589'.
Estimated net dolomite: 103'.

36 7,722 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous.


34 10,560 Did not encounter Smackover Fm.
Bottomed in Eagle Mills Fm. of
Triassic Age. Diabase found in
Eagle Mills.
40 12,600 There is an estimated 40' of dolo-
mite in the 12,445-12,560' Brown
Dolomite interval. No evidence of
oil staining. Dolomite microcrys-
talline to finely crystalline.
Core analysis from 11,255-11,625'
Sunnitand interval showed no
permeability, extremely low por-
osity, and no oil.


Total
Depth, Ft.


Geological
Significance








Florida Geological Survey


OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN STATE WATERS


well (1) and Lease No.
Year Permit No. Operator and Area


Rotary
Table Etev.
County Ft. above MSL


1962 P-298 California State of Florida
w-5970 Coastal Lease 1011 No. 3
Marquesas



1963 P-304 California State of Florida
w-6278 Coastal Lease 224-8 No. 3
Honeymoon Island
Area

1967 P-375 Nobit Oil State of Florida
w-8139 Corp. Lease 224-B No. 1
Boca Grands Area





1967 P-382 Mobil Oil State of Florida
w-8304 Corp. Lease 224-A No. 1-A
W-SW of Crystal
River




196? P-383 Mobil Oil State of Florida
W-8305 Corp. Lease 224-A No. 1-8
Cedar Key Area





1968 P-387 Mobil Oil State of Florida
U-8487 Corp. Lease 224-A No. 1-C
Little St. George
Island Area

1983 P-1097 Getty Oil State of Florida
W-15391 Coopany Lease 2338 No. 1
East Bay


offshore
Monroe




offshore
Pinellas



offshore
Charlotte






offshore
Citrus






offshore
Levy






offshore
Franklin



offshore
Santa Rosa


... ...... .. .. .. ,= .


1. Florida Geological Survey well number for samples (cuttings or core chips).


Total
Depth, Ft.


Geological
Significance


57 12,850 Bottomed in Punta Gorda. No shows
of oil and no porosity reported.
Dritt stem test of the 12,521-
12,600, interval tested saltwater.
Rebecca Shoals Reef (Paleocene
and Upper Cretaceous) present.

37 10,600 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous.
Very poor samples. No oil shows.
Carbonates-clastics below 7,000'.


21 12,931 This well drilled into Pumpkin
Bay Fm. (Upper Coahultan) at
12,230'. Drilled into basement
(rhyolite porphyry) at 12,830'.
No shows in Sunni stand Fm. Brown
Dolomite Zone: 11,920-12,000'.
Estimated net dolomite: 70'. Poor
samples.

22 6,041 Mixed faces carbonatess, sand-
stones, and shales) at 4,325';
Triassic, Eagle Mitlls at 5,625';
Paleozoic at 5,920'. Very indur-
ated shale and sittstone. Some
quartzite. Bedding planes verti-
cal in this core. No shows and no
porosity.

25 4,735 Mixed faces carbonatess, sand-
stones, and shares) at 2,882' in
Cretaceous. Predominantly vari-
colored unconsolidated sandstone
below 4,180'. Highly indurated
quartzites and interbedded shales
in core (Paleozoic) from 4,720-
4,735'.

37 14,369 This well encountered Jurassic
limestone. First indication of
possible Smackover in Apalachi-
cola area.

30 18,011 Smackover tests at 17,405-17,411'
and 17,328-17,411' produced only
saltwater. Norphlet Ss. and Louann
Salt were very thin.






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 7

1988 AND 1989 OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED

IN FEDERAL WATERS, OFFSHORE FLORIDA


57







Florida Geological Survey




1968 AND 1989 OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN FEDERAL WATERS, OFFSHORE FLORIDA


DEPTH, FT.
OPERATOR LOCATION BELOW MSL


PLUGGED &
SPUD ABANDONED
DATE DATE


oestin Dome OCS*0-6406 Chevron Block 56 22,572 06/12/87 01/26/88 Tenporarfty abandoned
Producible Norphlet discovery.

Pensecolt OCS-0-6391 Twenneco Block 948 19,200 10/14/87 01/19/88 Tefmporarfly abandoned.

Pensacola 0CS-0-6396 Texaco, Inc. Block 996 17,910 04/08/88 09/07/88

Destin Dome OCS-0-6397 Gulfetar Block 1 2,000 01/09/89 01/18/89 Tecporarfty abandoned.

Destin Dome OCS-G*-6398 Gulfstar Block 2 1,800 01/21/89 01/27/89 Tefrporarity abandoned.
No. 2

Pensacola OCS-0-6390 Gulfstar Block 881 2,700 01/29/89 02/07/89 Temporarily abandoned.

Date from Gould, 1989.


AREA


WELL
NO.


COMMENTS






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 8

1988 AND 1989 GEOPHYSICAL EXPLORATION ACTIVITY


59







196 AND 1969 GEOPNMTSCAL EXPLORATION ACTIVITY


GEOPHYSICAL
COMPANY

Shell Western El
GFS
Teledyne
Western
GFS
GFS
Dee Eptloration
GFS
IaGC
Conoco


PEINI T

6-96-8M

6-100-88
101-88
G-102-88
G-103-88
G-104-88
G-105-88
6-106-8
G-107-88

G-1086-
6-109-88
G6-110-8
G6-111-88
G-112-88
6-113-88
G-114-88
6-115-M
6-116-88
6-117-88
6-118-88
6-119-88

6-120-89
6-121-89
G-122-89
0-123-89
0-124-89
6-125-89
G-126-89
0-127-89
6-128-89
G-129-89
6-130-89
G6-131-89
6-132-89
G-133-89
G-134-89


SURVEYED
FOR


iP Shell Western E&P DO,CL


Norkins & Co.
First Seismic
Western
Davis Petrolt
Union TX
Exxon
Pruat Oif
Coastal Oil &
Canoco


an


PEUIT EXPIRATION
COUNTY APPODED DATE


SR. ES
=R.OK
SR'Q
SR
ES2
ES
ISR
8T,GANOJK,

USRES

SR.0K,ES
DD
DO
DO, N
NO
ES
DO
DDO R, HE
M.iECL
DD


Coastal Oi L & Gas SR,OK
Coastal Petroleua GL,HE,MT,OE,PB


Paramount
First Seismic
SheLL Western E&P
ARCO
Exxon
Shell Uestern EP
Exxon
Nobil t
Chevron
Shell Western E&P
Paramount
Shell Western E&P
Shel I eastern E&P


OK
SR
BR,PB
ES
ES
DO,BR
SR,ES
Offshore
ES
DO
OK
DO
DO


N/A
14-mar-M8
27-May-88
20-Apr-8
08-Apr-88
11-Apr-88
11-Apr-8
27-ay-88
17-Aug-88
21-Jun-88

17-Au-88
17-AW-88
30-Jun-88
19-Sep-UM
19-Oct-88
02-Dec-88
07-Sep-88
19-Sep-U8
02-Dec-M
19-Dec-88
27-Jan-89
27-Jan-89


N/A
N/A
13-Jul-89
13-Jul-89

11-Aug-89
11-Aug-89

26-Sep-89
09-Nov-89
11-Oct-89
05-Dec-89

05-Dec-89


STATUS


N/A Withdraln
14-Nar-89 Coepeted
27-May-89 Copleted
20-Apr-89 Cpleted
08-Apr-89 Cmpleted
11-Apr-89 Completed
11-Apr-89 Cepleted
27-Nay-89 Completed
17-Aug-89 Creleted
21-Jun-89 Completed

17-Aug-89 Completed
17-AUB-89 Cmleted
30-Jun-89 Completed
19-Sep-8P Coeplete
19-Oct-90 Pending
02-Dec-89 Cpleted
07-Sep-89 Cancel Led
19-Sep-89 Completed
02-Dec-89 Completed
19-Dew-89 Coepleted
27-Jan-90 Pending
27-Jan-90 Completed


N/A Cancelled
N/A WUthdrami
13-Jul-90 Completed
13-Jul-90 Completed
Pending
11-Aug-90 Expired
11-Aug-90 Completed
Pending
26-Sep-90 Completed
09-Nov-90 Completed
11-Oct-90 Completed
05-Dec-90 Pending
CanceLLed
05-Dec-90 Pending
Pending


ENERGY DEPTU, CHARGE SNOT MOLE SURVEY
SOURCE FEET SIZE, ULS SPACING LENGTN,NI


Seismic Gel
Seismic Gel
Seis/Airgun
Vibroseis
Seimic Get
Seimic Get
Seimic Gel
Seimic Get
Seimic Gel
Vibroseis

Seismic Gel
Seis/Airgun
Seis/Airgun
Vibrator
Vibrator
Vibrator
Vibroseis
Seismic Gel
Vibrator
Vibrator
Vibrator
Vibrator

Seismic Get
Ai r/Watergun
Seismic Get
Seismic Gel
Seismic Get
Seismic Get
Seismic Get
Seis/Vib
Seismic Get
Ai rgun
Seismic Gel
Vibrator
Seismic Gel
Vibrator
Vibrator


5
N/A
60
0.33
27
150
80-90
27
30-90
N/A
30-90
N/A
60
N/A
N/A


3
20
.5
N/A
15
.33
15
5
.33
N/A

10
.5
.5
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
6
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A

.33
N/A
15




.3-5
N/A
1-20
N/A
15
N/A
H/A


133.2
6.3
113.8
45.0
4.7
28.3
5.0
1.6
9.4
140.0

149.0
46.0
18.0
35.0
90.5
55.5
19.2
65.0
24.1
37.7
26.0
2.5

46.0
225.0
4.3
8.0
27.9
7.0
11.0
25.8
31.5
185.0
12.5
70.8
4.6
50.0
8.5


County Abbreviations:

BR-Brouard GL-Glades
BY-Bay HE-Hendry
CL-Cottllier NO-Holmes

DO-Dade JK-Jackson
ES-Escambia LN-Leon
GA-Gadsden MT-Martin


OE-Okeechobee
OK-Okaloosa
PB-Palm Beach

SR-Santa Rosa
WK-Wakut ta
WS-Uashington


Total Miles in Applications:
Total Surveyed:
Surveyed Miles by Area:
Panhandle Onshore:
Panhandle Offshore:
South Florida:
Surveyed Mites by Method:
Vibrator:
Airgun:
Seismic Gel:
Seis.Gel/Airgun:
Total Pending:
Total Withdrawn, Cancelled, Expired:


1988 1989 TOTAL
1,055.8 717.8 1,773.6
786.9 252.3 1,039.2

632.1 67.3 699.4
0.0 185.0 185.0
154.8 0.0 154.8

339.8 0.0 339.8
0.0 185.0 185.0
269.3 67.3 336.6
177.8 0.0 177.8
116.5 183.0 299.5
152.4 282.6 435.0


IGC
Coastal Petroleum
GFS
GFS
Shell Western EP
Hatlliburton
Halliburton
Shell Western EP
Halliburton
Digicon
Haltiburton
Shell Western EP
GFS
Shell Western EP
Shell Western ESP


GFS Exxon
Teledyne First Seismic
Teledyne First Seismic
Shellt Iastern P Shell Westem E&P
Shell Western SP Shell Western E&P
Shell Wastern EP Shell Western EP
Conco Conoco
Petty Ray ARC
ShelL Western EP Shell Western E&P
Shellt Western EUP Shell Western EP
Shell Weastern P Shell Western EP
Shell Western EP Shell Western EP


0.



cc




CD






Information Circular 107


APPENDIX 9

FLORIDA OIL AND GAS RESERVE ESTIMATES

By
Charles H. Tootle, P.E. #40,500









FLORIDA OIL AMD GAS SERVE ESTIMATES


OIL AVERAGE PWOOUC-
GRAVITY, PORITY, TIVE
A.P.I. PERCENT ACRES


AVERAGE
GAS-OIL
RATIO,
SCF/STB


GRIGINMAL
OIL IN
PLACE,
ARIRELS


ESTIMATED
RECOVERY
FACTOR,
FRACTION


ORIGINAL
RECOMVER-
ABLE OIL
IN PLACE,
ARRELS


OIL
PRODUCED
TNOUGN
1-1-90,
BARELS


REMAINING
RECOVERABLE
OIL RESERVES
AS OF 1-1-90,
IAAELS


ORIGINAL
RECOER-
ABLE GAS
IN PLACE,
NCF


GAS
PRODUCED
TNIUGM
1-1-90,
NCF


REMAINING
RECOERALE
GAS RESERVES
AS OF 1-1-90,
NCF


ORTHWUST FLORIDA
Bluff Springs 53 19.6 160.00 550 1,300,440 0.19 247,066 220,111 26,973 135,795 120,791 15,004
INowid 53 12.8 160.00 400 4,967,347 0.10 496,736 121,206 377,530 199,494 48,364 151,130
Jay (FL & AL) 51 14.0 14,414.50 1,277 820,569,505 0.60 492,341,702 395,356,327 96,965,375 628,720,354 505,466,642 1235,251,712
Jay (FL only) 51 14.0 13,021.14 1,277 763,129,63 0.60 457,877,783 365,479,210 92,398,573 564,709,929 466,58,558 117,851,371
Colater Creek 47 12.1 160.00 500 2,000,107 0.15 312,016 6,802 303,214 156,006 537 155,471
Blackjack Crek 48 16.5 5,719.96 954 100,500,000 0.60 60,300,000 54,482,137 5,817,863 57,526,200 51,969,890 5,536,310
Mt. Carel 43 9.1 481.28 1,028 17,500,000 0.29 5,075,000 4,665,696 409,306 5,218,140 4,797,292 420,848
McLlltan 43 9.0 480.00 430 2,915,540 0.14 412,686 174,289 238,397 177,455 74,905 102,550
Swetwater Crok (2) 44 11.0 160.00 1,070 624,000 0.10 62,400 13,695 48,705 66,768 14,655 52,113

Subtotal (3) 20,342.40 893,037,072 524,785,705 425,165,146 99,620,559 648,189,89 523,904,992 124,284,797

SOUTN FLORIDA
Lehigh Park 28 17.7 800.00 100 8,211,707 0.65 5,337,609 5,164,594 173,015 533,761 518,448 15,313
Tmmsend Canal 28 13.7 640.00 0 4,504,699 0.20 900,940 406,117 494,823 0 0 0
est Felds 26 15.0 7,5000. 80 125,802,366 0.35 44,030,828 41,225,828 2,805,000 3,522,466 3,221,145 301,321
NMid-Felds 26 11.9 480.00 10 5,090,419 0.30 1,527,126 1,239,166 287,960 12,726 10,094 2,632
SunoEo Folds 25 15.0 3,840.00 85 28,946,578 0.40 11,578,631 11,528,631 50,000 964,184 951,329 2,855
Corkscrew 26 6.9 480.00 0 1,667,806 0.40 667,122 524,462 142,660 0 0 0
Lake Trafford 26 7.9 160.00 0 7,690,293 0.06 307,612 277,746 29,866 0 0 0
Seminole (2) 25 14.1 480.00 0 2,366,565 0.10 236,657 84,755 151,902 0 0 0
Sumi land 26 15.0 2,080.00 100 37,685,118 0.50 18,842,559 18,444,812 397,747 1,884,256 1,824,628 59,628
Bear Island 26 11.9 2,880.00 80 42,811,959 0.35 14,984,184 10,575,398 4,408,786 1,198,735 836,093 362,642
Pepper Hamock 27 15.3 160.00 0 976,713 0.10 97,671 323 97,348 0 0 0
Baxter Island (2) 22 19.6 160.00 0 1,276,617 0.10 127,662 1,859 125,803 0 0 0
Raccoon Point 23 13.9 2,400.00 120 42,437,790 0.25 10,609,448 4,443,959 6,165,489 1,273,134 530,070 743,064
Forty Mile Bend (2) 21 10.0 320.00 50 1,112,701 0.07 77,889 32,888 45,001 3,894 1,656 2,238

Subtotal 22,380.00 310,581,331 109,325,938 93,950,538 15,375,400 9,413,156 7,923,463 1,489,693

STATEWIDE TOTAL 42,722.40 1,203,618,403 634,111,643 519,115,684 114,995,959 657,602,945 531,828,455 125,774,490

1. Fields are Listed in approximate order from northwest to southeast. UNITS: MCF Thousand Cubic Feet


2. Plugged and abandoned oil fields.
3. Northwest Florida subtotals use Jay (FL only) data.


SCF Standard Cubic Feet
STB Stock Tank Barrels


METHODS USED TO DETERMINE RESERVE ESTIMATES:
Archie's Equation was used to estimate the oil saturation in two feet increments. The formation water resistivities used were 0.018 ohm-meters for the Smack-
over Fi. (northwest Florida) and 0.022 ohm-meters for the Sunni Land FI. (south Florida). Formation temperatures were estimated SST 76 + depth/80 for north-
west Florida and SST a 76 depth/100 for south Florida. SST is subsurface formation temperature in degrees Fahrenheit, and the depth is the distance in feet
below ground surface. The volumetric calculation procedure was used to estimate the reserves for aLL of the oil fields except Sunnitand, Sunoco Felda, and
West FeLda fields. Decline curve analysis was used to estimate the reserves for these three oil fields. This type of analysis will give credible results for
these fields because they are well into the decline part of their production curves. In addition, few porosity Logs were available for these three fields and
resistivity Logs yield anomalous values because the wells were drilled with water.
DISCLAIMER:
An attempt was made to present realistic estimates; however, no guarantee or warranty is expressed or implied. Anyone who uses this information does so at
their own risk.


FIELD (1)






Information Circular 107


PART II

PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICIES IN FLORIDA:
RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONCERN FOR SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS

By
Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. 74
and
Joan M. Ragland, P.G. 298


63






Florida Geological Survey










TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page
Abstract.................................................................................................................................................. 66
Acknowledge ents................................................................................................................................ 66
Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 67
Phase I: Encouraging Exploration and Petroleum Legislation............................................................ 67
Early Exploration ............................................................................................................................... 67
Early Legislation ................................................................................................................................ 67
Phase II: Econom ic Concerns and Petroleum Legislation.................................................................. 70
Early Rules and Regulations .......................................................................................................... 71
Early Offshore Geophysical Perm itting........................................................................................... 71
Phase III: Petroleum Policy Development in Response to Environmental Concern........................... 72
South Florida Developm ent History................................................................................................ 72
Policy Development in Response to South Florida's Sensitive Environments ............................... 72
Current Regulation of Geophysical Exploration.............................................................................. 73
Offshore Activity and Policy Developm ent...................................................................................... 73
Jurisdictional Boundaries ........................................................................................................... 73
Offshore State W aters ............................................................................................................ 73
Offshore Federal W aters......................................................................................................... 75
Activity....................................................................................................................................... 75
Policy ........................................................................................................................................ 75
Sum m ary................................................................................................................................................ 80
References............................................................................................................................................. 81


ILLUSTRATIONS

Figure Page

1. South Florida oil field location map showing boundaries of the Big Cypress Swamp
drainage area, the Big Cypress Swamp Area of Critical State Concern, and the
Big Cypress Swam p National Preserve......................................................................................... 68

2. Northwest Florida oil field location m ap......................................................................................... 69

3. Florida portion of the 1987-1992 federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and
gas leasing program ........................................................................................................................ 74

4. O il exploration wells, Florida state waters ..................................................................................... 76

5. O il exploration wells, federal waters, offshore Florida................................................................... 78







ABSTRACT


Florida's oil and gas policies have evolved in response to its increased awareness of the economic and
aesthetic value of its other natural resources. The history of state oil and gas regulations and policy in
Florida can be divided into three phases. The first phase encouraged exploration with no stated concern
for other natural resources. This phase culminated in the legislative offer of an award for petroleum
discovery. The second phase began in 1945 with the passage of the conservation law and spanned the
mid- 1940's to -60's. This period was characterized by economic concern for tourist trade and commercial
fisheries. Finally, environmental concerns became an issue in the early 1970's. The effects of these
concerns are especially apparent in the development of recent offshore policies and regulations. The
following text describes the history of oil and gas development and regulation in Florida as it relates to
concerns for the economic and aesthetic value of Florida's other (non-petroleum) natural resources.


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Walt Schmidt, Tom Scott, Steve Spencer, David Curry, Ed Lane, and Frank Rupert, all staff members
of the Florida Geological Survey, reviewed this report and suggested improvements. Debbie Tucker
(Office of the Governor, Environmental Policy, Community and Economic Development Unit,
Tallahassee, Florida) reviewed the section on offshore activity and policy development and suggested
clarifications. Jim Jones and Ted Kiper drafted and photographed the figures.







Information Circular 107


PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICIES IN FLORIDA:
RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONCERN FOR SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS
By Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. 74
and
Joan M. Ragland, P.G. 298


INTRODUCTION

Florida currently produces oil from two areas
(Figures 1 and 2). One is in south Florida, the
other is in the western panhandle area. The
south Florida area includes 14 oil fields; the
western panhandle area includes seven.
South Florida production began with Florida's
first oil discovery at Sunniland field in September,
1943 (Gunter, 1949) (Figure 1). The south
Florida fields are oriented along a northwest-
southeast trend through Lee, Hendry, Collier,
and Dade counties (Figure 1). The trend is the
Sunniland trend and is approximately 12-miles
wide by 145-miles long and happens to lie within
some of south Florida's most sensitive wetland
environments.
Production in the western panhandle began
with the discovery of Jay field in June, 1970
(Babcock, 1972). Although Jay field straddles the
Escambia River, most of the field is within less
sensitive upland environments (Figure 2). Even
though ecological and environmental concerns
affected development at Jay field (Oil and Gas
Journal, 1972), most of Florida's environmental
regulations have evolved in response to
development in south Florida.


PHASE I: ENCOURAGING EXPLORATION
AND PETROLEUM LEGISLATION
Early Exploration

The years 1900 to 1939 were characterized by
sporadic, shallow wildcat exploration in Florida.
Florida's "first phase" (1900 to 1945) policies
concerning petroleum exploration somewhat
parallels this same period. Until Florida's first
commercial oil field discovery in 1943, emphasis


was on encouraging exploration. The only
petroleum legislation passed prior to this
discovery was the reward bill, which was passed
in 1941. Attempts to pass petroleum
conservation legislation began after the state's
first deep oil test was drilled in 1939. These
attempts were not successful until 1945. The
attempt to pass this legislation and the history
leading up to the passage of the conservation
law in 1945 are described in detail by Fields
(1959). The following discussion of this history is
summarized from his report.
The first test for oil in Florida was in 1900 at
Pensacola in Escambia County (Gunter, 1949).
This well was drilled to only 1320 feet. An
additional 79 exploratory wells were drilled
between 1900 and 1939; however, many of
these were very shallow and may have been
more "promotional" than serious oil tests (Gunter,
1949). In 1939, the first significant deep oil test
was completed near Pinecrest, in Monroe
County, at a depth of 10,006 feet (Gunter, 1949).
Information yielded by this deep test drew the
attention of major oil companies to Florida and
marked the beginning of more "serious" oil
exploration in Florida.


Early Legislation

The interest shown by these major oil
companies prompted the first attempt to pass
conservation legislation in Florida in 1939. The
bill was supported by the petroleum industry and
proposed to make "waste" in production, storage,
and transportation of oil or gas unlawful. The bill
briefly:
1. Prohibited waste of oil and gas.
2. Defined waste.
3. Set up the State Board of Conservation.






Florida Geological Survey




SOUTH FLORIDA OIL FIELD LOCATION MAP


A2R24 8E_ 0 r2E RER3E R93
LEHIG A RK O L
,I I
__ OWNGIEhD ANAL I
MID- I A
8UNOCO-FELDA HENDR. CO.
LEE CO. PALM I
II IN .....---...... .. .... BEACH -
LIO
IWET -LDA- ---
CORKSCauseIW CO. ,

TRAFF Ww


I I LAND i SEMINOLE


A ND I
MMOCKI
BAXTER ISLAND Q
IBROWARD

_Lx .. ... ..__.. .

NPINT



FOS 130888 DADE CO.
SED AUGUST 1988
--+-- -J-..

F. (ORIOA ORTY MILE BEND
EXPLANATION
AREA OF
CRITICAL CONCERN
ICAIQ BIG CYPRESS .-


M ItESERVE AREA
ACTIVE OIL FIELD
Q INACTIVE OIL FIELD
0 10P KM
0 10 MI
SCALE


BIG CYPRESS
SWAMP BOUNDARY


I


Figure 1. South Florida oil field location map showing boundaries of Big Cypress Swamp drainage area,
Big Cypress Swamp Area of Critical State Concern, and Big Cypress Swamp National Preserve.



68


REVI!







Information Circular 107


SLACKJA(
SICREEK

rv- A -- -- -^ _



EXPLANATION -
P ACTIVE OIL FIELD
INACTIVE OIL FIELD 44 .
5 0 5 KM
5 0 MILES MILTON
CANTONMENT 4"
SCALE

FLORIDA



LOCATION


S/ \ ENSACOLA
Figu ENSACOLA f

















Figure 2. Northwest Florida oil field location map.






Florida Geological Survey


4. Required notice of intention to drill, deepen
or plug a well.
5. Required that log and plugging records be
filed with the State Board of Conservation.
6. Authorized the State Board of Conser-
vation to promulgate and enforce rules and
regulations and prescribe necessary forms.
7. Prescribed penalties for violations.
Opponents to the legislation argued that such
a law would doter rather than encourage
exploration. A quote from one of the opposition
leaders states:" ... as long as the state has no
production .. there is about as much necessity
for legislation to regulate or control production as
there would be to require paupers to rent lock
boxes in banking institutions." This first effort to
pass legislation failed.
Florida's legislature only met every two years
so the next attempt to pass a conservation bill
was not made until 1941. The proponents had
enlisted petroleum industry lawyers to prepare a
much more detailed bill than the previous one.
The opposition revised the bill to the extent that it
dealt more with ground-water pollution concerns
than with conservation of oil and gas. The
original proponents, therefore, fought the
passage of the bill in the House of
Representatives after it passed the Senate. It
died on the House calendar at the end of the
session. Efforts to pass a conservation law were
again delayed by two years.
1941 was also the year that the discovery
award bill (Chapter 20667-No. 459, Laws of
Florida, 1941) was passed to encourage
exploration for oil and gas. The bill offered an
award to the explorer and operator of the first
commercial oil or gas discovery. The award
included $50,000 and a five-year oil and gas
lease covering four tracts of land up to 10,000
acres each "free of any bonus, rental or lease
charges except the reservation of one-eighth
royalty usually retained in such leases." This act
became law without the Governor's approval and
was filed in the Office of Secretary on June 4,
1941.
In 1943, the conservation bill was Introduced
again. A briefer, simpler version was proposed to


avoid the alteration by the opposition that had
occurred in 1941. The bill had stronger backing
but failed to be voted on during this session. The
session closed with the bill on the calendar. A
separate bill, which sought to protect ground
water by regulating drilling practices, was also
introduced in 1943. This bill passed the Senate,
but died in the House, primarily due to a lack of
Interest by its sponsors.
The 1943 legislature adjourned in June; just
three months before the first oil discovery. If the
discovery had been made before the end of the
session, the conservation law may have passed.
By the end of 1943, more than 15 major oil
companies and numerous independents were
buying leases in the state. Major newspapers
began publishing oil news and discussing
conservation issues.
The September 1943 discovery, named the
Sunniland field, was made by Humble Oil and
Refining Company (HORC) in Collier County,
Florida (Figure 1). In 1944, after proven
commercial production, HORC was awarded the
$50,000 for finding the first oil production in
Florida. HORC donated the award to the
University of Florida and Florida State College for
Women (now Florida State University) and added
$10,000 as a gift (Elliot, 1945).


PHASE II: ECONOMIC CONCERNS AND
PETROLEUM LEGISLATION

The second phase of Florida's petroleum
legislative history began in 1945 with the
passage of the conservation law and spanned
the mid-1940's to -60's. The public began to
show concern for the value of Florida's other
natural resources. This concern was prompted
primarily by potential economic impact on tourist
trade and commercial fisheries.
In 1945, due to the Sunniland discovery and
the resulting increase in exploration, Governor
Millard F. Caldwell appointed an Oil Advisory
Committee to study the petroleum laws and
practices of other states. The State Bar
Association also appointed an oil and gas







Information Circular 107


committee to study legislation of other states.
The two committees worked together, with
advice from the Interstate Oil Compact
Commission, to prepare what was to become the
first conservation law. The 1945 legislature saw
the introduction of this conservation law and
several other related oil bills. The bills included:
1. The conservation law.
2. A bill to ratify the Interstate Oil Compact
and to make Florida a member of the Inter-
state Oil Compact Commission.
3. A bill for taxation of oil and gas produced
in Florida.
4. A state lease law.
Unexpected opposition arose to all of the oil
bills; this time from the cities along the west
coast of Florida. They were not opposed to the
subject matter of the oil legislation, but wanted
provisions to be inserted in all the proposed bills
that would ensure protection of the Florida west
coast beaches from pollution and "unsightly
operations." Their concerns were not
environmental but rather economic. They
contended that oil operations might "destroy the
beauty of the west coast and do irreparable
damage to the tourist trade."
Newspapers of these cities "clamored" for
beach protection. Amendments were adopted
which addressed this issue and were made a
part of Florida's conservation bill. After six years
of effort, a law providing for the conservation of
oil and gas in Florida was finally passed and
signed by the Governor on June 5, 1945
(Chapter 22819-No. 305, Laws of Florida, 1945).
The bill to ratify the Interstate Oil Compact and
make Florida a member of the Interstate Oil
Compact Commission (Chapter 22823-No. 270,
Laws of Florida, 1945) and the state lease law
(Chapter 22824-No. 310, Law of Florida, 1945)
were also passed by the 1945 legislature.
The conservation law:
1. Prohibited the waste of oil or gas.
2. Set up the State Board of Conservation and
gave them the authority to:
a. administer and enforce the Conservation
Act,
b. adopt necessary rules and regulations,


c. establish drilling units, and
d. regulate production procedures as nec-
essary to prevent waste.
3. Set penalties for violations.
4. Restricted drilling on or near improved
beaches or municipalities.
A taxation law was not passed until the next
legislative session. The oil and gas taxation act
(Chapter 22784-No. 270, Laws of Florida, 1947)
became law without the Governor's approval and
was filed in the Secretary of State's office June 3,
1947.

Early Rules and Regulations

The first rules regulating oil and gas
exploration and production were adopted in 1946
(Section 115-B-2.05, Florida Administrative Code
(F.A.C.)). There was no mention in the rules of
environmental concerns. As discussed
previously, the statutory protection for improved
beaches was enacted in response to an
economic issue. Primarily, the rules were written
to "... prevent waste of oil or gas ..."
Rule revisions in 1949 (Gunter, 1950), 1962
and 1963 (Babcock, 1964) were procedural in
nature and did not include environmental
concerns. The 1949 and 1962 revisions added
provisions for the temporary abandonment of
wells and defined an abandoned well. The 1963
revision changed the time for supplying the Oil
and Gas Section of the Division of Geology with
electrical logs and other surveys made in the
drilling of a well from six months to ninety days. It
also provided that the State Board of
Conservation would keep information confidential
for a period not exceeding one year from the
date the information is filed, unless exceptional
hardship was proven.


Early Offshore Geophysical Permitting

In 1963, the first five offshore geophysical
permits were granted by the State Board of
Conservation (Babcock, 1964). In 1965, a






Florida Geological Survey


statement of policy outlining rules and
regulations to be observed in performing offshore
geological and/or geophysical work was
prepared by the State Board of Conservation
(Babcock, 1966). These covered "submerged
lands, other than inland waters of Florida and
applicable to federal lands seaward of Florida's
boundary." The rules were supposedly "pursuant
to authorization of the Department of the Interior
of the United States dated April 3, 1965, and
published in the federal register (Federal
Register Document 56-2450, Volume 21, No.
64)."
Approximately 100 offshore geophysical
permits were issued. In the early 1970's, it was
determined that there was no statutory authority
to issue these permits and geophysical
permitting was discontinued (David Curry, Florida
Geological Survey Oil and Gas Section
Administrator, personal communication, 1989).
These rules expressed concern for natural
resources other than oil and gas, primarily for
commercial fisheries; thus, the concern was
again prompted by economics. They included;
however, a brief reference which indicates an
aesthetic or environmental concern (Babcock,
1966):
"All operators conducting seismic operations
shall use reasonable precaution in
accordance with approved and accepted
methods to prevent destruction of, or injury
to, fish, oyster, shrimp and other aquatic life,
wildlife, or other natural resources."


PHASE IIl: PETROLEUM POLICY
DEVELOPMENT IN RESPONSE TO
ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN

South Florida Development History

The minimal legislative activity and apparent
lack of environmental concern between the time
of the passage of the conservation law and the
early 1970's may have been partly due to the
slow development and limited success in south


Florida following the opening of the Sunniland
field. During the years between Sunniland field
discovery (1943) and the first rule revision to
include extensive environmental concerns
(1972), only 92 exploratory wells were drilled in
south Florida. The Sunniland discovery was not
followed by the usually rapid successes seen
when new production areas are opened. Forty
Mile Bend field was discovered in 1954, but
showed disappointing production from only two
wells and was abandoned in 1955 (Gunter, 1955
and 1956). The second really successful oil field
was not discovered until 1964, 21 years after the
Sunniland discovery. This was the Sunoco Felda
field (Babcock, 1966). Discoveries of West Felda
field in 1966 (Babcock, 1968), Lake Trafford field
in 1969 (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985), and Bear
Island in 1972 (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985)
followed.


Policy Development In Response to South
Florida's Sensitive Environments

The rule revision of 1972 included the first
statutory evidence of serious environmental
concerns and the first mention of concern for
onshore native and sensitive environmental
resources. These rules incorporated the
concerns that developed through the years with
the recognition of the importance of wetland
environments, especially as it related to oil
exploration and development in south Florida.
South Florida oil production is partially within
the Big Cypress Swamp and is adjacent to the
Everglades (Figure 1). The wetlands of these
areas provide important feeding, nesting, and
wintering grounds for migrating and several
endangered and threatened species. are
dependent upon the wetland ecosystem for
subsistence (Big Cypress Area Management
Task Force, 1984).
The Big Cypress Swamp Advisory Committee
was created by the Governor and Cabinet in
1971 in response to pressures exerted on the Big
Cypress ecosystem by many external factors, not







Information Circular 107


solely by oil and gas exploration. This Committee
provides a forum for industry, various regulatory
agencies, and environmental groups to allow oil
exploration and development while ensuring the
protection of sensitive environmental and wildlife
resources (Big Cypress Area Management Task
Force, 1984).
In 1974, Congress set aside about 40 percent
of the Big Cypress Swamp (570,000 acres) as
the Big Cypress National Preserve (Figure 1). In
the legislation creating the Preserve, the National
Park Service acquired the surface land rights,
but, in most cases, not the mineral rights. This
legislation (Public Law 93-440) allows oil and gas
exploration as long as it is not detrimental to the
purpose of the preserve, which is to: ... ensure
the preservation, conservation and protection of
the natural, scenic, hydrologic, floral, faunal and
recreational values of the Big Cypress
watershed, and to provide the enhancement and
public enjoyment thereof."
The rule revisions of 1981 through 1986
incorporated additional environmental concerns.
These rules and the interagency cooperation of
the Big Cypress Swamp Advisory Committee
allow oil production and exploration to take place
while minimizing damage to the environment.


Current Regulation of
Geophysical Exploration

An amendment in 1980 gave the Florida
Geological Survey the statutory authority to
regulate geophysical activity, both onshore and
offshore in state waters (Chapter 377, Part 1,
Florida Statutes). Rules were adopted in 1984
(Chapter 16C-26.07, F.A.C.) to implement this
authority and legitimate permitting began in July
1984. The rules state:
"It is the intent of the department to permit
geophysical operations in Florida
provided that this activity is conducted in a
manner which minimizes or prevents the
destruction of or injury to the environment
and the natural resources of the State of


Florida."
There were major revisions to the geophysical
rules in 1985 and 1986 that resulted from safety
violations by some geophysical companies and
from additional concerns about wildlife habitat
and sensitive environments.


Offshore Activity and Policy Development
JURISDICTIONAL BOUNDARIES

State ownership of the continental shelf off
Florida extends three miles into the Atlantic
Ocean and about 10.5 miles (three marine
leagues) into the Gulf of Mexico. The federal
government controls resources beyond these
state boundaries out to 200 miles. The Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) is a jurisdictional term
that describes the offshore area that is under the
control of the federal government. The federal
government divides the OCS into planning areas.
Three federal OCS planning areas surround
Florida: the Eastern Planning Area, the Straits of
Florida Planning Area, and the South Atlantic
Planning area (Figure 3) (Johnson and Tucker,
1987).


OFFSHORE STATE WATERS


There has been no leasing of tracts within
Florida state waters since the early 1980's. At
this time, the only known active leases within
Florida state waters are held by Coastal
Petroleum Company. Three leases were
obtained by Coastal Petroleum in the late 1940's.
Two of these leases cover state land in the Gulf
of Mexico, from the coastline to about 10 miles
offshore, between Apalachicola and Naples,
Florida and the submerged land of rivers and
lakes that feed this area. A third lease covers
Lake Okeechobee.
Between 1947 and 1983, a total of 19 wells
were drilled in Florida state waters (Figure 4).






Florida Geological Survey


Figure 3. Florida portion of the 1987-1992 federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing program
(after Johnson and Tucker, 1987). The areas off Florida Bay and the Florida Keys were
removed from the 5-year plan. The area south of 260 North latitude was removed from the
November 1988 lease sale. President Bush later canceled Sale 116, Part II in this area until
after the year 2000.






Information Circular 107


Detailed information on these wells is tabulated
in Part I, Appendix 6, of this publication. One of
these wells, .drilled in 1959 in the Marquesas
Keys area (Florida permit 275, Figure 4), had a
significant oil show in the Lake Trafford (?)
Formation (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985; also Part
I, Appendix 6 of this publication).
Recognition of environmental sensitivity, as
well as dependence of many commercial
enterprises on the vitality of these areas, has led
state government to place all state waters under
a no-lease protection policy. This policy was
enacted by the legislature in two steps: effective
July 1, 1989, drilling was prohibited in Florida
state waters south of 260 north latitude off the
west coast and south of 270 north latitude off the
east coast; effective July 31, 1990, drilling was
prohibited in the remainder of Florida's territorial
seas, i.e., north of 260 north latitude off Florida's
west coast to the western boundary of the state
bordering Alabama and north of 270 north
latitude off Florida's east coast to the northern
boundary of the state bordering Georgia (Section
377.242, Florida Statutes).


OFFSHORE FEDERAL WATERS
Activity

A total of 53 wells have been drilled in federal
waters offshore Florida; 43 wells in the Eastern
Planning Area, 3 in the Straits of Florida Planning
Area near the Marquesas Keys, and 7 in the
South Atlantic Planning Area off northern Florida
and southern Georgia (through February, 1989)
(Figure 5). This relatively small number of
offshore wells has not resulted in any
development in Florida's offshore to date.
However, two Destin Dome area wells (Amoco-
8338 and Chevron-6406, Figure 5) off Florida are
Norphlet discoveries and are described as
producible fields by Gould (1989).
The Amoco-8338 well, completed in Destin
Dome block 111 in 1987, was the first
commercial discovery in the Eastern Gulf of
Mexico Planning Area (Gould, 1989). The Oil and


Gas Journal (1989) discusses the Chevron-6406
well and quotes Chevron USA Inc. as stating that
"the well was not tested due to safety and cost
considerations. However, analysis of cores and
wireline logs indicates the presence of gas in the
Norphlet sandstone." These two discoveries
extend the offshore Norphlet gas trend seaward
and eastward from the Mobile map area of the
Central Gulf of Mexico Planning Area, offshore
Alabama, into the Eastern Gulf of Mexico
Planning Area, offshore Florida.
In addition to the potential indicated by these
Destin Dome discoveries, an offshore south
Florida well (Florida permit 284, Figure 5), drilled
in the Marquesas Keys area in 1960, had
potential for low volume oil production from the
Lake Trafford and Sunniland Formations
(Applegate and Lloyd, 1985).


Policy

Former Florida Governor Bob Martinez
negotiated with the federal government
concerning the current five-year (1987-1992)
federal OCS Oil and Gas Leasing program
(Figure 3). His negotiations reflected his belief
that "oil and gas activities must not be allowed at
the expense of our unique and sensitive
resources" (Governor Martinez, March 3, 1987
letter to Secretary of the Interior, Donald Hodel).
When the five-year oil and gas leasing plan
was first proposed by the Secretary of the
Interior, Donald Hodel, Governor Martinez
expressed his concerns to both Secretary Hodel
and to President Reagan. He requested that
sensitive areas off Apalachicola Bay in northwest
Florida, Florida Bay and the Florida Keys be
removed from the plan. In August 1987, the
Governor filed a petition for judicial review in
federal court of the Department of the Interior's
five-year leasing plan because these areas were
not removed (Press Release, Office of the
Governor, August 14, 1987).
In January 1988, Secretary Hodel
accompanied Governor Martinez on a snorkeling








Florida Geological Survey


7,47 1993
1956


P-e1 10,526
P-43 -3P 7WEL L19
7,009 14,338 1959
1947 1968


4,710
1967 1
N P-382
6,019
1967


P-304 9
10563
1963
LEGEND

APPROXIMATE WELL LOCATION

P -80 FLORIDA PERMIT NUMBER

TOTAL DEPTH OF WELL, P-375 -
,0 FEET BELOW MSL }eg9o0
1967 1
1959 WELL COMPLETION DATE Pe 97"
1961 P-2e9
13,961
1960




SCALE

0 50 100 150 MILES
t- -- ^ -^ ---- ^ ----

0 80 160 240 KILOMETERS
P-2
14


FOS02041 P-Me
1961










Figure 4. Oil exploration wells, Florida state waters.


'75
22
9


'-298
2,793
962


P-22
15,432
1947






Information Circular 107


trip to the Florida Keys. The Governor was able
to show Secretary Hodel "exactly what it is that
we in Florida are fighting to protect." The
following March, the Secretary of the Interior
agreed to remove 11 million acres of sensitive
habitat around Florida Bay and the Keys from
further consideration for leasing under the five-
year plan (Figure 3). The Secretary further
agreed to require a one-year study before any
drilling could take place in an area of "special
concern" off northwest Florida (Figure 3). The
study would verify that the exploration would be
for gas and not oil. The Department of the
Interior would also establish an emergency
response team to deal with possible accidents.
As a result of this agreement, the petition for
judicial review of the five-year plan was dropped
(Press Release, Office of the Governor, March
24, 1988).
In May, 1988, the Governor requested that the
federal government delay exploratory drilling for
oil and gas off southwest Florida. The request
specifically referred to leases which were sold off
southwest Florida during 1984 and 1985. The
leases are in an area south of Naples to just
north of the Dry Tortugas, Marquesas Islands,
and the Florida Keys (south of 260 north latitude,
Figure 3). Congress had required a three-year
environmental study before exploratory drilling
would be permitted in this area. A panel of
scientists was assembled by Governor Martinez
to review the federal environmental study. The
panel concluded that the federal study was not
extensive enough to ensure protection of
sensitive environmental resources. Specifically,
there was not enough information to determine
the potential effects of an oil spill. Subsequently,
the Governor supported and Congress imposed
a one-year drilling moratorium on the area south
of 260 north latitude (Press Releases, Office of
the Governor, May 26, 1988, and June 16,
1988).
In June 1988, Hodel agreed to remove 14
million acres in the same area (south of 260 north
latitude) from the November 1988 lease sale
(Figure 3). Martinez and Hodel appointed two


task forces to assess the environmental impact
of proposed drilling in previously leased areas.
One task force assessed the risk posed by oil
spills and the directions spilled oil would be
carried by winds and currents. The second task
force assessed the impact of drilling on marine
and coastal resources (Press Release, Office of
the Governor, June 16, 1988). President George
Bush established an additional federal task force
to review drilling and leasing in this area. As a
result of this task force, President Bush
canceled, until after the year 2000, Gulf of
Mexico Sale 116, Part II, which covered this
area. He also ordered the Minerals Management
Service to begin procedures to cancel the leases
that oil companies hold in this sale area and
begin discussions with Florida on a joint federal-
state repurchase of the leases costing $100-
$200 million (Oil and Gas Journal, 1990).
The House Appropriations Committee voted in
June 1990 to delay lease sale 137 (scheduled for
November 1991), which includes the area from
Naples to Pensacola. Also in June 1990,
President Bush proposed a 12-year moratorium
on drilling off the southwest coast near the
Florida Keys, but this was not supported by the
same House panel that delayed lease sale 137.
The panel said they did not want to lock up the
area for that long a time.
Florida's current Governor Lawton Chiles has
begun discussion with President George Bush
concerning the draft proposed 5-year OCS oil
and gas leasing program for mid-1992 through
mid-1997. The 5-year program includes oil and
gas lease sales off Florida's panhandle in 1994
and 1997. In a letter to the president dated
February 18, 1991, the governor stated that:
"The west Florida coast contains many
sensitive marine and coastal resources
which are vital to our State's well-being. The
economy of Florida is directly tied to these
resources through such industries as
tourism and recreational and commercial
fishing. We cannot afford to place these
marine and coastal resources at
unnecessary risk, simply because this






Florida Geological Survey


0 25 0 MIi S
h 0 o Momcun STRAITS OF FLORIDA
SCALE PLANNING AREA


Figure 5. Oil exploration wells, federal waters, offshore Florida. Well locations are plotted at the center
of their three-square mile lease block. If two or more wells have been drilled In the same
lease block, they are represented by the same location point and code on the map and In the
map location code and well data table.







Information Circular 107


MAP LOCATION CODES AND WELL DATA

LEASE NO.
MAP OR FLORIDA PLUGGED & TOTAL
PLANNING LOCATION MAP BLOCK PERMIT WELL ABANDONED DEPTH
AREA CODE AREA NUMBER NO. (P-) OPERATOR NO. (1) DATE (FT.)
EASTERN 1 Destin Dome 162 2486 Exxon 1 1974 10,930
GULF OF 2 Destin Dome 118 2492 Exxon 1 1974 7,075
MEXICO 3 Florida Middle Ground 252 2516 Texaco 1 1975 15,663
PLANNING 4 Destin Dome 166 2490 Fina 1 1975 17,608
AREA (2) 5 St. Petersburg 7 2527 SheLl 1 1975 18,443
1 Destin Dome 162 2486 Exxon 2 1975 10,418
2 Destin Dome 118 2492 Exxon 2 1975 7,507
6 St. Petersburg 100 2523 Texaco 1 1975 17,388
7 Destin Dome 250 2472 Exxon 1 1975 6,634
8 Destin Dome 207 2480 Exxon 1 1975 4,800
1 Destin Dome 162 2486 Exxon 3 1975 17,938
9 Destin Dome 360 2468 Gulf 1 1975 20,988
10 The ELbow 566 3344 Mobil 1 1977 15,865
11 Destin Dome 617 2463 Chevron 1 1977 10,513
12 Destin Dome 31 2502 Amoco 1 1977 18,338
13 Destin Dome 529 3888 SheLl 1 1980 20,450.
14 Charlotte Harbor 144 3906 Gulf 1 1981 11,362
15 Charlotte Harbor 672 3917 Tenneco 1 1981 11,302
16 Charlotte Harbor 265 3912 Shell 1 1981 12,362
17 The Elbow 915 3341 Mobil 1 1981 18,128
18 Vernon Basin 654 3903 Mobil 1 1981 10,768
19 Charlotte Harbor 628 3915 Mobil 1 1981 1,270
20 Pensacola 973 3886 Mobil 1 1981 23,264
21 Charlotte Harbor 188 3909 Odeco 1 1981 11,360
22 Destin Dome 563 3890 Sohio 1 1982 21,068
23 Destin Dome 160 6417 Shell I TA 1985 7,764
24 Pensacola 948 6391 Sohio 1 1985 18,958
23 Destin Dome 160 6417 Shell 2 1985 16,953
25 Gainseville 707 6456 Sohio 1 1985 15,941
26 Deatin Dome 284 6428 Exxon 1 1985 17,500
27 Destin Dome 422 6438 Chevron 1 1985 22,222
28 DeSoto Canyon 512 6472 SheLl 1 1986 12,300
29 Charlotte Harbor 622 4950 Shell 1 1986 10,550
30 Florida Middle Ground 455 8363 Tenneco 1 1986 12,401
24 Pensacola 948 6391 Tenneco 2 ST 1987 19,200
31 Destin Dome 111 8338 Amoco 1 1987 19,240
32 Destin Dome 56 6406 Chevron I TA 1988 22,572
24 Pensacola 948 6391 Tenneco 2 TA 1988 19,200
33 Pensacola 996 6396 Texaco 1 1988 17,910
34 Destin Dome 1 6397 Gulfstar 1 TA 1989 2,000
35 Destin Dome 2 6398 Gulfstar 2 TA 1989 1,800
36 Pensacola 881 6390 Gulfstar I TA 1989 2,700
37 Destin Dome 167 6420 Chevron I Drilling 17,259

SOUTH I NH 17-5 208 3686 Tenneco 1 1979 7,754
ATLANTIC 2 NH 17-5 427 3695 Tenneco 1 1979 7,472
PLANNING 3 NH 17-2 913 3664 Getty 1 1979 7,000
AREA (3) 4 NH 17-2 1005 3671 Transco 1 1979 11,635
5 NH 17-5 472 3699 Exxon 1 1979 7,578
6 NH 17-5 564 3705 Exxon 1 1980 12,863
7 NH 17-5 387 Ocean GE-1 1977 13,254
Production

STRAITS OF 1 NG 17-10 44 P-296 Gulf 1 1961 4,686
FLORIDA 2 NO 17-10 46 P-290 Gulf 1 1961 7,871
PLANNING 3 NG 17-10 28 P-284 Gulf 1 1960 15,294
AREA (3)

1. TA = Temporarily Abandoned; ST = Sidetrack Well.
2. Data from Gould, 1989.
3. Data from Karpas and Gould, 1990.






Florida Geological Survey


Nation continues its strong dependence on
fossil fuels and fails to implement a
comprehensive energy policy. Therefore, it
is in the national, as well as the State's best
interest to ban all oil and gas activities within
100 miles of Florida's coast."
The governor feels that a comprehensive,
national energy policy is essential. Only within
such a policy can the risks associated with
coastal oil and gas development be wisely
assessed. He concluded his letter to the
president with:
"This Nation, with your leadership, should
develop a strong national energy program
which includes the development of
alternative energy sources, fuel efficiency,
conservation and the rapid decrease in the
dependency on fossil fuels. Without such a
program, interest in oil and gas drilling
offshore Florida and the associated risks to
the resources of our State will remain; and I
will continue to oppose short-sighted
approaches to such monumental and long-
term problems."


SUMMARY

Florida petroleum regulations have evolved
from simple to the complex, from encouragement
for exploration to concern for economic and then
aesthetic value of Florida's other natural
resources. There were no laws regulating oil and
gas activities before 1945. Early legislation
responded to the need for petroleum resource
conservation and to the need to protect the
economic value of other resources. Later
legislation responded to environmental concerns,
especially due to development within the wetland
environments of south Florida.
Petroleum exploration eventually extended into
areas offshore from the panhandle and
southwest Florida. Other natural and economic
resources in these areas include commercial and
recreational fisheries, coastal and barrier island
environments, Florida Bay, the Florida Keys, and


the only living coral reef in the conterminous
United States. This juxtaposition of potential
petroleum resources and existing natural
resources has yielded strong state environmental
policies. Florida's concerns influenced the federal
1987-1992 OCS oil and gas leasing program.
Florida's Governor Chiles has begun discussion
with the President which may Influence the next
5-year OCS oil and gas leasing program as well.






Information Circular 107


REFERENCES

Applegate, A.V., and Lloyd, J. M., 1985, Summary of Florida petroleum production and exploration,
onshore and offshore, through 1984, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 101, 69 p.

Babcock, C., 1964, Summary of Florida petroleum production and exploration in 1962, Florida Geological
Survey, Information Circular no. 45, 63 p.

1966, Florida petroleum exploration, production, and prospects, 1964, Florida Geological
Survey, Information Circular no. 49, 117 p.

1968, Oil and gas activities in Florida, 1966, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular
no. 55, 35 p.
____ 1972, Oil and gas activities in Florida, 1970, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular
no. 80, 82 p.

Big Cypress Area Management Task Force, 1984, Sensitive natural resources of the Big Cypress Area of
Critical State Concern, a report to the governor and members of the cabinet, February 21, 1984, 69 p.

Elliot, F. C., 1945, Minutes of the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, State of Florida, July 11,
1944, vol. 24, p. 732-733.

Fields, D. W., 1959, A legal history of conservation of oil and gas in Florida, unpublished report, Florida
Geological Survey Petroleum PAM file, 34 p.

Gould, G. J., 1989, Gulf of Mexico update: May 1988 July 1989, Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas


activities, U.S. Department of the Interior Minerals Management Service: OCS
MMS 89-0079, 51 p.

Gunter, H., 1949, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey,
no. 1, 106 p.

1950, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey,
Information Circular no. 1, 38 p.

1955, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey,
Information Circular no. 1, 35 p.

1956, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey,
Information Circular no. 1, 31 p.


Information Report,


Information Circular


1949 Supplement to


1954 Supplement to


1955 Supplement to


Johnson, P. G., and Tucker, D. L., 1987, The federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing
program; a Florida perspective: February, 1987: Office of the Governor, Office of Planning and
Budgeting, Intergovernmental Coordination Unit, 16 p.





Florida Geological Survey


Karpas, R. M., and Gould, G. J., 1990, Atlantic update: July 1986-June 1990, Outer Continental Shelf oil
and gas activities, U.S. Department of the Interior Minerals Management Service: OCS Information
Report, MMS 90-0060, 57 p.

Oil and Gas Journal, 1972, Jay field development tied to ecology, Oil and Gas Journal, February 14,
1972, p. 58-59.

1989, Norphlet gas find indicated off Pensacola, Oil and Gas Journal, February 6, 1989,
p. 18.

1990, Bush orders cancellation of eight controversial offshore lease sales, Oil and Gas
Journal, July 2, 1990, p. 26-27.






Information Circular 107


PART III

PETROLOGY AND PROVENANCE OF THE
NORPHLET FORMATION
PANHANDLE, FLORIDA

By
Greg W. Scott





Florida Geological Survey










CONTENTS

Page

Abstract.................................................................................................................................................. 87
Acknowledgm ents.................................................................................................................................. 87
Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 89
Norphlet Form ation of Panhandle Florida .......................................................................................... 89
Denkm an M em ber ............................................................................................................................. 97
Fram work G rains......................................................................................................................... 97
M atrix and Cem ents...................................................................................................................... 103
Red Bed Lithofacies .......................................................................................................................... 103
Fram work Grains......................................................................................................................... 107
Cem ents...........................................................:............................................................................ 109
Conglom erratic Lithofacies ........................................................................................................... 109
Provenance of Norphlet Sedim ents .................................................................................................... 113
Conclusions ........................................................................................................................................... 118
References ............................................................................................................................................. 119


ILLUSTRATIONS

Figure Page

1. Area of study and location of core, chip,and log data ................................................................ 90

2. Stratigraphic column, of Mesozoic and older units of the North Central Gulf Coast .................. 95

3. Tectonic m ap of South Central G ulf Coast................................................................................. 96

4. Isopach m ap, Norphlet Form ation, panhandle Florida ............................................................... 98

5. Monocrystalline quartz grain, exhibiting subrounded shape and hematite coating.................... 100

6. Potassium feldspar overgrowth on m icrocline............................................................................ 101

7. Dissolution of feldspars .............................................................................................................. 102

8. Low-rank m etam orphic rock fragm ent........................................................................................ 104

9. Volcanic rock fragm ent ............................................................................................................ 105

10. High-rank m etam orphic rock fragm ent ....................................................................................... 106

11. Induction log and spontaneous potential curve illustrating serrate pattern
associated with red beds............................................................................................................ 108





Florida Geological Survey


12. Volcanic rock fragment............................................................................................................ 110

13. Scanning electron micrograph of secondary quartz overgrowths and clay coatings.................. 111

14. Scanning electron micrograph of chloritic clay coatings............................................................. 112

15. Norphlet Formation-Werner Anhydrite ....................................................................................... 114

16. North-south stratigraphic cross section, Panhandle, Florida...................................................... 116

17. West-east stratigraphic cross section, Panhandle, Florida ........................................................ 117

TABLES

Table Page

1. Well names, locations, and permit numbers for all wells used in this study ............................... 91





ABSTRACT


The Norphlet Formation of the Florida Panhandle is primarily a sandstone that underlies the
Smackover Formation and overlies the Louann and Werner Formations. Three lithofacies of Norphlet
strata have been identified in the Florida Panhandle: an updip conglomerate, red beds, and an upper
quartzose sandstone (Denkman Member).
The Denkman Member consists of an upper gray and a lower brown to reddish-brown quartzose
sandstone. Generally, these sandstones are fine- to medium-grained and well sorted with rounded to
subrounded grains. The upper Denkman is massively bedded to faintly horizontally or wavy laminated;
the lower Denkman is either horizontally laminated or has low to high-angle cross- stratification. The
average composition of the member is 62 percent quartz, 26 percent feldspar, and 12 percent rock
fragments.
The red bed lithofacies has fine- to coarse-grained, moderately sorted sandstones with subrounded to
rounded grains. The most distinctive feature of the lithofacies is its closely spaced horizontal to slightly
inclined (10 50) laminae. The average composition of the faces is 35 percent quartz, 16 percent
feldspar, and 49 percent rock fragments.
The conglomeratic lithofacies is a multilayered section of gray conglomerates and red, coarse-grained
sandstones. The conglomerate consists of poorly sorted, subangular to subrounded, cobble- to pebble-
size plutonic and metamorphic rock fragments.
Principal source areas for Norphlet sediments in the Florida Panhandle were the basement rock of the
Conecuh Ridge (Talledega Slate Belt) to the north and the Pensacola Arch (Piedmont Belt) to the south
and east. Additionally, contributions from the Eagle Mills, Werner, and Louann Formations probably were
significant.


ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This study was originally completed in 1986 as part of the author's master's degree requirements at
Northeast Louisiana University. Thanks to Jacqueline M. Lloyd and the Florida Geological Survey for
encouragement and editing of the manuscript. Financial support for the project was provided by the
Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists and Geraghty & Miller, Inc. I express my sincere
gratitude to Leonard M. Young, Professor, Department of Geosciences, Northeast Louisiana University,
for his professional guidance, constructive criticism, and encouragement in pursuing this project. Thanks
to Frank H. Guinn for his editing expertise. Finally, thanks to Sally Easterwood and Geeta Modha, for
drafting support and Alice Wingerter, Carol Ratcliff, Ileana Kiefer, and Shelly Hargrave of Geraghty &
Miller for word processing and document preparation.





Florida Geological Survey





Information Circular 107


PETROLOGY AND PROVENANCE OF THE NORPHLET FORMATION,
PANHANDLE, FLORIDA

By
Greg W. Scott


INTRODUCTION

Several authors have published data on the
petrologic character of the Upper Jurassic
Norphlet Formation in Mississippi and Alabama
(Hartman, 1968; Badon, 1975; McBride, 1981;
Mancini et al, 1984). This study is primarily
confined to areas of Norphlet deposition
previously undocumented, namely Escambia,
Santa Rosa, and Okaloosa Counties, Florida
(Figure 1, Table 1). Throughout panhandle
Florida, the Norphlet Formation is encountered at
depths usually greater than 13,000 feet below
mean sea level. The formation underlies most of
the study area except eastern-most Okaloosa
County, where it wedges out. The Norphlet
unconformably overlies the Louann, Werner, or
Eagle Mills Formations (Oxley et al, 1967;
Mancini et al, 1984). Lying above the Norphlet
Formation sandstones and making an abrupt
lithologic break are carbonates of the Smackover
Formation (Sigsby, 1976) (Figure 2).
Most of panhandle Florida is located within the
Conecuh Embayment which, in turn, is situated
within the Alabama Interior Salt Basin. The
Conecuh Embayment, as defined by Sigsby
(1976), lies between the pre-Jurassic Conecuh
Ridge to the north and the Pensacola Arch to the
southeast, both of which probably served as
source areas for Norphlet sediments (Figure 3).


NORPHLET FORMATION OF
PANHANDLE FLORIDA

The Norphlet Formaiion varies considerably in
lithologic character across panhandle Florida. In
central Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, the
upper Norphlet Denkman Member (informally
subdivided into upper and lower units) is
characterized by relatively clean, light-colored


sandstones (Tyrrell, 1973). Core material
available for this study is concentrated within this
quartzose lithofacies because the member lies
just below the more productive Smackover
Formation and therefore is more frequently cored
than other lithofacies.
The Pensacola Arch trends southwest through
Okaloosa County and across southern Santa
Rosa and Escambia Counties (Figure 3).
Placement of the arch this far west is based upon
the overall subsurface trend of structural features
and stratigraphic sequences and geophysical
well logs interpreted for this project. It is against
this arch that the relatively clean sandstones of
the Denkman Member thin and grade into
medium- to coarse-grained and gravelly
sandstones.
In southern Santa Rosa County, the formation
is represented by a 14.6-foot section of
conglomerates and coarse grained sandstones
(Getty Oil Company, Florida permit 1097),
interpreted to lie on top of or adjacent to the
Pensacola Arch. The conglomeratic sands
contain granule- to cobble-sized igneous and
metamorphic clasts. Mancini et al, (1985)
identified chert, granite, rhyolite, quartzite, and
shale pebbles within this conglomerate
lithofacies in southern Alabama.
In western Okaloosa County (Champlin
Petroleum Company well, Florida permit 518),
the Norphlet Formation is characterized by
coarse, red, lithic sandstones (red beds), which
probably represent a transition from the
conglomerate deposits over the Pensacola Arch.
The formation thins dramatically east of this well
and wedges out completely within approximately
16 miles. In southern Santa Rosa County, the
Norphlet Formation represented within the Belco
Petroleum Corporation well core (Florida permit
692) exhibits a red bed lithofacies at its base.
A discontinuous basal shale sequence has
been identified within Norphlet cored sections in













































Figure 1. Area of study and location of core, chip, and log data.




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de2c5cde06335c1dc09b97203419cd8e23858f90
'2017-03-08T18:11:47-05:00'
describe
'173404' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPS' 'sip-files00008.jp2'
da3b1c7f785f08303e506a3fef656096
8badce4542a07073bab3d95ca59943ab48cb642f
'2017-03-08T18:14:33-05:00'
describe
'115001' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPT' 'sip-files00008.jpg'
f73175742e2f586ccbca9163963efe34
142bb98ee91a5dcb3118de90f133ce8aefac753a
'2017-03-08T17:39:28-05:00'
describe
'61896' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPU' 'sip-files00008.pdf'
a8ea1da2bcdd407f35afcb826dffa822
77ba5a330ddfcee5b1d59df5c4d75c773cffe35f
'2017-03-08T18:13:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABPU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:24-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:13:49-05:00'
normalize
'182988' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPV' 'sip-files00008.pro'
bc9b3dab97d495802094510162ce600d
902685d7b9a3c8e9a485532e284fce8634f07cf8
'2017-03-08T18:11:03-05:00'
describe
'36586' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPW' 'sip-files00008.QC.jpg'
2881b07c24b19d94bc7573febc80c1cd
26fabaecaedcc52372e71b6511dc65bc5a36200a
'2017-03-08T18:14:07-05:00'
describe
'1569560' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPX' 'sip-files00008.tif'
9bf860843049074c42856b9e2af2f419
e48a79cbe3b62a26e9e21052f6198416344397e6
'2017-03-08T18:15:28-05:00'
describe
'6580' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPY' 'sip-files00008.txt'
df07aa832f5766f459a9a01cba844701
d74da8a6e9c9d73ac3d2d0cb47bc83378e41b115
'2017-03-08T17:40:13-05:00'
describe
'8401' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABPZ' 'sip-files00008thm.jpg'
e6b54c240cea579eb318b80793189513
bc383d0613008ce5ba588167bda54f8c2cb24522
'2017-03-08T18:13:16-05:00'
describe
'136475' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQA' 'sip-files00009.jp2'
0e2d4608d0c2384d6fe6bb8abb78bc2c
655e3b0c752e1d16260ddc6ef8946cd0ea91f1be
'2017-03-08T18:14:47-05:00'
describe
'87099' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQB' 'sip-files00009.jpg'
fc6880f17f7081685148543efbeb9af2
d77487b3a100ef95f795a9a714596902edff0d81
'2017-03-08T18:12:46-05:00'
describe
'49912' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQC' 'sip-files00009.pdf'
e09fbb907d69a0aa04dddeb3f6486bd4
48cf6ab05b05c482f9d27f91f9b5026fe01adbeb
'2017-03-08T18:18:12-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABQC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:39-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:14-05:00'
normalize
'80884' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQD' 'sip-files00009.pro'
d883e4c99af496de122c61a938cbe783
63211acc9c25c8d485d1e6300467f18e9e6ae15b
'2017-03-08T18:15:56-05:00'
describe
'29800' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQE' 'sip-files00009.QC.jpg'
de13d8cf3a70fd464885fb23ca24e4c6
d91e209bac8569f16bde59f3dbcb17eb5b9f2940
'2017-03-08T18:14:34-05:00'
describe
'1541636' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQF' 'sip-files00009.tif'
ee105cf63c484185ec1ebba1ef04f8b8
15f733ca5819c4d387436d28c76dd705e5d9bee9
'2017-03-08T18:11:23-05:00'
describe
'3023' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQG' 'sip-files00009.txt'
60f277a8e1b5616234f14b79844d39c7
7e18ad45b848bc6447ccd825c36f68dde98243fe
'2017-03-08T18:16:09-05:00'
describe
'9034' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQH' 'sip-files00009thm.jpg'
822540726959e9b19ff2788842ada21c
bffcf87a5e7bb649869fab41ccc8cbeeec3ebc74
'2017-03-08T18:16:17-05:00'
describe
'59251' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQI' 'sip-files00010.jp2'
bcfecf8c2e7487f26a2fd46acc36a814
80cb342c7b1c0a84ec1d5cc218e0d3e39be1eb2a
'2017-03-08T17:40:16-05:00'
describe
'39669' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQJ' 'sip-files00010.jpg'
8005eb3bc76c79861bebe3401b2c4e4e
2b22a6bd4f10ab854881ebe4db88c4ab02aa61d1
'2017-03-08T18:09:35-05:00'
describe
'21917' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQK' 'sip-files00010.pdf'
379c2e5e7463b8dc78124b759f297437
8a0af412d639f741de48fb4fdd2e415d829ccd2d
'2017-03-08T18:12:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABQK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:53-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:32-05:00'
normalize
'44319' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQL' 'sip-files00010.pro'
fa15d6f338eacbb805b1185a0764d147
cf25a1e19f3204b18f715bee96746eacbca7478b
'2017-03-08T18:18:33-05:00'
describe
'14049' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQM' 'sip-files00010.QC.jpg'
0fc932ff902ada2f210aa28d995d865c
6afe001ca1db6d33c3df35067b2af8a08047c589
'2017-03-08T18:11:24-05:00'
describe
'1585016' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQN' 'sip-files00010.tif'
c6700e1140869b772f1df6fdcea91d22
6bb21386dfae09e2674a904d75f093444b276dcc
'2017-03-08T18:18:03-05:00'
describe
'1406' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQO' 'sip-files00010.txt'
8d130c83c3a6d35b968eca45dae37a21
843991744334653d2b27da479c5e3188dd073989
'2017-03-08T18:16:29-05:00'
describe
'4372' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQP' 'sip-files00010thm.jpg'
f55c33018b0621ff13ab9c2050c1b744
093cc599be52bf88788e57f30db7afcd36512236
'2017-03-08T17:40:05-05:00'
describe
'154373' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQQ' 'sip-files00011.jp2'
34b9c0884ad39870270e75adf251b3c9
fe05af200462665cf9b3aecce43778e8f760f66e
'2017-03-08T18:13:23-05:00'
describe
'95893' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQR' 'sip-files00011.jpg'
e11fccc25504a6264fa746f6d405a947
8b5acd0faf8b47b1f47c1109e53624423d16d292
'2017-03-08T17:39:35-05:00'
describe
'63640' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQS' 'sip-files00011.pdf'
546b913bb9e4780a430f9c735221c217
0b22223608f127ad42d551963798e24def94f87c
'2017-03-08T18:13:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABQS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:25-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:13:03-05:00'
normalize
'61083' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQT' 'sip-files00011.pro'
5b267da14b2744f335d951fd483aab42
37caf7d899e69564407fa956eec8a50d674d91ee
'2017-03-08T18:16:56-05:00'
describe
'28198' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQU' 'sip-files00011.QC.jpg'
e48bcb80cb8c72ad5da1b5bda74bba6c
eeee241d131c3be1ba4d14b0a194ba666e93199e
'2017-03-08T17:40:37-05:00'
describe
'1584356' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQV' 'sip-files00011.tif'
f204ee3406818f15bd14ba99c22b5cc2
1553163df637934f5f0d19690546038a485f5477
'2017-03-08T18:10:44-05:00'
describe
'2267' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQW' 'sip-files00011.txt'
75d735b2688744a2ed10babbf36128cc
18e77a45f32bc31aa7b8b931530705ea065b37d2
'2017-03-08T18:09:58-05:00'
describe
'7255' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQX' 'sip-files00011thm.jpg'
b468099bd9218c84f29e54bc6798ef2d
20381f2c261c1772ac315fbe84c7c4ef52238e02
describe
'255387' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQY' 'sip-files00012.jp2'
7a2ce1dcae354aa1d1183519da3c266a
80740063fbe057e6b96b367ff4f5b1153e8dbbfa
describe
'166649' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABQZ' 'sip-files00012.jpg'
4f5d8727c26bc1f818193fb55d648b24
ecaa32b711344410edc20c95597ae095705ab3b7
'2017-03-08T18:16:40-05:00'
describe
'103954' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRA' 'sip-files00012.pdf'
a5468c198eeb1406aa616ff989e69828
e55b67c4dcf667c28ffa14b01800adb4476f03ba
'2017-03-08T18:11:55-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABRA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:38-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:11:57-05:00'
normalize
'103772' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRB' 'sip-files00012.pro'
4689e4cb3fefe3103a2e97690750104a
d67b79ba1db43e260223b099a17dea87bbcba88a
'2017-03-08T17:40:32-05:00'
describe
'46464' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRC' 'sip-files00012.QC.jpg'
c7a8663d238584668e02794c6c2c84c0
fe57911aeb290222bdfc74f428869c27165db57f
'2017-03-08T18:14:51-05:00'
describe
'1569228' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRD' 'sip-files00012.tif'
5fbe7b9ba11a34d7cd18e29f355cfe94
aa872085b4294937356240f066b639a112ee4f9a
describe
'3856' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRE' 'sip-files00012.txt'
4cdb456d5e544dcf9bc1975e359e5cbc
7da49e84275e77189c841c52620ae273cb32b099
'2017-03-08T17:38:48-05:00'
describe
'10705' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRF' 'sip-files00012thm.jpg'
2dcd828c726bd1b97219d4de9ea8e7b6
7e927540c4b754254504c92311c1c52d7cacd398
'2017-03-08T18:12:01-05:00'
describe
'110568' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRG' 'sip-files00013.jp2'
0c695f964a99a267a1edfe9c337ecdfb
35172233ca98b4b8a2f3d7ef11e1c2529a0a28c7
'2017-03-08T17:40:19-05:00'
describe
'76375' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRH' 'sip-files00013.jpg'
295b9c4d33dbb4d8c2d0471849f73fae
8bfdbc07c82b3c9c3a5cf8f0fd185ac8bdb94244
'2017-03-08T18:09:03-05:00'
describe
'42387' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRI' 'sip-files00013.pdf'
499f018b5abe257e5dc6768fa6e913f7
afc82b04223ffbb67c448e7cbd2878f8379b9d42
'2017-03-08T18:18:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABRI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:40-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:06-05:00'
normalize
'23169' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRJ' 'sip-files00013.pro'
2753bcd010c43591c742c9c598fce9f2
1c13da9f2e90c0997857326aca2640a7dbe8e370
'2017-03-08T18:18:48-05:00'
describe
'26303' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRK' 'sip-files00013.QC.jpg'
d974e5b9c86d0b580c1abdaa30768876
7d1f8c85154ec3e95b17ab9d54f3f5a5e990b753
'2017-03-08T17:39:36-05:00'
describe
'1552388' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRL' 'sip-files00013.tif'
a70eef6d1b38d028f2efa638820816fc
0543b5d922a8efbe076f0f3b80560ef7619fa416
'2017-03-08T18:10:04-05:00'
describe
'1938' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRM' 'sip-files00013.txt'
dd062453dc1286a4092825fa19de3f30
d3bc8e27e37638a05ba27bf4000d55be8b6e7035
'2017-03-08T18:13:39-05:00'
describe
'7800' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRN' 'sip-files00013thm.jpg'
ef163984811d7d649335f29e008ffcab
cc5e6a5927625ee684a24ded2910ec5ce1a77694
'2017-03-08T17:38:59-05:00'
describe
'124027' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRO' 'sip-files00014.jp2'
ca4a07d950564664e942330bedc454ff
07b84a27be3abfe36c07d1c95438090e85920b6c
'2017-03-08T18:09:57-05:00'
describe
'83170' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRP' 'sip-files00014.jpg'
6ed3d1c653ac3e5c9337930b940899c7
ef19902045d319457aac21cd8761777a20ac00e6
'2017-03-08T17:38:54-05:00'
describe
'47679' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRQ' 'sip-files00014.pdf'
8c16d601412262f5f3fde5a460eba5aa
a68818e872b2c81a01d5a98da6e08a37dfc62c7f
'2017-03-08T18:13:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABRQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:37-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:13:55-05:00'
normalize
'7304' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRR' 'sip-files00014.pro'
845310cca23c7f1d279e910d4fd509f2
58a65f803a4d6645e354eeaf258da3387c70cbd6
'2017-03-08T18:10:56-05:00'
describe
'27257' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRS' 'sip-files00014.QC.jpg'
1073a56422d155a26b2181a53c49398a
0da9ace44c5cb441a21d8ade19cb9a4701068256
'2017-03-08T18:10:27-05:00'
describe
'1600444' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRT' 'sip-files00014.tif'
2d4c578c734c02530eca818fdbf7accc
23b504189df1e0661aeeb9e07433635f913e85f3
'2017-03-08T17:39:25-05:00'
describe
'298' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRU' 'sip-files00014.txt'
695fc4e0ae0233aa82322d734dd8eb53
dd711a5857af853cff9b85d8f603018c406b47b2
'2017-03-08T18:10:49-05:00'
describe
'7820' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRV' 'sip-files00014thm.jpg'
67cd652835773247d872926833f39570
62e58138768ad64085cdce65c3b8c2ade1f3f575
describe
'118520' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRW' 'sip-files00015.jp2'
6aa0cd53c8354305a2c9b95ac95b69b5
b113fddd407ddea89b1f2b64a15c647ee2d4620d
'2017-03-08T17:39:31-05:00'
describe
'74710' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRX' 'sip-files00015.jpg'
94582877ce02ec4c5924f7e2a4af2f4f
27421ac8758dfb79cbb3315dd6e57e4604dcefb2
'2017-03-08T18:15:43-05:00'
describe
'45399' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRY' 'sip-files00015.pdf'
046934eb309acd0ede2a5cf9036e9ef8
87244b92eb16a707390063ca235c03a85cf3c5d2
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABRY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:55-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:11:05-05:00'
normalize
'4749' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABRZ' 'sip-files00015.pro'
dc712549353b95656294ed7280efa7b6
5551ef20327f1c9dbb4d7a1cf8e565b7e4817371
describe
'25012' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSA' 'sip-files00015.QC.jpg'
38cce9a3d1774ca7b14194efd3a27c8f
b9eddbfeba44bc0044921e6f697e192599422f7e
describe
'1599852' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSB' 'sip-files00015.tif'
a2fda21f04869664418daca4c4cdb7d9
3e5746b75927b47f6df67a164bbfe7c2178086ad
'2017-03-08T18:12:35-05:00'
describe
'204' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSC' 'sip-files00015.txt'
188cdc54ea51134e27d7ccfa7ef8396f
c533aa6ecb0e3f1140b0ed35079350c886cfd019
'2017-03-08T18:14:38-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
WARNING CODE 'Daitss::Anomaly' Invalid character
'7543' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSD' 'sip-files00015thm.jpg'
7591bd5afa2b232d3972d8152ad430ab
fb5cbb799023419ec1e83ad5c45945fa05d64004
'2017-03-08T18:09:52-05:00'
describe
'139005' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSE' 'sip-files00016.jp2'
b5d2ee6f5daac094b068a385c5a035c7
28d25a1e7e40578770e5e47e305c25e7941d459e
'2017-03-08T17:39:04-05:00'
describe
'84775' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSF' 'sip-files00016.jpg'
4ca9902ff401b1f19997ebb9669ab8f7
f132b808c03bad68c2a776ea2573c5af7a1e879e
'2017-03-08T18:10:31-05:00'
describe
'52794' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSG' 'sip-files00016.pdf'
e04a0a128270f994ec7ee201fade8112
2787103d64180ab8fab104a4710e1acc5656cd6e
'2017-03-08T18:10:07-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABSG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:51-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:09-05:00'
normalize
'26150' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSH' 'sip-files00016.pro'
61e22510da1c8ea635843e107f8d8034
df21d4e56290e377723c4dd82b540908f1a021e3
'2017-03-08T18:18:02-05:00'
describe
'28356' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSI' 'sip-files00016.QC.jpg'
288835bf974fbf9b2cd237cc9506248d
9c23bc25662d8e98dd02a5e58c877ad57141475d
'2017-03-08T18:17:40-05:00'
describe
'1623128' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSJ' 'sip-files00016.tif'
56612966d14e3bb58c9ac2a982ee3e4a
9718f838f4ebc32090a68608564162ea7a6ce422
'2017-03-08T18:10:12-05:00'
describe
'1803' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSK' 'sip-files00016.txt'
b3bd0fe9df2a96dab65378ff0a9b6dde
c2f657375bc7f2e8d4ef3b5212d919d71886db37
'2017-03-08T18:14:06-05:00'
describe
'8467' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSL' 'sip-files00016thm.jpg'
33c679a1a58e0ee05b160706be410b4e
7f3fb62fc3d2261517818ee84cc94ef33f789c2a
'2017-03-08T18:11:10-05:00'
describe
'45960' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSM' 'sip-files00017.jp2'
06cdcae6a528b41b81c13fab2bdfa3ec
5def1a05cd5c9ecd6cb9d3629bbc36ac0e1da9db
describe
'32651' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSN' 'sip-files00017.jpg'
05405074d6a026ca44d00186a9d4192f
c39deaf685bbd8df890edf0d5e38ca44e7d9febd
'2017-03-08T18:10:25-05:00'
describe
'17185' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSO' 'sip-files00017.pdf'
df78c4956c4759ee7b4df51ab5596a48
45d226cc5518d39a7dcd5a6ad908d0f034e928f9
'2017-03-08T18:09:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABSO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:22-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:09:27-05:00'
normalize
'7626' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSP' 'sip-files00017.pro'
ec234a941038003079258aa0e9c13336
70d10dd0c41c6ff9c1b9c862a440539a71e79fda
describe
'11178' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSQ' 'sip-files00017.QC.jpg'
2fb31536cd806e61e14864ace4fcdb8e
6c19622d0ba44fc03cac72d5f0e86e7b16ed7357
'2017-03-08T18:17:11-05:00'
describe
'1598132' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSR' 'sip-files00017.tif'
8ec80c18fb0a6732af4cb2ecd4fba9f9
f89f28e409ffe2d8669bfa3cbaed66b174317a96
describe
'381' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSS' 'sip-files00017.txt'
427b03efb66cf5042e3877145042d93b
4657d366104eeeff99d937c61184c03a1bec825d
describe
'3577' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABST' 'sip-files00017thm.jpg'
96c2d4bee58a9e473b18a4cd43b848d4
bef4c4a0569135b975345bf718eda8c2e575d28c
'2017-03-08T18:09:33-05:00'
describe
'71460' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSU' 'sip-files00018.jp2'
ebd0d9ec66e32f8e7933f1283f53b5a8
ec89c572cfb29063a07d19ad4e09ef38966d48e4
describe
'42771' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSV' 'sip-files00018.jpg'
869dccfb428d4d0196ef49b5cb4f0fe3
bb44d75a65c7f800dd06a23cc2d8d31ba257135a
'2017-03-08T17:40:27-05:00'
describe
'29063' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSW' 'sip-files00018.pdf'
d94ebd5f31d70caa150289ece9d5c0b9
f07378670bd6d399240c694f9cedbb119f0bef27
'2017-03-08T18:11:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABSW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:11:27-05:00'
normalize
'19546' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSX' 'sip-files00018.pro'
b98992d8dd403648d9b769c2b786ae55
1f1988f6a245bf4ca24be32b7e05eb14720bee08
'2017-03-08T18:12:34-05:00'
describe
'13226' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSY' 'sip-files00018.QC.jpg'
d1b9c7b9a613f6c301d1e8aa877141d9
ea87083d0f3937f0cbb0ab33ef9541bcd09bbb08
'2017-03-08T18:14:35-05:00'
describe
'1595544' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABSZ' 'sip-files00018.tif'
9d5d36120a588e56e047dbd8cc05c179
e929cc001b5fa5377ea0081a6e6b761b35b1fc3b
'2017-03-08T18:11:46-05:00'
describe
'1798' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTA' 'sip-files00018.txt'
4e9321d455e09a86e55ecb2003fb9837
edb04df214b671c3900f26611420198a24ed3deb
'2017-03-08T18:11:40-05:00'
describe
'4216' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTB' 'sip-files00018thm.jpg'
f30b261b5d7eefe75e5b3a73bdb411f8
c81ad3c6725b24386d77f5b37166f5614f8e6b31
'2017-03-08T18:16:49-05:00'
describe
'259933' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTC' 'sip-files00019.jp2'
c4ff15f3b393846f9f73d9e9401ee8a0
e44cedd0b97be079531a2d48298af1c767e5bb89
'2017-03-08T18:09:34-05:00'
describe
'159535' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTD' 'sip-files00019.jpg'
dfee11ad783bea1580f92de49f0858ba
987772fac341a64331a112518e5ec6835e040580
describe
'104453' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTE' 'sip-files00019.pdf'
4518edafdc7201136cab62bace128646
0adb4033cd0ca35cae1ec780b8b1ff8ffadb3fd3
'2017-03-08T18:16:03-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABTE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:23-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:16:05-05:00'
normalize
'106560' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTF' 'sip-files00019.pro'
e59ce16032d09351aef2010e57890761
6b19e0a5fc20c715094bfa1a7543873e194a0657
'2017-03-08T18:18:57-05:00'
describe
'45106' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTG' 'sip-files00019.QC.jpg'
2af40010deb936ff72ef54f1ce19cb3d
e97f87b6adada9445b88fd650ed8c28de2cd3344
'2017-03-08T18:14:48-05:00'
describe
'1635700' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTH' 'sip-files00019.tif'
d033f120eb757846007822b733dd6777
afe64c4ef863059a0df1d146db6e055a5d13b0f7
'2017-03-08T18:11:39-05:00'
describe
'3943' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTI' 'sip-files00019.txt'
305ac316733c880657be5540bfd145fe
3aaeb105219e6dee8bb56732222b76127128beac
'2017-03-08T18:09:54-05:00'
describe
'10739' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTJ' 'sip-files00019thm.jpg'
d22df22b9cfefcff1295c4ef051d63c4
44273e25820a86bc0801885f79535a15ff909633
'2017-03-08T18:16:16-05:00'
describe
'81463' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTK' 'sip-files00020.jp2'
cfa389357473251c72e4609f76fc1884
f72a3402d9c0e867b5abf2916ccf5bfb21612595
describe
'54383' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTL' 'sip-files00020.jpg'
0d9863ec7eee4a588be8a3d32d68f34d
dc39676282c8d527ad1d37f9fa428fdb6fe5f493
'2017-03-08T18:17:35-05:00'
describe
'30663' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTM' 'sip-files00020.pdf'
1fabec3a7349b79764f4aafbaa49f860
f7721f6cd760283f7106535729382dd9e06045d0
'2017-03-08T18:11:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABTM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:11:13-05:00'
normalize
'15477' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTN' 'sip-files00020.pro'
9be2346c7aff9519068957609c81d9b5
97a5103f243b62c8b7dae354ea3413f5f06342ff
'2017-03-08T18:16:23-05:00'
describe
'18488' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTO' 'sip-files00020.QC.jpg'
5840b3d4037cb9033a0a303b14c35d6f
e2b0987b37ad59a5dc0c3913782b9bf6da27e23e
'2017-03-08T18:17:59-05:00'
describe
'1562116' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTP' 'sip-files00020.tif'
ab6ade40e273b0de05e4681c2a868fc2
67fbb2989962bc509edeab7406930103c8c4b62e
'2017-03-08T18:12:37-05:00'
describe
'1092' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTQ' 'sip-files00020.txt'
0376188a74902fa8d1400483354e6799
ad4d77b1a9e3f4a48601bd8818d75583e896d927
describe
'5797' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTR' 'sip-files00020thm.jpg'
0077c78cc57a71b8ab5e402794215005
3158483847ac9190cdd7ca329503b6b06f4fa976
'2017-03-08T18:15:14-05:00'
describe
'97894' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTS' 'sip-files00021.jp2'
2a1f39e7cb101562113c329cf3708f4f
3dd6d1e9e7561c97f0d545b266945be3ef7af9ef
'2017-03-08T18:11:28-05:00'
describe
'66272' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTT' 'sip-files00021.jpg'
9534a9f1ea2dd6c02a416cf3d2fc3e9e
9371a97d6f85da465504ab3d65fa5f916e4edfa7
'2017-03-08T18:18:51-05:00'
describe
'35825' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTU' 'sip-files00021.pdf'
53582229378059fd761f2cb48353d409
83d948c820a769e796ee0ce02a4efa327efd2f59
'2017-03-08T18:18:46-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABTU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:56-05:00'
describe
normalize
'3770' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTV' 'sip-files00021.pro'
01cd703f0680807042efeee6738cb380
c33ef1760bbbbc39927c2d180772fb4a2efa1021
'2017-03-08T17:38:45-05:00'
describe
'23586' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTW' 'sip-files00021.QC.jpg'
20e2b67daf8291e90691bdd39c70744e
a32a020e0e87db6932ec95f4c94cdbbe00d31331
'2017-03-08T17:39:13-05:00'
describe
'1639312' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTX' 'sip-files00021.tif'
9230c8e09709524b37715166187c276a
332fdd2083badc72d41d2887f3aeb956851d2254
describe
'216' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTY' 'sip-files00021.txt'
f3aa2cb8cce7fb018ad24bfed17026fc
d3620906ba5c8fc84129af5a3d777a0383dfc423
describe
'8210' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABTZ' 'sip-files00021thm.jpg'
c9d04f4713765bee539be2e505a2a4aa
435e32c92f8cfa9127c158ce36bd51203777d9b4
'2017-03-08T18:14:56-05:00'
describe
'282487' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUA' 'sip-files00022.jp2'
59a03e629b79285fa3a20c1f7c4e6c22
cc0ae655212e63329e15877b5003ed3ff4238cf6
'2017-03-08T18:11:35-05:00'
describe
'175906' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUB' 'sip-files00022.jpg'
021ee23de5a88eb9a5bf93a252ee06b1
ad0647b19ad9ecbc14ec7cd4c638e5e98e82b95d
'2017-03-08T17:40:14-05:00'
describe
'115171' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUC' 'sip-files00022.pdf'
dbe647126d08b8080864c71ace3014b4
dd647f32a7e413bf1ee1da53c5ed01a8a12909aa
'2017-03-08T18:13:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABUC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'115122' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUD' 'sip-files00022.pro'
1b62ce183096010c4170c3708b7cffdb
008cdb1a8d555ac1c2d3cef7485b1dd83ac0c62d
describe
'48825' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUE' 'sip-files00022.QC.jpg'
29ba2094b3e011f751a3d1144fefb1bf
16a7a000cfe45c179596ce8cb50ddea1b721ea22
'2017-03-08T18:14:05-05:00'
describe
'1612284' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUF' 'sip-files00022.tif'
e7ef694e401e23aca47ef7ddbf86ab47
7cf1da89f2eaac1df443c3e4f63f4fefb06d169a
'2017-03-08T18:10:43-05:00'
describe
'4203' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUG' 'sip-files00022.txt'
6e1238d9a21920f9c9aa17252f2a7dbe
3973e4d367e9eae1e6650b19f893942ac4c08cee
'2017-03-08T17:38:44-05:00'
describe
'11416' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUH' 'sip-files00022thm.jpg'
21e82da8583381a92f0c35903def390f
6003ab87cb2651a0a3064728ae6f4d26c0eaf718
describe
'265884' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUI' 'sip-files00023.jp2'
8f6a87257ac66ee132397670fd47ab42
ac14e8583049992a5aa23a1bef94c66ddf6c2ea0
describe
'166096' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUJ' 'sip-files00023.jpg'
09d71e2cfb3137210943f3ccd193bad0
4bd5c414eb1b729c020cba719d33a2dc6226d9a3
'2017-03-08T18:18:44-05:00'
describe
'107722' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUK' 'sip-files00023.pdf'
f87ae0cab11278ec765917fdf63db639
7778d1726361889adc9eda7399656ac0de76ce5d
'2017-03-08T18:12:28-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABUK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:52-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:30-05:00'
normalize
'106441' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUL' 'sip-files00023.pro'
d9b13f258955d45544f0d93f16fb77aa
9f70cbf23bfb7e229f616e4702e17984530af409
describe
'45944' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUM' 'sip-files00023.QC.jpg'
5b04babd8afd278c58a1d3c87df59a4e
3f8e9f3f40092701c8e3e2012feba90c7dad7f60
'2017-03-08T18:16:43-05:00'
describe
'1614460' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUN' 'sip-files00023.tif'
7cde34334364b62ab065873118a24e88
1639954390b147a0fe65e5bce889872965e12180
'2017-03-08T18:10:48-05:00'
describe
'3895' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUO' 'sip-files00023.txt'
da2155c182fff292248022392ec9a142
29146c28e7e8b99264c682904ac4441b07a06e4e
'2017-03-08T18:16:42-05:00'
describe
'11121' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUP' 'sip-files00023thm.jpg'
6d794a99ca489795d34c64944071085a
532d8d158938e41180b830a0d792300df6482c96
'2017-03-08T18:18:29-05:00'
describe
'107571' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUQ' 'sip-files00024.jp2'
20bb3bf3b392fd1391c655a2f45cd03e
817fedb299fbb2b6892aab99835b2c8efa073ab5
'2017-03-08T18:17:39-05:00'
describe
'69036' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUR' 'sip-files00024.jpg'
b0a6cb617146db7eddfcf17ed26c42b5
73cc3a6b63c962069cbe7d431bd204e3d2ce9271
'2017-03-08T18:09:15-05:00'
describe
'41516' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUS' 'sip-files00024.pdf'
d75b554194c5d764fe63615479180247
dc66641d60f85dbd38dd0f4a267af745e1b95d9a
'2017-03-08T18:15:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABUS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:41-05:00'
describe
normalize
'8226' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUT' 'sip-files00024.pro'
3f8e27f3b1d159c1216ec93fb46c90fb
75349b63c8cc62975ceb8276b82ff25a50382e2a
describe
'23047' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUU' 'sip-files00024.QC.jpg'
a30ed067c5562b65cd21162f24bf4509
1d11f65a95af9d854aaf4599d59b509cc6628cf7
'2017-03-08T18:13:18-05:00'
describe
'1563084' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUV' 'sip-files00024.tif'
f39264a80c8204b7fd1f9ef3c8887243
5ac20742c176e988003643374f8cf54047501bf6
'2017-03-08T17:39:38-05:00'
describe
'395' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUW' 'sip-files00024.txt'
b98113c0a21c159c8e0176cf0aa072d1
be5d3112a41d8b12a5b6148524beacc48bc8a282
describe
'7067' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUX' 'sip-files00024thm.jpg'
28aedbf5c253e032a51f91d04ccb0a85
81198195244ca8bdb9a3bb1c6d9b7084b4e35f8a
describe
'91839' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUY' 'sip-files00025.jp2'
ccaaa9ba7a1b827f1d0b69d1894e1ee2
60696bc3766dbbe4a539fbb1dc40fb774db2761d
'2017-03-08T18:17:05-05:00'
describe
'53396' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABUZ' 'sip-files00025.jpg'
bcaf151db8716d759f79d9af535dde4e
809ecedee493c9828c84c7679243dc0d9c6fd13e
'2017-03-08T18:11:45-05:00'
describe
'37857' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVA' 'sip-files00025.pdf'
be8d3a323ab257796ab43161cc98e155
1b93dab6e0c4e60b09bd9bed8a6a0478052317b6
'2017-03-08T18:12:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABVA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:59-05:00'
normalize
'9485' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVB' 'sip-files00025.pro'
e92a83fbeadc6e21f28ef4ef83c609e6
d9a8f39b6c13c1caabd496fc0c73e5c0962c05f8
'2017-03-08T18:12:18-05:00'
describe
'18622' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVC' 'sip-files00025.QC.jpg'
7225556b906b5c7aaddf0c4794389194
dbb19daf028ce765cd98b9ecdb244bbcc3d1fb7e
'2017-03-08T18:17:43-05:00'
describe
'1596964' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVD' 'sip-files00025.tif'
6b88f0f48fa63557754bc96c875ac204
1b14f5cbc88e7b4d1d33be15c194afe7145524a4
'2017-03-08T17:39:10-05:00'
describe
'584' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVE' 'sip-files00025.txt'
deb1c152c3a628c7a8f664b40693e885
0803cc83b0621a14464a980b0e03dcf110d21480
'2017-03-08T18:16:24-05:00'
describe
'5794' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVF' 'sip-files00025thm.jpg'
e596d00157657ea617e19feb62cb5dec
0e5566e29f0e86cdecd0db438434e17e01c4845f
describe
'276251' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVG' 'sip-files00026.jp2'
8ca9f416eeae2a25a92f64ff412c651b
6164c4fbebcd50cb2289b88f5a1e8ac6c3563bcc
'2017-03-08T18:13:07-05:00'
describe
'173026' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVH' 'sip-files00026.jpg'
501f305ba5b16ab116c2fab45a5aeb23
af3465f6d02d6894c4beba9199de64ecd1ee3ac5
describe
'112313' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVI' 'sip-files00026.pdf'
632bb9ec5a47fc69947e02cb3b88ec31
0ec0d16dbddf805c0494c619ceba1d31ec64aa66
'2017-03-08T18:09:36-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABVI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:27-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:09:38-05:00'
normalize
'110519' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVJ' 'sip-files00026.pro'
c5ce53c40de05afdb91a94929635d6a1
0b7bc11e831bcdfd37870cacef8746c451291ec6
'2017-03-08T18:14:37-05:00'
describe
'48493' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVK' 'sip-files00026.QC.jpg'
53bef88ad9d9d6434153ef403f4b30d8
b5850abadb62d06cd80e926aa015a0546983f53a
'2017-03-08T18:16:38-05:00'
describe
'1580152' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVL' 'sip-files00026.tif'
7d7fd2b4d8e963c41bbb4f705dcbc4be
6c23b41d051f0e075585a6e48be6c87097830329
describe
'4058' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVM' 'sip-files00026.txt'
84eaada5ec54012b28b9fcdc1f3cb75d
967cd7317e781c231914149fb348a2607ee53a11
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11494' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVN' 'sip-files00026thm.jpg'
1556cdc73b59096a3e91e2029f82b1c4
9db95635583f369024d1181b9e7c9fbadb87ecfc
describe
'134970' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVO' 'sip-files00027.jp2'
138c7fb84bae14cde146bd68d12fa085
7d8beb6ca51606ca36ded13ee70d4bb01e9d36b5
describe
'51448' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVP' 'sip-files00027.jpg'
2f27aa39c445b880d2f7f3d8134a0074
2d393e4e7872bf00c1d7fc6573c2b3d7d3adf99d
'2017-03-08T18:17:04-05:00'
describe
'51682' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVQ' 'sip-files00027.pdf'
121283d6a8ff513d5b2061377d389dd3
8a8fa331a91813f8a36a86a3356576ea67cbde0e
'2017-03-08T17:38:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABVQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:36-05:00'
describe
normalize
'12657' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVR' 'sip-files00027.pro'
6cdb77bfb1809a4ca67a28f3a47a05ea
316ef9130b18248bc7b9d1cc6a6d2eb437698cb5
'2017-03-08T18:10:11-05:00'
describe
'17014' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVS' 'sip-files00027.QC.jpg'
368266e06582fae22a70264a39b7cd41
582e6129fe4d87b6975f380b667a3af47024c9c4
'2017-03-08T18:10:57-05:00'
describe
'1559540' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVT' 'sip-files00027.tif'
bea1fb19f2513fc69a74e8043267aaff
84bfcb900e706c9ca5cbb5211b331086e9b219e1
'2017-03-08T17:38:47-05:00'
describe
'561' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVU' 'sip-files00027.txt'
77f3c135a09735f41d0066da1099bae8
fa74d309ef3c5a9f35d459e2c336fa82f2e29bad
'2017-03-08T18:16:18-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'5119' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVV' 'sip-files00027thm.jpg'
376168b39e9fbb2fa5fc945408652e0b
f4eecf635efcff5a2a6f18821ef4fd92f40047f2
describe
'287720' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVW' 'sip-files00028.jp2'
f3079c2e570019a5b14e8e32fb729c76
edd308c61644c1bbbabba9c49cf26a5637ec443f
describe
'179048' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVX' 'sip-files00028.jpg'
f75c46f29f5ef63795db766bc94c21d2
5e0bafa03d65073388023c22e46b32827eaf9186
'2017-03-08T18:14:30-05:00'
describe
'116984' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVY' 'sip-files00028.pdf'
66f4cc04815689587e6c61fa73402dde
62873fff8810a7f9a53602e89fd8270dd433cee7
'2017-03-08T18:15:06-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABVY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:54-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:09-05:00'
normalize
'116293' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABVZ' 'sip-files00028.pro'
35af446f4197793a3aa8e32101150535
155ba284c8aa7c139a7c334a3fd69634d9e8c3fc
describe
'49997' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWA' 'sip-files00028.QC.jpg'
c8c6614a2a92dff928be2b191abc5f09
1df0bc2f453e5b6dbe5f465ad4ef2d9c7c68cc8e
'2017-03-08T17:40:35-05:00'
describe
'1580328' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWB' 'sip-files00028.tif'
efa34180d2fcae5f9825d370841e8707
8ec6e95a12275b734930534630e6726720c24aa4
'2017-03-08T17:40:06-05:00'
describe
'4226' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWC' 'sip-files00028.txt'
34d68f6fa79fc2a70014cc43a9c9fef7
ac9ac82be4823a11ce5ac3ef30f79118ee3be4af
'2017-03-08T18:12:04-05:00'
describe
'11443' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWD' 'sip-files00028thm.jpg'
ec736db91f12c80bf400fdc1f8af9586
03c55e9a2494448aaced16142f8b18838c721921
'2017-03-08T18:16:25-05:00'
describe
'113009' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWE' 'sip-files00029.jp2'
174256e4bbeea5f987f273f9afcda21c
7743407e0527476527cf24a9942299e0c0042a5d
'2017-03-08T18:18:08-05:00'
describe
'29799' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWF' 'sip-files00029.jpg'
64a1b838f883e249e56f6af358c4ad1a
5a65c904ca92d1504b40b68bf16187ebb3a27b29
'2017-03-08T17:39:24-05:00'
describe
'47505' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWG' 'sip-files00029.pdf'
055997def66c84dcd3d87e0b1670b63f
8a96c35c8b4152f9196026820938694c96a14ace
'2017-03-08T17:39:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABWG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:23-05:00'
normalize
'7945' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWH' 'sip-files00029.pro'
92d5c655f6f21ca75b2388481c229adc
10af55d667b11224162a69a3fbf9b83c81ea8a14
describe
'9071' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWI' 'sip-files00029.QC.jpg'
76c9561564146c521c5db6c17997dc37
bc83b03f0ff029657df5b43f8ae5a1bbc4b358d1
describe
'1556048' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWJ' 'sip-files00029.tif'
6373ca374de459911a7e1428d20cf50c
f76dfec10ef07c349a54a5ed90f8e22604c75f3b
'2017-03-08T18:09:23-05:00'
describe
'607' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWK' 'sip-files00029.txt'
dcb7de655d814f236b15ec5d0fea8034
1384906c86767719e290bb14d01fc99fdf3366e8
'2017-03-08T18:17:50-05:00'
describe
'3234' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWL' 'sip-files00029thm.jpg'
b6c56792f9666bc513101b0bd1d48d9c
2acb857f7462500141a9948418a99022c2e5bcc5
'2017-03-08T18:18:01-05:00'
describe
'266882' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWM' 'sip-files00030.jp2'
8c3c7880bd9ac92a9090efc4aa85cd92
0c7b5126c3b00eeb92b846cecd6121364be7bea9
'2017-03-08T18:13:56-05:00'
describe
'168339' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWN' 'sip-files00030.jpg'
bc84301e4b7b000ce044e0704137b9b4
728c6f6455892b444a44843a02edd559addf07a4
'2017-03-08T18:09:09-05:00'
describe
'108026' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWO' 'sip-files00030.pdf'
facc9ed852f5075512dc3df9aca26f76
f030e305355e7dd1530a28b31a70a275c4f73ef0
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABWO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:34-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:16:21-05:00'
normalize
'106934' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWP' 'sip-files00030.pro'
f7487881dbccd57293e5cda6fada7a35
64dd67a24c09e393bc4f04469985d234e7c37a2a
'2017-03-08T18:18:38-05:00'
describe
'46362' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWQ' 'sip-files00030.QC.jpg'
ea4b94d70779972845361c11bcd5cf7b
c43b2266d0ad52738a7245b7e74897013c8a2530
'2017-03-08T18:11:52-05:00'
describe
'1602760' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWR' 'sip-files00030.tif'
a68339e8e13fa1918653929b719c3e8f
d0f3bddd6fadd5ae967be70654274108f913403a
describe
'3948' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWS' 'sip-files00030.txt'
88d9b18a979f5c6f8311e2248dcc3239
c44bccf54dd8475edc6f2cb141d17f83285543d9
'2017-03-08T18:17:16-05:00'
describe
'10956' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWT' 'sip-files00030thm.jpg'
f4f871bf2fba66edb8e51cd1d49e8a5f
9ca8d07c7ef5f02740e466c70293e9ec4508f1e0
'2017-03-08T18:15:19-05:00'
describe
'47352' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWU' 'sip-files00031.jp2'
ad81a473e9228c7f1e3a8761783fb0ba
8399ef83cc9fad516ae9296289eb0af9389337f5
describe
'33978' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWV' 'sip-files00031.jpg'
ff545763550aedd786d45498defd0647
79ad3eeea9e686ffccf725c6468aa6efbcd4b738
'2017-03-08T18:11:07-05:00'
describe
'17797' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWW' 'sip-files00031.pdf'
d9feba506aabbf97db585b03e157a7ab
5b43ec19bee6e8c43568ba843ab4fee6d33792f0
'2017-03-08T18:17:26-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABWW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:17:28-05:00'
normalize
'5137' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWX' 'sip-files00031.pro'
9cfc0a8e671f5b60e7e6256d0349776b
ef1ad567203a0e8b7eeb6beae871244bf313f0d6
'2017-03-08T18:14:57-05:00'
describe
'11676' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWY' 'sip-files00031.QC.jpg'
1c8012b4a3f7cf822b65612f76482252
df372549a10439fe3e044f589a0ed5208e2a1011
describe
'1581572' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABWZ' 'sip-files00031.tif'
958875b35969720e429817be338db72b
9cec5d309653b7fd680746e53b98c1a25f0e5b57
'2017-03-08T18:18:10-05:00'
describe
'228' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXA' 'sip-files00031.txt'
4c1dbbc0917241976b401e8c532043dc
81b00db372ed10ee273d9107877266566ff17bf7
describe
'4139' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXB' 'sip-files00031thm.jpg'
8e7404646815493fe13362c6d53b224a
36827a5923eed27b71a62b754f996d38685eccf1
'2017-03-08T18:10:28-05:00'
describe
'210873' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXC' 'sip-files00032.jp2'
7bf7bd05b5aac664adf7495641933716
9c7935d51052a2bfaf973afcd81a1981fa97d035
describe
'126412' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXD' 'sip-files00032.jpg'
bb098aa3050c025f7f17c9bf26b85ffd
7abbf00a2226504e27e63921948ffb54edbd09c1
'2017-03-08T18:16:34-05:00'
describe
'82800' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXE' 'sip-files00032.pdf'
e24fbb8334e063a8e67ae83c202edf76
d715844cf88a5feec8342087724dcb46d1000f34
'2017-03-08T18:18:30-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABXE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:32-05:00'
normalize
'44975' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXF' 'sip-files00032.pro'
4a30f2a6089090a1941fa054c5fb1f6f
877fbc02ed7a9a0588125ed3ca8720a738255ee3
'2017-03-08T17:39:47-05:00'
describe
'39383' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXG' 'sip-files00032.QC.jpg'
b61a80933991fecd910f32f2d8d9d13d
452e36a16f1da623b6e6e4e06da8f1b731125141
describe
'1558824' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXH' 'sip-files00032.tif'
02c66673b746505cc012c1dd0828fcce
acf80576b5b0c13e4e557391265196a7f58c03d4
'2017-03-08T17:39:48-05:00'
describe
'2374' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXI' 'sip-files00032.txt'
009ace0330d96d8430573cb29c069f7c
7f4ffd93f37ae2e2b6880935a91b2c11acf7b0c0
'2017-03-08T18:12:38-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'10531' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXJ' 'sip-files00032thm.jpg'
71ff5422ad434f4e23c2c62637e3c4c6
32523faba19de47b93e8dc9ef5774c738d2268b5
'2017-03-08T17:39:57-05:00'
describe
'262798' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXK' 'sip-files00033.jp2'
13eee6bf4f4130c99fb1971bb68bc104
bc1638009c6280e49618d9ccd4a55ece52eefcde
'2017-03-08T18:16:36-05:00'
describe
'164815' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXL' 'sip-files00033.jpg'
d2da463ad0886211306bee0838d8a68f
b22f6b556d9d7c8fa238fc15dbd936a013bef06d
'2017-03-08T18:09:17-05:00'
describe
'105867' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXM' 'sip-files00033.pdf'
7a566e3a087f8bb0bc852c726a15541f
4529d187ef31fec4e837ceeb4c505fa37f22751b
'2017-03-08T18:09:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABXM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:43-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:09:42-05:00'
normalize
'107751' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXN' 'sip-files00033.pro'
31c2f679ecd4950a5ef6bce4c0d3e415
b37508024a8dc50c781d695fa6eada8f922e1cf0
'2017-03-08T17:40:22-05:00'
describe
'46328' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXO' 'sip-files00033.QC.jpg'
8c8009376207b5b8b08a22bdda62bf84
18ab8647a1a842bf028abebc4b75b6d52b26f7de
'2017-03-08T17:39:39-05:00'
describe
'1591316' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXP' 'sip-files00033.tif'
d3dab8cfb3bb16dcdb646f13e7b23803
615779e62d2bf2328ab696848c9382fa65b90d35
describe
'3970' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXQ' 'sip-files00033.txt'
fd4cc3c79b89ab2ae1559d647ac169b0
bbb712fe61f34ae3e91c3234cefdff23b18116c5
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11479' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXR' 'sip-files00033thm.jpg'
cd94a64a5fc891791c25ada363763e9f
835a55a9bd12ffda1cabc4d8e1a8a00aaa75d5f3
describe
'122031' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXS' 'sip-files00034.jp2'
a364eab3695829580eff6b5fc6e4e4ad
800b7722ceed0bd5b92b054a3d83abac3e23b88a
'2017-03-08T18:11:38-05:00'
describe
'78249' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXT' 'sip-files00034.jpg'
f0736795b497b404c4d4dfa77d328195
2b685e918d260730bedcc440d01e5fc25ac10c16
'2017-03-08T18:17:15-05:00'
describe
'45596' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXU' 'sip-files00034.pdf'
521842eb753d303be1ebd2ff03a4cbf1
50e954b8e4b406566b6a5c394520d8ec6697ce0e
'2017-03-08T18:16:57-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABXU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:16:59-05:00'
normalize
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXV' 'sip-files00034.pro'
ed652699c97326c96f3c4cb1d82f46ee
8b34846dfbe1009cd4207c4747d5fb704b87b508
describe
'26316' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXW' 'sip-files00034.QC.jpg'
9765eeece7aad097d1129413cd655cb7
fe4a0f107ee02f0ff25614bc74911036ac45c4b6
'2017-03-08T18:14:04-05:00'
describe
'1631060' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXX' 'sip-files00034.tif'
6364b13fdf4f533dbb459348ccf18cc8
80e847a5c93f8f833320be0d9b57c3863fbf9cf4
'2017-03-08T18:18:16-05:00'
describe
'172' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXY' 'sip-files00034.txt'
7857d400720897c9d31276899e553552
8d2ecb5b047dc2092725a53e97c33bea57b04c50
'2017-03-08T18:17:21-05:00'
describe
'7797' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABXZ' 'sip-files00034thm.jpg'
2851c6fc8dbff0e0ee289545cd833b1a
fb9ad5a65802483ea44691dbadd5846cc17bf967
describe
'115544' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYA' 'sip-files00035.jp2'
5f43a3ba082a05c6810db19a6ad9be17
3ac5b3fe20755293cde7a36e07c603ade543c716
'2017-03-08T18:17:06-05:00'
describe
'78320' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYB' 'sip-files00035.jpg'
d7df519937dde649682d1f8272f5a2c1
876592bd4dc0d94cf0a121b8ef6037dc5d540645
'2017-03-08T17:39:00-05:00'
describe
'43824' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYC' 'sip-files00035.pdf'
2a23eaf40a94cf192cc52cb49425cc5a
0e2507b1a3048f5edc2b5cb541e7c94cfaa55776
'2017-03-08T18:12:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABYC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:44-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:44-05:00'
normalize
'18142' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYD' 'sip-files00035.pro'
dbcb2f69a7ce34d669f1dbd6e38d71d6
07dfcae767368e403d0f027a5327be650264028e
describe
'26277' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYE' 'sip-files00035.QC.jpg'
1c6b0232c4d44de99556162e25b1a03a
9c51555100f89186ee97fe53d95f13f50ab801a9
'2017-03-08T18:10:34-05:00'
describe
'1540484' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYF' 'sip-files00035.tif'
1c1c21d380a0896324af8a0863e762fa
7f8948e2f4c0402f0da77a55814e17e28c30983d
'2017-03-08T18:11:58-05:00'
describe
'1169' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYG' 'sip-files00035.txt'
7ade23a04797858d8e1e968b63fb6511
cf55f74e1dbb03c2652f61e66ef097d5585d4285
'2017-03-08T18:16:26-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'8181' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYH' 'sip-files00035thm.jpg'
dcdbc49adf87cbb9cf0cb9c3584ee6f3
9a482340a839de4b1914cefe2c5d7c9bcff68f72
'2017-03-08T17:38:56-05:00'
describe
'264970' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYI' 'sip-files00036.jp2'
f35356894575db9e98d387ecc1e2ff6b
44a1c589b45e5cb308c8683b7924fdf95bcaa3a0
describe
'163160' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYJ' 'sip-files00036.jpg'
fca26a70749ba29f0ab80820ee82a606
817bb3f2784e14d5297e70e1b6a61a02698c6ff3
'2017-03-08T18:13:52-05:00'
describe
'107035' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYK' 'sip-files00036.pdf'
4fb866dbd26e8f15db80868edb9213ba
16dd366a03b2c44b0dbd64591980a49471ec8596
'2017-03-08T18:10:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABYK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:03-05:00'
normalize
'107678' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYL' 'sip-files00036.pro'
9caf3a5105501e85c35af9b2819d6539
a34c5fd6cc7c6e7c63e65b7d0feeaf7393e00c55
'2017-03-08T18:13:22-05:00'
describe
'45631' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYM' 'sip-files00036.QC.jpg'
49332e76c331ed2b6e31ac63b1191fbd
18df0486500644cfb0349ed7f12e3a146b6332ac
describe
'1586760' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYN' 'sip-files00036.tif'
1cd4b355a3a1d756e5301f7297fb3a5d
0f29dd0ec09c86e911a63a9c3db4ecb693358bf1
'2017-03-08T18:11:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYO' 'sip-files00036.txt'
95e9e0d227694f57fdbf0de18b1b01d3
0f679024477defcab7a5b74a0e7afcfbe0ddbc26
describe
'11184' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYP' 'sip-files00036thm.jpg'
efda5ba674ddc8194f84072d63f4c015
141a305f41cc6a6e2da5a5113d02608c7e9f86e4
describe
'77117' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYQ' 'sip-files00037.jp2'
49955b1f6b248122937aa74bf5c75412
e427e080efdba425ad683c9337e0fcf11992c4ab
describe
'59729' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYR' 'sip-files00037.jpg'
589ee738b14e88eb4d7793d7c6afa959
6d1cc50bfa3278f42d2895b7822adcf54bb7c571
'2017-03-08T18:10:22-05:00'
describe
'29344' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYS' 'sip-files00037.pdf'
58f276ca4e1f882847de96487fcae906
69df55c46d84ff2c66f5120f8ef717d1a6adb834
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABYS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:18-05:00'
normalize
'17451' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYT' 'sip-files00037.pro'
d4624232e1781a0326ef2eab5aaf90cf
2f8d2f9983027503214ac2bfb7f4048db87544ed
'2017-03-08T18:16:53-05:00'
describe
'21122' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYU' 'sip-files00037.QC.jpg'
4f628a4e93c04c2c0d5bdebd09995c71
d0d83dc165960b587aa61dd019b70e057e3fef16
'2017-03-08T18:15:18-05:00'
describe
'1589700' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYV' 'sip-files00037.tif'
fcecf5f20609e662d51e66083c3c30ed
80c037510cb07d028f6377e97d9aab6c345c82aa
'2017-03-08T17:39:09-05:00'
describe
'806' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYW' 'sip-files00037.txt'
4fc6dd494be577a44c27a9f954305e98
9812fe5c1494329aadf34686132d08cb63402552
'2017-03-08T18:09:43-05:00'
describe
'6882' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYX' 'sip-files00037thm.jpg'
e7e9a0551fb8c70d9af71e5dc76d55b7
e7c92b6ba97f74d5c0ff5d3b808eb9b3c3ff11d0
describe
'267909' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYY' 'sip-files00038.jp2'
59fe0ee659d6606c289df2d92fc21a48
daf87ea07f909d301c882065c262d92cc082751c
'2017-03-08T18:17:25-05:00'
describe
'62211' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABYZ' 'sip-files00038.jpg'
0c9d1281fb782e11ff0eb1ddcddd7fe9
1de3dc11be5f98e59a855195f3739f3d453e6fb7
describe
'108849' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZA' 'sip-files00038.pdf'
0d4a541ab9a46596476508ffe108b7b1
fab82fbafcd042ba35b3cefea5566780e897b229
'2017-03-08T18:14:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABZA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:32-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:14:55-05:00'
normalize
'23686' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZB' 'sip-files00038.pro'
c8878c64bed135bcf9030c6d1db713d9
a0a5f778baf44a882b9c96d69011a5cce0b2079e
describe
'17159' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZC' 'sip-files00038.QC.jpg'
631e218497493f66535ecd5ed668e671
6c45cf8cd1e24df56e2c82965857d7b8a34540c8
describe
'1553024' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZD' 'sip-files00038.tif'
d22d7a8598406986b35c49c7d38d9ea1
90b1769d1fcc4e8e6ecaddffb1b49041016b3a95
'2017-03-08T18:18:15-05:00'
describe
'1415' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZE' 'sip-files00038.txt'
9b1fb841e8a39aeb9ae7b58d4532f620
c9633df2afd87072fcf2f8793d8ed243634ddd6e
'2017-03-08T18:15:55-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'4859' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZF' 'sip-files00038thm.jpg'
c924daf67c09561117844879ebec9f27
e3d4ead0333368dbe9abf727bf99100c343d8417
describe
'250154' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZG' 'sip-files00039.jp2'
b0f1a0949c46f32a3303fd30e1d74f66
2ccf1046ce8b341f0e422a0c12ac335e7f0f0bd7
'2017-03-08T18:11:22-05:00'
describe
'155692' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZH' 'sip-files00039.jpg'
0221a15156a3566c775ff051f0ab6e3e
e5ab72390afe4661f2442d1be756d57e98f6aa68
'2017-03-08T18:10:06-05:00'
describe
'101267' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZI' 'sip-files00039.pdf'
c2e9fcc3efcad3a9b0cd7d7f8dcf5587
c80f08ef00fe10c11144a06377180f0bd255c99a
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABZI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:47-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:45-05:00'
normalize
'102923' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZJ' 'sip-files00039.pro'
86fb274232db3146737ba2ebe02a2368
4faee09d9863bf49f8216bda2ab45959dd15952a
'2017-03-08T18:15:46-05:00'
describe
'44661' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZK' 'sip-files00039.QC.jpg'
7c31d5d566187c8fe0c9bed8a635ed6f
389cb8a3e2813090fd27d814381495a3dd6141fd
'2017-03-08T18:12:19-05:00'
describe
'1605072' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZL' 'sip-files00039.tif'
eb6330fb23ce56811d44a8c806bee15f
09fe48bf8a1b27df5d3fe12ba7e5838288e2c41a
'2017-03-08T18:15:51-05:00'
describe
'3829' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZM' 'sip-files00039.txt'
bf9668d88658b7131d6c790d5a897b8d
0894871fdfc03da72dc4cbcfa2334e5e759fe8ff
'2017-03-08T18:18:09-05:00'
describe
'11217' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZN' 'sip-files00039thm.jpg'
1c48661e198f5eaaf73e5537415fd32e
64c74f68530138e53bad6d693dd7b768547fa407
describe
'112455' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZO' 'sip-files00040.jp2'
0ae27bd2511ffe1050834ac0d68f0a8d
63141c5a4edf33fc9acc711dc0e005ee4749047c
describe
'69480' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZP' 'sip-files00040.jpg'
f6a907fbc39d23eaf44323a654e1a070
37218f7e6f2e7a71a54575dbc72248a3a55ec21c
describe
'40943' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZQ' 'sip-files00040.pdf'
cc60f473c4e2058bb8714ed00fb18933
8dd6b174aced1797bc4c4226c73f66bc9315e128
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABZQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:35-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:14:59-05:00'
normalize
'3759' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZR' 'sip-files00040.pro'
312cb3206d5ea20ae93c3124f6df3fc8
8da288b7cd7e3bea6337244c17059aeb98b53c09
describe
'23491' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZS' 'sip-files00040.QC.jpg'
a7b4775eb355360e1d969a2e2c93c8e7
93780fa65187e5a083fbe5a31e298e3c31f3d73d
'2017-03-08T17:40:26-05:00'
describe
'1647156' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZT' 'sip-files00040.tif'
17a2322d9536fc4172f2f3512ae111b7
4e6e02ab870a9d5ced81480391631cbaa290f481
'2017-03-08T18:15:10-05:00'
describe
'133' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZU' 'sip-files00040.txt'
02b0e200ac963a15f229950fc349f3f9
1251dccbe9d4fce3f49a6b8c21bb334b6e0abf3f
'2017-03-08T17:39:34-05:00'
describe
'7064' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZV' 'sip-files00040thm.jpg'
e45b7f9367c8ae886eab7f805e750621
3f71e548270b8d75d9b8932817d7d9c5690d8ca3
'2017-03-08T17:40:02-05:00'
describe
'255772' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZW' 'sip-files00041.jp2'
f1a463e4124264d0a6fc6716aab9f4fe
c715f552ce17c5781d1070ecf5fb1b9de73ebff3
'2017-03-08T17:38:55-05:00'
describe
'150998' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZX' 'sip-files00041.jpg'
55478d1dd549b0812378f6fbff83c5ff
c0cf120176ff79abfb17a732500c3c3f575bbdf3
describe
'102852' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZY' 'sip-files00041.pdf'
36d693868b15b69915be419b5fffe5b9
85c64069d9195135b8714d9c3c8dd6a78d8d1740
'2017-03-08T18:14:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAABZY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:14:42-05:00'
normalize
'101905' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAABZZ' 'sip-files00041.pro'
00d5247a2b135bc656a1f27adf8092c8
e14a1a676e0abf285514a57dcc754e8af7ba49de
'2017-03-08T18:18:34-05:00'
describe
'42199' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAA' 'sip-files00041.QC.jpg'
e18cf7735c1f0342154444d6e48c4665
35526c5ebd4fa835d12e9ee1edb9d18d07de9ca6
'2017-03-08T18:11:34-05:00'
describe
'1660968' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAB' 'sip-files00041.tif'
d7471442e1aa6d135d5636771852db8d
144ab904be6fe0d11579deb1cd0a2f5fe26c7113
'2017-03-08T18:11:37-05:00'
describe
'3790' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAC' 'sip-files00041.txt'
461a4b33762c3a53ff7ff2ff6a505c69
298171e282fe4e10d503f84fa2781c7e2583cdf6
'2017-03-08T17:39:26-05:00'
describe
'10626' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAD' 'sip-files00041thm.jpg'
4775537de5f13cb0d5491edc231c44db
8013093aedb53cf9a57c4d99cb947143784be4f4
describe
'161378' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAE' 'sip-files00042.jp2'
a892fef5a7747193b813b3f4ba3a4499
270d4652fd331c98fd5a2c7bae7da8054ee862d3
'2017-03-08T18:15:11-05:00'
describe
'54664' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAF' 'sip-files00042.jpg'
cb1c7992995dec3813dfca245669c762
f118e4f90d7adc6da34a89542cd553691fa69b07
'2017-03-08T18:16:35-05:00'
describe
'62937' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAG' 'sip-files00042.pdf'
5973b173b0e656ab57970eccf0f8a72f
6dc8567be06a33b944ce461bea6ff4025c925d18
'2017-03-08T18:09:47-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACAG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:09:49-05:00'
normalize
'52737' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAH' 'sip-files00042.pro'
c098bfae0828a1938b14b04c864c75f9
13ec9ae15dfa1d6c68302313637a00138050fc5e
describe
'16636' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAI' 'sip-files00042.QC.jpg'
58e6dce12d79c60d950a74b8575e5b43
f60b99f6d75f775c2bb8b84145123ba7e3ffca52
'2017-03-08T18:11:53-05:00'
describe
'1553192' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAJ' 'sip-files00042.tif'
fd2267657874fa01d6586bc31a64ca09
7b810d8aada3a95ae24ddeb35dce47fffbd05897
'2017-03-08T18:12:54-05:00'
describe
'1097' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAK' 'sip-files00042.txt'
a8a468ece2dbf1d89662997c752e7a59
e9a4e41babe8bec426accfd6f366e593f861e9e3
'2017-03-08T18:11:16-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'4548' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAL' 'sip-files00042thm.jpg'
8aa71342667434db12f52d9372ad99f0
535e507effbf0e060af4a106c69718b88e8cbab4
'2017-03-08T17:40:36-05:00'
describe
'259138' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAM' 'sip-files00043.jp2'
4e7038310c2326b5120f783c01abf2fc
015022ca512463b2600be2ab3f472cca6e88dfae
'2017-03-08T18:10:51-05:00'
describe
'157378' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAN' 'sip-files00043.jpg'
5a61d47e8733f5856cd1fffbf7d34548
61fec1f5afffd46f7eced5042c16dca9338e2e57
'2017-03-08T18:19:11-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAO' 'sip-files00043.pdf'
f5104e8a1eaad732e550f4c3fb0cabb7
b32534c44403a4a32c451884a9fc2326af9c7f94
'2017-03-08T18:16:51-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACAO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'106299' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAP' 'sip-files00043.pro'
b9395248431e08e52e46ea5582f87590
7abf16468a3d31e8c9a143ccf8f01df5df27a4b5
'2017-03-08T18:16:10-05:00'
describe
'43805' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAQ' 'sip-files00043.QC.jpg'
5eef83fc90eca0d16f7a214542a3fc97
7acf14b711377f4e40df0f67c4c49183b87907d0
describe
'1653088' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAR' 'sip-files00043.tif'
322c1e1f460695221038dd475fdf6588
3af2af503c4ea7ffafae7008eb0c5743280ae7cc
'2017-03-08T18:10:47-05:00'
describe
'3911' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAS' 'sip-files00043.txt'
8d6d2353be88f5eb38388b7ade364e1a
fa1de1849415184ff8717ff2d0542e66fc76773e
describe
'10848' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAT' 'sip-files00043thm.jpg'
b2cfd55161049ddb5e52739e75c4324e
551ff5a2668d744ffafcf2dc1056a50420befa8f
describe
'151620' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAU' 'sip-files00044.jp2'
4e28431e6ddeb8218ab735640ac86fbc
f6257ba86f0bd973822dcf6adcd228175690b419
'2017-03-08T18:10:21-05:00'
describe
'107043' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAV' 'sip-files00044.jpg'
1cba498c3c67c34fc715de732a47cded
08f1c9a2301e4e4c97dda543a1acccdd419b1149
'2017-03-08T17:38:49-05:00'
describe
'57663' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAW' 'sip-files00044.pdf'
ed2193dd2bf8c4a4e6cc4b027798ed7b
70e745d57996951a197784c5a93b46bda16d3028
'2017-03-08T18:09:04-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACAW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:09:06-05:00'
normalize
'13027' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAX' 'sip-files00044.pro'
30c92f45ed1b9f39e15c011955a6b214
a563589c3a9ad2828066d2eaf49a5b376dd78e1a
'2017-03-08T18:18:56-05:00'
describe
'37215' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAY' 'sip-files00044.QC.jpg'
81e65b57eb1d0485a80fe5c56177001d
1e685560d637952f8b6209582e82a617b3922550
describe
'1570728' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACAZ' 'sip-files00044.tif'
27eb823dbccedee08afcad927a692bb3
74f24d7763631a30aad2c29d704cda2ef3d05267
'2017-03-08T17:39:32-05:00'
describe
'551' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBA' 'sip-files00044.txt'
ad6233965e65608d35e1df972d5144ca
ca9670edb7dabef8625532621099992dee762b8e
describe
'10365' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBB' 'sip-files00044thm.jpg'
dde09f3db191ccf3d0bbaabbedd96001
9936319ce859f49e4465c73113e15a1731e186a0
'2017-03-08T17:39:54-05:00'
describe
'263135' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBC' 'sip-files00045.jp2'
fe16a4999decada9c8e561cbbbd98b56
b2acaf1f3df80b95e85461d5d6245f1421c31ee2
'2017-03-08T18:10:15-05:00'
describe
'162558' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBD' 'sip-files00045.jpg'
a09587c01bdd8bc09a744f9da93e36ce
1a62a0a146e6aa12126cf6a29512481ae43b46cf
'2017-03-08T18:15:50-05:00'
describe
'106870' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBE' 'sip-files00045.pdf'
e05782076ffb96f280224535e0d0fcf0
12e9125cebb006a0eadfe6987fa6b97269f4788a
'2017-03-08T18:12:16-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACBE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:31-05:00'
describe
normalize
'107431' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBF' 'sip-files00045.pro'
d923bdd95a04c0acf66308e6782ed6dc
2f443857100db117f0a6d499fa926949e7649581
'2017-03-08T17:40:23-05:00'
describe
'45728' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBG' 'sip-files00045.QC.jpg'
811f013c473ea9c9d926657973a4d85a
c6784575c494dcde79ee41f22c0d4c5d04d4b9c8
describe
'1624816' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBH' 'sip-files00045.tif'
8882530f7c983062ec2e03d61728d68a
6fc32364e3a6c12dccc476897f47dac371eb49b4
'2017-03-08T18:13:43-05:00'
describe
'3956' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBI' 'sip-files00045.txt'
89faac5493c05e8f897dce595d03a908
52370c486dfa58b2d9c3661af86f95b2489d944f
describe
'11032' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBJ' 'sip-files00045thm.jpg'
414450d756eb4d5f9767c9137afbf826
d098d1d3d1dff8bba398bb451f3054682e3c170b
'2017-03-08T17:38:58-05:00'
describe
'142455' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBK' 'sip-files00046.jp2'
810a28e5bb9ebf10dfaa0a70d8030a7a
6a5bf965889a2b763de52f9b00b7079247149293
describe
'87595' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBL' 'sip-files00046.jpg'
0a2f5d66a9215645fff229eb0ca12699
7afb0ad8a63ceedbe0cb8a62ca56a1a62bbab730
describe
'58518' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBM' 'sip-files00046.pdf'
5bc5623532fd1547e82c8bed2b371690
eaa8dfc8ad2a9ded7606499658271ef331558a81
'2017-03-08T18:11:19-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACBM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:11:21-05:00'
normalize
'3237' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBN' 'sip-files00046.pro'
93c03600d1bd6d29a32427591c662df8
99b36195717958e7c3cad3401c323b66a561098a
describe
'27129' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBO' 'sip-files00046.QC.jpg'
f094a42ddbd79c73dab763c2be154f09
96c94c218dfa8e285186f51e9feefaa58396d88b
describe
'1601112' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBP' 'sip-files00046.tif'
e3b3c1c1e3594057121384afea3dd75d
b315bac1bc06ee0d8ad3c1bec06671ca27b0a232
'2017-03-08T18:14:39-05:00'
describe
'120' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBQ' 'sip-files00046.txt'
3671ec6499bfd684603e5bdbea1dcbaf
369a04eccbe0280ccecd9709897a2d66dffe4dba
'2017-03-08T18:09:46-05:00'
describe
'7582' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBR' 'sip-files00046thm.jpg'
3eed00ca9d7ce03a1e672b86bf5904bc
9ba28cb03a99868e5aaca6e1ea7383900e39cf2e
'2017-03-08T18:11:51-05:00'
describe
'144874' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBS' 'sip-files00047.jp2'
7f7ee689203f5b4ff64abe5e1dd124e4
94f6c093406f83100eb2dd1fb9c7a51f3043ca21
'2017-03-08T18:18:25-05:00'
describe
'101784' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBT' 'sip-files00047.jpg'
0d3d8680ef80deb767db97fb3dee1e3f
16b675e0d263c556e7d65bc00284f9a20dfeb7aa
describe
'57742' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBU' 'sip-files00047.pdf'
1c9ea4d1de2c08b6e1adc249cb1caab3
4fd1b803e18da365baf377f9ade64e33506df08d
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACBU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:56-05:00'
normalize
'25421' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBV' 'sip-files00047.pro'
6c281f8cfeda1103ace7ebadaa2dd5ef
23986a92aab6c71a624ec8578fd42b8fe22d460f
describe
'32409' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBW' 'sip-files00047.QC.jpg'
1b005dcf36f4ab9edfa430786d74d668
35a851da15578f3b9b2c33eda615451759130fcd
'2017-03-08T18:13:24-05:00'
describe
'1553096' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBX' 'sip-files00047.tif'
42b8fbbf16000a217bb025bd77ef9e2b
8be2f226dfb5fa23919f81539ebebcaf8a30d43d
'2017-03-08T18:10:39-05:00'
describe
'1382' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBY' 'sip-files00047.txt'
7207d1e6ee07495c7003541f0490f40d
bb070f0436b2b53da2cf77490cbf1bc74d1b3e9a
'2017-03-08T18:13:42-05:00'
describe
'9075' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACBZ' 'sip-files00047thm.jpg'
f13e68905959669cf95c3a425d8c191a
875707bbeb44eaa9689de120d4f75e9427e55f95
describe
'252579' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCA' 'sip-files00048.jp2'
337897eb6c083a258babd6ef89304642
0d106a924c9250bdc15561dd46f19c818b64d5c5
'2017-03-08T17:39:41-05:00'
describe
'153913' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCB' 'sip-files00048.jpg'
919c81f93569744e71d4efbd83038381
854d483c40948eb88b3bb6a383ec3fd3623b0353
describe
'101442' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCC' 'sip-files00048.pdf'
25917f4aa71d94836d21d2d17ae7c44e
ead2442a3d740efa44855fe973827c42a68e8b4a
'2017-03-08T18:14:43-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACCC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:28-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:14:45-05:00'
normalize
'102004' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCD' 'sip-files00048.pro'
c1984568b7d70fdcdd4c1dddc5831afc
21ff2d91db12ecd81e5eda0c7141f1646db9681b
'2017-03-08T18:09:53-05:00'
describe
'44770' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCE' 'sip-files00048.QC.jpg'
03e4d9e499051d3412e6315ecb8c8f41
b87d310741eda1f489867396244c140dcd61a7a9
describe
'1600424' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCF' 'sip-files00048.tif'
2419a93b949ab24233260b6cc7ffed80
9f58952f125d720a2c3e30aa432029d6e3cdf70a
describe
'3779' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCG' 'sip-files00048.txt'
25994892530ee8829cb5b1621926fd2d
3c4b875e1792bedbaf44f3c89a5a9e3b9c86c39b
'2017-03-08T17:40:17-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11053' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCH' 'sip-files00048thm.jpg'
f67a6666f66d6096d0c0b86624c8ca9a
fb084e3527c6b60a04c89309defc0e42f7ca91a0
describe
'110069' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCI' 'sip-files00049.jp2'
fd17b70b7a0be50bdcb63492333c5716
aa1c38566071ef066939e1868f9c744213d717dd
describe
'71128' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCJ' 'sip-files00049.jpg'
2d603c4ba30a575da291435ab373675d
a1805b1a2e50f775392c1500b6f90280ece5020d
'2017-03-08T18:13:20-05:00'
describe
'42486' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCK' 'sip-files00049.pdf'
63790527e346ef678999fdb46dc6427d
348ce267589e80abe1eea6fa2444a170d0ba3de3
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACCK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:57-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:43-05:00'
normalize
'15739' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCL' 'sip-files00049.pro'
feef6a75ac5b4c688cf112893e08756e
e80bffa39b672c25f1272a139332fce232c84d49
'2017-03-08T18:15:05-05:00'
describe
'24390' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCM' 'sip-files00049.QC.jpg'
aaf7b1e5096a47194c3abe56facc4d61
61845c6649d66cdfd9ca7a74299c147d7aaf15cf
describe
'1698900' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCN' 'sip-files00049.tif'
9d99f9698bb4e8025299f2cb24c5dece
290c94d90d803c4a04e34f239545db06e1d2d844
'2017-03-08T18:16:41-05:00'
describe
'854' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCO' 'sip-files00049.txt'
d5e255385c8258e2790ab6554cb2eb2e
f45cc153c364d22c4463b587f7509dfe930d1008
describe
'7113' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCP' 'sip-files00049thm.jpg'
827976ffde0df5c88a4aa21d36ab2053
346d9d4d251dc1b3d46f175cca94e1aacc5aa45c
'2017-03-08T18:09:11-05:00'
describe
'212945' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCQ' 'sip-files00050.jp2'
0b7c8ab6c9c7eb143a5cc6125e50a561
456cd615f87ded709bb4bbba6637c8ae379f791a
'2017-03-08T18:13:26-05:00'
describe
'133377' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCR' 'sip-files00050.jpg'
ba3306d69828c3b8c4e3f37d4f457d6e
0ca2394a7ae54208b3af904c2bc95670df785bc1
describe
'86589' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCS' 'sip-files00050.pdf'
7d671ab196a6a8775895795c60b1e94a
93d2bfd3874628e21033b867dcba73691df0111d
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACCS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:46-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:53-05:00'
normalize
'84780' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCT' 'sip-files00050.pro'
034059e49b7cf653b1d99414718db39e
694541203293e0c72bf80595f3e55fdf8a0e9dad
'2017-03-08T18:18:54-05:00'
describe
'37578' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCU' 'sip-files00050.QC.jpg'
5fc5b940089d962fdf18250e8c1e001e
d48fcd20f47f9c4a9a85c535701ecd0202157dbd
'2017-03-08T17:40:20-05:00'
describe
'1599216' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCV' 'sip-files00050.tif'
8b4d49a4519767aa89443a75752c2a03
a56f30be9cbbb3e46f521efe82b0bdda7cac938c
'2017-03-08T18:09:13-05:00'
describe
'3132' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCW' 'sip-files00050.txt'
26b92e161f2da6ff86bd15a2b69e6146
7f04eaa70cd61dfabb772f53a2aca08d5b495fd3
'2017-03-08T18:09:56-05:00'
describe
'8918' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCX' 'sip-files00050thm.jpg'
d7cc0db83038257a69f708d22418d1e6
a1243d2120e78b51e5c20cb0d945b9706714f3f2
'2017-03-08T18:09:20-05:00'
describe
'174566' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCY' 'sip-files00051.jp2'
9d7cc8807fc06b679b9be45cd0685e51
1bb349e359ac0feafdb64224b06f3702ccbf5556
describe
'105459' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACCZ' 'sip-files00051.jpg'
adc2012ab6d6a9d241915558a2f4f8ce
5536ae3b8d0a439fd143e7956a75f601e1d757d4
'2017-03-08T17:40:03-05:00'
describe
'69166' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDA' 'sip-files00051.pdf'
77ba981fe98d9cb730e5acd6e747140c
24b255646350fdb3bf2ff3089c781c6330ac4a24
'2017-03-08T18:12:21-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACDA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:23-05:00'
normalize
'69825' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDB' 'sip-files00051.pro'
e0d22faf82e46facf06c1a90cfd9460b
72fae692887ffd3dbac260e364a25089a57a3a66
describe
'33099' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDC' 'sip-files00051.QC.jpg'
e5dd33e3cbd6a28fb11046da5f497c12
b8a992dab8cc4aaf0b885743ef02a0d6422e0651
describe
'1621336' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDD' 'sip-files00051.tif'
730d5ae6ce2ab9c0f6fa3bdb874dd2a1
6cd85cc227c83c9e44e4cf83812ba431d64017ea
'2017-03-08T18:10:14-05:00'
describe
'2671' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDE' 'sip-files00051.txt'
a2bb8c443d3fa266af498276f613d5a1
b90f6400bf87de349ce5c104c8a05814abd236af
describe
'9337' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDF' 'sip-files00051thm.jpg'
ad05405a97bee8d02a73b8f7c757ce53
85b4cf818bd293f7f53f78cca9f4a539a534b8fe
describe
'175397' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDG' 'sip-files00052.jp2'
400ca3c182618900070810624135e61b
f907f6ed269b6de17ed4be758fce5d6363e02381
'2017-03-08T18:12:39-05:00'
describe
'116057' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDH' 'sip-files00052.jpg'
239449443f2b3caa16bf99421923793b
97fba1343b83e8be85657bace2708b1df56f040c
describe
'68231' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDI' 'sip-files00052.pdf'
55274ec7d33ec1c22eb0cd47bdadda08
f748fe299da876b38224a48c6a00e804dbd7b53b
'2017-03-08T18:11:32-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACDI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:29-05:00'
describe
normalize
'67416' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDJ' 'sip-files00052.pro'
446c9806cb82a3ff22f135392eb324a0
69b03c83a035705ee8777fcd0b0b724f3b8a6093
describe
'40762' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDK' 'sip-files00052.QC.jpg'
b7bb137c48fd03e3b4cf95ff70909bf5
c296341d37b28011b122fe07d606928b6816958a
describe
'1553064' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDL' 'sip-files00052.tif'
39ae02f583d92fbb8aee1c2540476b6c
b30c4044c3b834bcd433091a4281ba4129ed7f4b
'2017-03-08T17:40:12-05:00'
describe
'2536' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDM' 'sip-files00052.txt'
4b07f9de448721e61fbdd51b3eed9840
9df2dc2ad626900a617f60bf1fa702e9f25ad28c
describe
'9551' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDN' 'sip-files00052thm.jpg'
0effdd1ff62accc6e92883f2f6003bed
9dcf2e8c0db0c1813cbdfd9c8b4e6f23d9170d77
'2017-03-08T18:12:45-05:00'
describe
'178939' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDO' 'sip-files00053.jp2'
438ca37af8dd8be16bb84c08a01fdaad
a8bfbdfd356d248da3ea34bbf79023cfcd0c780a
describe
'113933' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDP' 'sip-files00053.jpg'
2ae8a8799f22f872eaca6bd2bf950a75
53467d7c9949d9e471ec141ee5567f6b03bafbdf
'2017-03-08T18:10:50-05:00'
describe
'70954' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDQ' 'sip-files00053.pdf'
ac95aa360f4ed632944888ed4f56b0ea
5b0db842d7be4f881005b943cb499ba73a2ca649
'2017-03-08T18:17:32-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACDQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:17:34-05:00'
normalize
'71288' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDR' 'sip-files00053.pro'
25799d8356388ca6d6933d0398cda78f
9a150598ebb7bdb6427c727af42af6b966034a20
describe
'34630' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDS' 'sip-files00053.QC.jpg'
1e8cddce82799121b5a48b63838ace29
2d0860d05674df6459357e051788c9555428dcbb
'2017-03-08T17:39:12-05:00'
describe
'1554084' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDT' 'sip-files00053.tif'
fefc8d93c9b9470a9befc5aa4764486e
d527aa6ec12484c42911f58f562ac8b737bc5dd0
'2017-03-08T18:13:06-05:00'
describe
'2685' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDU' 'sip-files00053.txt'
327a2b0f2e76f46f71a2fd6ad320db81
d2df912fd4b4f253f172d82dc80ede33d00decb5
describe
'10122' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDV' 'sip-files00053thm.jpg'
f744bb345686f86aee4d48fd3ca3cc57
af0f8938defc822ff718bde5d81248428e1b7609
describe
'11574' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDW' 'sip-files00054.jp2'
fb79f613222b588872ac7264a491bfad
922eb5b25d7f82dc1e9e364acd9c4b5a50b8a3d0
'2017-03-08T18:15:52-05:00'
describe
'13899' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDX' 'sip-files00054.jpg'
d0d0a38d4d4c52830a52c47106415223
8f01d6319629b71808fce63dd64bde6272417a44
describe
'6093' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDY' 'sip-files00054.pdf'
2b3cce6f2a377ede13eb0a769207cc4a
1f648b6e3f714e686ec5e474620ce04df3e6854f
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACDY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:42-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T17:40:10-05:00'
normalize
'2304' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACDZ' 'sip-files00054.pro'
d0f0a2d74849981910cc3d8755cfd6d0
e6dbbb19a5668582743e7ac439bfa36d5868100f
'2017-03-08T18:13:44-05:00'
describe
'4722' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEA' 'sip-files00054.QC.jpg'
56c7bbaeafb3a1068c1fd89b013e6f04
ef6a3dc2bca813c373545d8dc4670cee8375c94f
'2017-03-08T18:14:27-05:00'
describe
'1571808' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEB' 'sip-files00054.tif'
0acb29f99c451a5361854d020444debf
17315c2d8158d513eb54a2ee7cff96f21c743bb8
'2017-03-08T18:09:16-05:00'
describe
'106' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEC' 'sip-files00054.txt'
30e9b988fa3dd56c1d859eb38f2b5b1a
cb396280a09bfe9dbc99b020330ee1c2f98073dd
describe
'1702' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACED' 'sip-files00054thm.jpg'
150f3e116c8065575bfbd9fd891c8c6b
78f948587af3edc550843e771c612f0207ad7049
'2017-03-08T18:17:54-05:00'
describe
'117363' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEE' 'sip-files00055.jp2'
36707b885ea953e01919c370628f8da3
8cf080cd6387d8cbd06985f933f949e554b662a1
'2017-03-08T18:13:46-05:00'
describe
'70868' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEF' 'sip-files00055.jpg'
b7b2ab417f734e110791536776eaf519
211419f77511fd86f336621453cad14bf00899e8
describe
'42397' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEG' 'sip-files00055.pdf'
75d168ea2431187d00ffb9112cfc2e14
c400e65ba0c9e7456adf8fb530a68a5358299df6
'2017-03-08T18:14:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACEG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:14:03-05:00'
normalize
'56977' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEH' 'sip-files00055.pro'
443bdbebe9b5c83b0efa63fe9a939bb7
9baa7022ca1272446338761395a8d1a4d54dfc3b
describe
'26358' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEI' 'sip-files00055.QC.jpg'
38282b3f7803f60ae7adbbc8d93ea1bb
1222ed2190a97f63274885a9dd8b16ebf03da77f
describe
'1613248' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEJ' 'sip-files00055.tif'
2faa06ac416e2721fd24e595ad0c25f9
16c385b421cc85461a0985db2fa2d51125d9d441
describe
'2885' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEK' 'sip-files00055.txt'
14c0b5f275fbb1935c151072a5581ecb
cfb271e19b9813986c789a5d3e75ce7957a5f2fd
describe
'7302' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEL' 'sip-files00055thm.jpg'
2c0d8b8ea8efd8a27bd45c21883472db
db552e3840a17acfb0417786189428eb84784411
'2017-03-08T18:14:31-05:00'
describe
'13061' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEM' 'sip-files00056.jp2'
18b88c0198ac228f278aee9dbf4e7f3d
3ad8afca4261ad23a26dabccb222444deb9a6b19
'2017-03-08T18:18:11-05:00'
describe
'14505' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEN' 'sip-files00056.jpg'
c962578b66e1e06c7540fa8b2bbc1a0f
3df567ea4b14a4251d41733c49781b36f7cc2b7f
'2017-03-08T18:17:45-05:00'
describe
'6299' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEO' 'sip-files00056.pdf'
c466b2bd11f146f466636fd0dd8eeb95
c961b8e880fbb23724ee41ddb79abf22a41ad992
'2017-03-08T18:18:42-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACEO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'2604' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEP' 'sip-files00056.pro'
d514a47026f70ccbc40a5562a0f4d088
fce8e820d6b09515c832905569759bf1b6b9bec1
describe
'4470' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEQ' 'sip-files00056.QC.jpg'
9b6a1c103c850f3d3b065c5c2b8cedb3
7d834ec40d5349558e9ea58963206d4770ec3a10
describe
'1517496' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACER' 'sip-files00056.tif'
931e620b09b6702f4ac4a5b72b53ab92
3c30bbf70c99b24a2f661a5a545370e418dbf0b8
'2017-03-08T18:15:04-05:00'
describe
'119' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACES' 'sip-files00056.txt'
12a7ecc9de5daba5bcf5c7393ebf7b3d
46b514892ba909eb9a770d54b7c492b26b9c7bc1
describe
'1693' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACET' 'sip-files00056thm.jpg'
bcd230db93a35038fcf3529db78b35a0
380245c524a305b72da2739e5cc6ccb0eb1a9ecb
'2017-03-08T18:12:20-05:00'
describe
'112946' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEU' 'sip-files00057.jp2'
64cedf9c299409ec759625ffafff7527
0b5e17826cb2f0cb271446ac6aa7ee8f747436a4
'2017-03-08T18:10:37-05:00'
describe
'66990' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEV' 'sip-files00057.jpg'
607ac8b477c5eb20091f27e1ef5aa689
ffa10ae6f5032374561dff04eac219232fb56214
'2017-03-08T18:09:10-05:00'
describe
'44838' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEW' 'sip-files00057.pdf'
1229385a18c7a621c835e9c7ee0e825a
b0509ef4e25673caebe5ddb7598d6e6aa77c9773
'2017-03-08T17:38:52-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACEW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'77866' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEX' 'sip-files00057.pro'
f3c02adeacf04d4b11ca1325f6e534b4
50e49bf243fd8c66888720e7527011d725d3b997
'2017-03-08T18:15:12-05:00'
describe
'21471' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEY' 'sip-files00057.QC.jpg'
af44055da04d438f7bc608b894d53868
fb5e8a42fdd6cbedc0d874fc921470e2273b1bee
'2017-03-08T18:10:46-05:00'
describe
'1612076' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACEZ' 'sip-files00057.tif'
cc85147e7b17b8ad799f1e503b5cc705
d8e06b5c76790ee73d631d51e063e664d39cd473
'2017-03-08T18:10:24-05:00'
describe
'3867' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFA' 'sip-files00057.txt'
5e99ce3f496dd5aaafd2567a95249da2
cc5f394fe37042b86d9fa383493e017f2d986d1d
describe
'6203' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFB' 'sip-files00057thm.jpg'
89c98f90f38216198756432779a32283
3e58c956093815ff4cb31c454c56435ce67e914f
describe
'11104' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFC' 'sip-files00058.jp2'
c8e1df9bee6e665f8cdba7a0131ed563
59b9bd9446885bba315b93abbb71df834baeefca
describe
'13671' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFD' 'sip-files00058.jpg'
b2ace7bb8feb9265bb22dd40c60d9dc6
d5070ef67c421e2946d9d4da5e5cba7d91957a74
describe
'6005' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFE' 'sip-files00058.pdf'
68dcfed460c234142dc0b1c3dce9dda3
0e7588866367897ead495e286e3d299ddca6746d
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACFE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:06-05:00'
normalize
'2464' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFF' 'sip-files00058.pro'
9001704f76eb13f5c3442b28841aae1d
33a7c7daf87d3c2df219f8f4b8237665914ed887
describe
'4293' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFG' 'sip-files00058.QC.jpg'
373fbcf43fc5a66496b43fb7e590c959
9bbec116f6e1a876b3dd1fd7d894f353e7fb415d
describe
'1541592' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFH' 'sip-files00058.tif'
801dcaf76e3fd7137da02f238798247c
527761985c43422676ecbb0c9629ceed60bc183c
describe
'110' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFI' 'sip-files00058.txt'
71a77eb2ac9fe16ab2761bd254dc0d63
f11aa5eadd1d98d4f16352b7c34cd65e8a9f73d0
describe
'1650' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFJ' 'sip-files00058thm.jpg'
bbd4ec17da2f930202a6b1b0e624ef30
826f6f88bc253b336b3b5059c1c87f1b2bb1753c
describe
'89710' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFK' 'sip-files00059.jp2'
b399907c102bf182654b556021ae6af5
41f5082f66f27e59f45d05be7d994d1b3c4986d7
'2017-03-08T18:13:35-05:00'
describe
'61478' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFL' 'sip-files00059.jpg'
5f56dd9decc6ee63809e9603aee67487
dc83614ec618efdfb442189431091a43d028b2f1
describe
'35051' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFM' 'sip-files00059.pdf'
f85837f38243708f50d0e65c1a5ca381
62dc88d29638d2212e1ade337a2be1c38a284b79
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACFM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:30-05:00'
describe
normalize
'54190' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFN' 'sip-files00059.pro'
487f93f8eb934fd82298b5f9a9a93f6e
9c6b0ce524ce55da8d035f4fd82fe461c2ae9b3c
describe
'21335' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFO' 'sip-files00059.QC.jpg'
b0bfd667309f54b50ff97b268e4bd8fc
c823da27a47cc4c19f31ff44b7f69bcf71a0ad0f
describe
'1611980' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFP' 'sip-files00059.tif'
db890236ca9c261d090d1ac95ce2698a
566bd3e6c13e1bd3fe7411c374393174b5dea873
describe
'2759' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFQ' 'sip-files00059.txt'
e8a783168dcac59081c132faa0e73658
95df81e6c4f70eb7978dd544f0b5479b723797d0
describe
'6309' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFR' 'sip-files00059thm.jpg'
5d0bc5d03c8a27854cbbd9eef8ebc702
c4328358e5ee75c2c29c56780b1dde26666e05c9
'2017-03-08T18:16:33-05:00'
describe
'11809' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFS' 'sip-files00060.jp2'
fa73dc75f4143b2fdc458e9e06fbc1c5
983194fdb5cee06d811e39300ab121eaeebe8630
'2017-03-08T18:17:42-05:00'
describe
'13827' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFT' 'sip-files00060.jpg'
9f50fa5139e6e22a1f7245dc623ddf1f
951246c9f4aa4c1aa7224b4e9f0ee358db291f7a
describe
'5983' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFU' 'sip-files00060.pdf'
9d58dce91b3f2f1c0980b6db3e09a730
531391f4c363c80da42f4ada2206fc05cc597377
'2017-03-08T18:19:14-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACFU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:19:16-05:00'
normalize
'2360' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFV' 'sip-files00060.pro'
8e1d5f2c3c3709bbf296493b8be8480e
3afda32ee5884ddaddd60ab498a0d99daf352ce9
'2017-03-08T18:13:25-05:00'
describe
'4808' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFW' 'sip-files00060.QC.jpg'
179cf066f9dc6c0ce7b16fbfa3188a52
5dd6760330f4e424f2b141f39c204cda57a25ee1
describe
'1542328' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFX' 'sip-files00060.tif'
a7621b0c3abd4120d4a4e9941cbc33a0
2dcbd4fbf3f0a11d1b087af8c8aa1bf762dcb604
describe
'107' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFY' 'sip-files00060.txt'
fbd44d1f178fb2cca90adbc3f0925b60
2be9fd675eaf5a41207af62fff63fd52045cee7c
'2017-03-08T18:16:32-05:00'
describe
'1657' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACFZ' 'sip-files00060thm.jpg'
90ca1db458ab19090fb0298c9d981c64
18d6d9f8314b29a5e83e25c44060667d8c6a159a
describe
'57334' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGA' 'sip-files00061.jp2'
c42ef5f7f50c4115f391e56d046e2b2b
c0b62b0bfa7150103a57e400e428a6575466bbee
describe
'39124' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGB' 'sip-files00061.jpg'
5872dc50c5c0a22c38315bb944d0efc6
aadb05073735d551870b0693db4f4211532d6709
describe
'22869' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGC' 'sip-files00061.pdf'
0d46f39529832996b79b157b0da89d98
dac6af6ab456d6304f3586ecb6263264f93d511a
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACGC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:03-05:00'
normalize
'29451' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGD' 'sip-files00061.pro'
1355bc2222467120d704a0991b7fa124
b2e130120f9ad9730d09fb4311ccae1e8dc5811e
'2017-03-08T18:09:14-05:00'
describe
'12451' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGE' 'sip-files00061.QC.jpg'
e3334ccae36452a74d253d62f747175a
ea718e9ecc3067213ead7785dd81a03440641b59
'2017-03-08T17:38:40-05:00'
describe
'1588412' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGF' 'sip-files00061.tif'
48149dcf83f4db55975ebecea755a1cf
b5abff0f564e53e1f721743e1b26781bfe555791
'2017-03-08T18:18:59-05:00'
describe
'1487' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGG' 'sip-files00061.txt'
d8f143681fd4ab150bfc779e1b041090
e6fcaf4c3a01499c295bb294ec8d4a0abf5d6153
'2017-03-08T18:11:06-05:00'
describe
'4280' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGH' 'sip-files00061thm.jpg'
b0a6dc73c552b14624c6ad5810577504
f720d37ab878b39e4df8ddfdddbcf5281358e3af
describe
'12188' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGI' 'sip-files00062.jp2'
f5b8b530557fe6cfbe16537d03017d5a
0a5c2acd8441186fdbc0567cadcb32f5361584cd
describe
'14184' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGJ' 'sip-files00062.jpg'
2ac061720045f047795f7719ac86e292
df8cac993079ca71f0f1413f2987a5029b5c099c
describe
'6244' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGK' 'sip-files00062.pdf'
d9929703634d25632b29a8bd37ece85c
4600cfd41e74f137a48c34f5f20400874ba2355b
'2017-03-08T18:13:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACGK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:13:29-05:00'
normalize
'2248' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGL' 'sip-files00062.pro'
bbba303d20ab49fd6b7779b71f23bf16
1ff4ad2d109e286ffa27b7665ca934059aa16d27
describe
'4169' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGM' 'sip-files00062.QC.jpg'
0705f39c214043c05e3eebf4ba17bb15
33e1d9f53c1f82b5fa9930373d849b2d330b263b
'2017-03-08T18:17:55-05:00'
describe
'1544464' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGN' 'sip-files00062.tif'
cd743f6941d759dd22a5ad61f2091a64
085ee2ee40f6037d66ccd2222653c39901cceb45
'2017-03-08T18:13:05-05:00'
describe
'105' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGO' 'sip-files00062.txt'
47eb4143e13c70c61bb278948cdf2461
be4280da7fed4e1d25ea99903e1b2866c9cabfc7
'2017-03-08T18:15:42-05:00'
describe
'1683' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGP' 'sip-files00062thm.jpg'
68bcee6c599cdbf48c49bf9f02727267
4088a05fc0938bfdbbda62a6026cb20cedd311cb
'2017-03-08T18:13:17-05:00'
describe
'111840' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGQ' 'sip-files00063.jp2'
61a6aae215edbb50f0d60030bcd95495
d4856336718c6e0d33e9d33401906849cc0811cb
describe
'65696' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGR' 'sip-files00063.jpg'
49057366ffd62121f858be2e81cdfe6b
d658c9fb008a2c379abdf283bd750ef22dc9eb81
'2017-03-08T18:09:55-05:00'
describe
'42657' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGS' 'sip-files00063.pdf'
7ccb9727cd017541bfc6d67a586fe338
d369a55a1a624fe8191647352987937af7628c0a
'2017-03-08T18:15:25-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACGS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:27-05:00'
normalize
'64709' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGT' 'sip-files00063.pro'
4b7869be8aaf7651f904ae552d489596
f31dc6efdcab9a264c3c648d44670e44a2665283
describe
'22521' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGU' 'sip-files00063.QC.jpg'
0f3c26798ed7922aa3c090163d849da7
c5f06cd7a721048a679326c499fd2f1864898e44
describe
'1592728' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGV' 'sip-files00063.tif'
9385ce00fccac75e0e32be3f7f37ec5d
db1e845c234639cfd1eba5c76f1d7bae41389d59
describe
'4023' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGW' 'sip-files00063.txt'
ac7b8f2ec28ff0f9d92d50a3d5364eb4
896cbabcfe782d1b5516134f5479d4a73ef9a7c1
describe
'7631' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGX' 'sip-files00063thm.jpg'
de09272fe3c2570e85d72b0790b73daa
05e4cb0d6795015b09c9fa685b83468a33d0fb0c
describe
'79809' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGY' 'sip-files00064.jp2'
ae6555ecd1080bec1e79bc65f6f29aa3
16ac9db59e7e2edde417046e130f248f87f1fefb
'2017-03-08T18:17:56-05:00'
describe
'47545' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACGZ' 'sip-files00064.jpg'
e4ab9ad7ef75fec1d7b574e7d8b693d9
74b53a924d4d547c7c860020d59a5fac84e21343
describe
'30794' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHA' 'sip-files00064.pdf'
4dfdb5fbc8b460d87ac1a9f07d349679
f54cf144d74025ec43003e120ccd2ecfddad8892
'2017-03-08T18:13:10-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACHA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:13:12-05:00'
normalize
'40087' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHB' 'sip-files00064.pro'
ae98c80811e210dacbe9e788b34ed601
ac74c4e53cacc7e57104bc7856d42adf741573f9
describe
'15382' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHC' 'sip-files00064.QC.jpg'
545a9649974b133cf1296e190933f9d0
09b27ef17e0bdcfc5d3186a245430f09e0e9932c
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHD' 'sip-files00064.tif'
a62dc7d56bd1c00a33596d4a98f197fd
528e116fcc51d7f708d69d36feef1a78aeab5160
describe
'2385' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHE' 'sip-files00064.txt'
61cfc137361b42ebe75a0bb01bae6acc
d16523cd53beae906fa9a14abee4ac8680c096fb
'2017-03-08T18:12:36-05:00'
describe
'4997' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHF' 'sip-files00064thm.jpg'
3815f62133f531cac62fdb3fa8367cc2
06cee63c4a62d19aefc7114ddd3cfaa5c23dcf6c
describe
'14242' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHG' 'sip-files00065.jp2'
5ead0b6a713cd0e6b8c1a5c81667740a
bb4156a02085813f25e3e49071fa93f6b3cd9c0b
describe
'15095' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHH' 'sip-files00065.jpg'
77fbdef5234c6988ba64fc0d5393d60b
7305d682f04369d7b133cf1095795074464bd5b0
describe
'6817' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHI' 'sip-files00065.pdf'
31212cce03a7f825b431d82089bd623c
b4b89de0632c56d84149bc025be465f60f1236af
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACHI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:19:13-05:00'
normalize
'2826' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHJ' 'sip-files00065.pro'
818fc3bc47a7163d0a0672fde6af43e8
2833192433e104cd7f1950a29a7fb22dc7387b70
'2017-03-08T18:18:19-05:00'
describe
'4748' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHK' 'sip-files00065.QC.jpg'
9d0137940db9dfe2efebb5aced38a492
4de6d4fdd993b5dd93f0fa478b6cde90f27002b9
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHL' 'sip-files00065.tif'
0b6057a4772323301af40112b3f110b6
282e1a583b9f7e0425eea94b7e13092e4dbc0d63
describe
'131' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHM' 'sip-files00065.txt'
ede60c502340af8aebd4fe1642b0f0d9
3d341ac72fbf2041d53317660d305699c5e015db
describe
'2064' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHN' 'sip-files00065thm.jpg'
19453b8dfdb405cbbf1057d8f90b1e9c
95aad15a71bf8ed41d86ceb6a719181dc5f57701
describe
'146850' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHO' 'sip-files00066.jp2'
45e2b6f720b93c119a39ecb4a3741bb1
60c307b40f715ca75c4e8ed1899bdf9f0e74207b
describe
'82983' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHP' 'sip-files00066.jpg'
77118fc0e97d9b3655e2404f18d314e3
05c4cabda5ec322bc5233fd5ebb0f15100d2859f
describe
'57618' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHQ' 'sip-files00066.pdf'
5aac1117c84343ed853cf6f44bb40dae
d11ff80f92c186549e3b80409580a72a565f88c4
'2017-03-08T18:11:29-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACHQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:11:31-05:00'
normalize
'80091' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHR' 'sip-files00066.pro'
62cec21c76c7d87bc3408af60eee5ef9
cf1ba0780f8ca2e870eb230cce63fddc22decb9b
describe
'26853' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHS' 'sip-files00066.QC.jpg'
72595e163a02d3435a0c2d80369f9a61
88d2c90167c4806dda755b9e226354c115011995
describe
'1523244' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHT' 'sip-files00066.tif'
c0d32d1461e236bf281933609a00320f
47e23ce80a12930ab928b488764f4fa25c570506
describe
'4777' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHU' 'sip-files00066.txt'
44a0f2630230f48688f4cac1898275d4
b9dc5e8dc6a1bc73a4866e2346ae38b00de6e5b1
describe
'8062' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHV' 'sip-files00066thm.jpg'
13e813c9c7511d7f2a7aea4a3096bedb
824ce2da6f155add26cf6580e748cdc02b40781c
describe
'113806' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHW' 'sip-files00067.jp2'
9ba88c70a4b1685e496b5c4daca25c0e
d46f8718ee179e10fa63cfd29f9be2178454bbf1
describe
'65177' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHX' 'sip-files00067.jpg'
d9d1b3e931966520c846ea54cc7cfa09
0cc279ad090a2c462be3d371749ae96aa1510025
describe
'45194' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHY' 'sip-files00067.pdf'
b700d518b2a95236c5e2a5d6b2d6e908
00ba7deb61414583515412fcfc5450f57d43093b
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACHY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'63812' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACHZ' 'sip-files00067.pro'
08a3a0020cb30470c8ae2f49d35b796f
0c4817ce8111593ddbe9359eec1c724cd8796094
describe
'19891' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIA' 'sip-files00067.QC.jpg'
da8efcd9d0a723fef6d9633613bd7dec
8db2790a6643e306643e8bf1a7c84a5c5c0a4515
describe
'1611124' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIB' 'sip-files00067.tif'
c943b66335cbb21c19699ffddab1fe2b
a9935d34a49e364e64d67c226be148fc6b5adcda
'2017-03-08T17:39:45-05:00'
describe
'3982' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIC' 'sip-files00067.txt'
7eebeb1a79487337079010e32eaad345
6cb3282cb2d19aa20bd4e0790b15e4781c51ce97
describe
'6176' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACID' 'sip-files00067thm.jpg'
7f9da1fd43c16aeb7d5cdd4c06be0a86
95f06293d32fe62f960c42bb664e68173d916c30
describe
'16526' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIE' 'sip-files00068.jp2'
055dc87c279a51aece523025f4aa570d
1fe5e7b9bd1704f3df651266636c899a3655e664
describe
'16723' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIF' 'sip-files00068.jpg'
7139fc712af922d957b458260ea7d1c7
b89fb1b31fc0c5dbc7e7ec95959622b54d590e42
'2017-03-08T18:09:31-05:00'
describe
'7596' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIG' 'sip-files00068.pdf'
bba8a6cdc43c7358074a858fac1e48af
8a43502192eb47f6e62c31ef88392b7aed50d7ba
'2017-03-08T17:39:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACIG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'3709' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIH' 'sip-files00068.pro'
bfc79d665ca68ad7b449ff5965347353
a26d15fada7148c42e6377678a399761a5de411b
describe
'5071' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACII' 'sip-files00068.QC.jpg'
e4a26218f24c4799c8d1aef8d819e9eb
440c6fc9033848636b22f47cdd945f8a7505e002
describe
'1517560' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIJ' 'sip-files00068.tif'
50c173aabc934ecd8f99c13a637e82c5
307f40c5425b5f91c37d2a651abba82fe8c6b2b2
describe
'164' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIK' 'sip-files00068.txt'
2ee10e6a3cb3787507d8cbb9aefff857
9ebf7353fec9787e33421a2146bb8a6ed9bb499e
'2017-03-08T18:11:49-05:00'
describe
'2089' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIL' 'sip-files00068thm.jpg'
ee5d2e5970194fd30a503d707a82722a
ed4d15c2dd5831bd97c300bd4a783db656fa5fbd
'2017-03-08T18:16:27-05:00'
describe
'49884' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIM' 'sip-files00069.jp2'
c93dc66b2b5bd1ab3b603d1859940c1a
4865d044c780a3a16d40dd041a24e95474fb9239
describe
'35380' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIN' 'sip-files00069.jpg'
e149cb7acd8b6465c304559913ac88b8
b137f00f3c2c5bacac56df4e51c5a94445cbf9eb
'2017-03-08T17:39:33-05:00'
describe
'19549' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIO' 'sip-files00069.pdf'
1b3cebda56825c1c5ed977e9fdbae2a5
febc3efb99ba949123612d988039e2c329ee2616
'2017-03-08T18:12:05-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACIO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:07-05:00'
normalize
'21440' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIP' 'sip-files00069.pro'
1daf0807f32ac2ec4e1da4af6cf20b7c
8c0bc6c8315d8cfb8637484d51db6118214d5e48
describe
'11974' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIQ' 'sip-files00069.QC.jpg'
06035fbe2cd39ecfe5f9ebe087ca30a4
95448b1999b2cbbd9aea14ba63953cd77bc95068
describe
'1588544' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIR' 'sip-files00069.tif'
8c49f388b79095cb45da42f3f2a5c638
e17be257622842da56a6c027acd7bc42f859a741
'2017-03-08T18:12:14-05:00'
describe
'1108' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIS' 'sip-files00069.txt'
da7d7917beed0d2c18096288a2eb1d8f
63b33bfb59a1a7ed5921f20f7ea3fa8a53df0759
describe
'3549' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIT' 'sip-files00069thm.jpg'
b727490ef831b7c8e3b549b3dee936f6
c6c3624285aa5e6baa820c909bb450fa2865538d
'2017-03-08T17:40:25-05:00'
describe
'16001' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIU' 'sip-files00070.jp2'
c45dea9f7b7efbb989be525c41366162
bb94954ad784bbe18f255c3a9b0b20993e7f5ebc
'2017-03-08T17:40:11-05:00'
describe
'16093' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIV' 'sip-files00070.jpg'
93493376f5ea91f673d51ed5fdedf814
2f82c6999dc630711ab244101eb33ee100ec0735
'2017-03-08T17:40:21-05:00'
describe
'7357' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIW' 'sip-files00070.pdf'
a7b4498ff6332b8473d2e12c6c2120ba
1eed42d8ee11b304586908ecfa74cc4fc9418d34
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACIW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:03-05:00'
normalize
'2772' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIX' 'sip-files00070.pro'
482fb994f2b834bf77b8371e0e835eb9
25ef536d35661e9bee3ffc0f58c6ef5aeb814e67
describe
'5599' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIY' 'sip-files00070.QC.jpg'
9186989de71d84ffb6861ca3b5ec4157
980c6354370d245aef52b27f7cfbbf39976249fc
describe
'1517596' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACIZ' 'sip-files00070.tif'
c515cebee398ac23b4e65ef089132497
47e4fbcb88b455c1cd859d80fe2c32c16a7a725b
'2017-03-08T18:18:55-05:00'
describe
'127' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJA' 'sip-files00070.txt'
41787a6dc3ab0e4b0cc041ca7c26a841
2c4ab121d17d9045d1a430190db97d40bc5a4b5d
describe
'1869' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJB' 'sip-files00070thm.jpg'
e5b48f646c520be740cc3ac4e4708498
b28c50779026675f6b25b7764043792ccc3ed724
describe
'190583' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJC' 'sip-files00071.jp2'
78deecd4e0d809061ca458dd684cf4e0
e44f2c9aa0dd47d446cc5974b7b311dddc32e954
describe
'57738' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJD' 'sip-files00071.jpg'
43979ce3f15c379bbeb61ce68a947076
3f50017242acf90f85311db80935501b36398b1f
'2017-03-08T18:12:10-05:00'
describe
'77355' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJE' 'sip-files00071.pdf'
c647735e723777dc0b5ee05da4ef2bbc
7db5dac77659d7d3d563649fb7c54312013de2ad
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACJE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:59-05:00'
normalize
'114042' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJF' 'sip-files00071.pro'
f13e379f8714d2940c24be13fb282fc9
4e61930f560edcb689b9c1121b5b2c1df3bf89e7
'2017-03-08T18:13:38-05:00'
describe
'16678' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJG' 'sip-files00071.QC.jpg'
76433ce354d4ff3cbae9f553c34aff6e
27c6067b42825080e04c908e76187b1327383700
describe
'1535400' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJH' 'sip-files00071.tif'
d712bb6eb7feb9740aa0f04f53af277b
a8ef126134f0f4d5343924183b430a72df57efc7
'2017-03-08T18:12:24-05:00'
describe
'5410' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJI' 'sip-files00071.txt'
c7d8853feb805ff1322227784f47786e
da110bc4097006ed92e5ece1ebb9f1bb58b12813
'2017-03-08T18:16:22-05:00'
describe
'5104' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJJ' 'sip-files00071thm.jpg'
f3f9fa61e4df99f416d32dc079afe157
eb781f20e0e99bc80fe649a1e472a02dc5d0501e
describe
'14879' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJK' 'sip-files00072.jp2'
f1eb94adba83aafdaf35e30164547e3c
d333f8254d32dc573b7c8527f280120a1ec83861
describe
'15953' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJL' 'sip-files00072.jpg'
91bf4183bb0c890e9c02989937af6c6f
112f664bf1c80bf503c2427063f22e482ef7b7a5
describe
'7137' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJM' 'sip-files00072.pdf'
07f83d476cf0aa891aef354117f68494
ea7b110ada05a846539a872589a6a6c1d1099d8c
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACJM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'3358' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJN' 'sip-files00072.pro'
b29a66db4153e8b6f5d5ddaea1935e7f
da946bb8faa72c8f938e99d36069fe8f6bc0a6e1
'2017-03-08T18:17:07-05:00'
describe
'5688' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJO' 'sip-files00072.QC.jpg'
156fd6756bac9e4e3c1d8da47ff4238c
55d77c6fe60d8dbbf071644d20019de32a449ab5
'2017-03-08T18:16:02-05:00'
describe
'1518476' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJP' 'sip-files00072.tif'
8f8bfd676b87abb7b712e34c97242069
4b09c2e4de729ece5f7bb4f5ec2c1d61677ca31c
'2017-03-08T17:39:40-05:00'
describe
'171' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJQ' 'sip-files00072.txt'
02f383a7608c78fa978a81e49efb302d
5a609fd76da90cf4069d24d62dda02134485c3f7
describe
'1861' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJR' 'sip-files00072thm.jpg'
0c377791cc4c5b459b5e848a9319eb00
dd06dcaa8e2747d4c5a162abcfef76f887a1b4ab
describe
'213879' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJS' 'sip-files00073.jp2'
8c5a80b94938c78e855877e6d4a17ffa
3e61c6775b12b6326286954907395efea9b657a5
describe
'65292' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJT' 'sip-files00073.jpg'
34d3d8d8e4872e64c08d6dde5d65f488
8d5a1526f3e20e16b508edaa350d9e2ab4ee376f
describe
'88565' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJU' 'sip-files00073.pdf'
293205a407f2e93ed092c429296f96a7
f4385a50d1a3af8fa3a9bd943dddeb876d23ae0e
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACJU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:53-05:00'
normalize
'146650' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJV' 'sip-files00073.pro'
8fa391cd5aeb59b7a5ef749880cf615a
81d05e68785b3015315d5c13c39dc4b17ae41d13
describe
'18918' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJW' 'sip-files00073.QC.jpg'
7a222b7eef236974d34185633e917276
960abcf01d343c7f8540e52be0801c0f26036a9b
describe
'1571308' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJX' 'sip-files00073.tif'
1c3750143bd66fb0e7167fb3d3f87c9d
d166ed61cfb6f3a050c3507c624b0b96dbc79d9e
describe
'6407' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJY' 'sip-files00073.txt'
ac37b76154296151bcad7dc21703d930
b3ad76288cfd6dcad0d8b224c050b404f7945d7d
describe
'5097' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACJZ' 'sip-files00073thm.jpg'
aa99679724b1ac06657983eb85765e5e
5cd13b66aa02f40e09320cf5f98cc3b88a0b6c45
describe
'23332' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKA' 'sip-files00074.jp2'
3a1292d43fc99b1cff6550d3d073053a
3d3fffa24f9cddb1823d85c5c5fb974503962531
describe
'21524' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKB' 'sip-files00074.jpg'
dd6ca7603e2488d91441b364234a9910
e62b1b8e010d9c6d244b13ee256c5b3794c8d9ba
describe
'10190' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKC' 'sip-files00074.pdf'
a21dfd18b1f3605ce00ed8baf820f0c7
164f47733a936d8ee2d9c611258bb774814880c2
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACKC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'6337' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKD' 'sip-files00074.pro'
3475e6956cb7da433079eea26cd51d6c
8619cb1d6c1cfa8c214f92c0092a2e243ca94f59
describe
'7571' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKE' 'sip-files00074.QC.jpg'
5e6a81e4cd7b40d2e0dd523473408a12
21a7870421d8adcddba9d1fc9d1e73fa9854cd90
'2017-03-08T18:16:39-05:00'
describe
'1518584' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKF' 'sip-files00074.tif'
094a0a0f4411d90df5ecf4a87957d603
d74b0718552da3d77d5267376c52129ff8e787e2
'2017-03-08T17:39:07-05:00'
describe
'367' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKG' 'sip-files00074.txt'
849bb3be63aaa527b1d7ec4ce1a480bd
26ba504ab3263b6a4c4d63796f1ecb3a6db09be6
describe
'2166' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKH' 'sip-files00074thm.jpg'
960f8cae1d2288abe7a4614563a3cf8b
e666039a3185d028a48a15c7a5e0222513407b73
'2017-03-08T18:13:00-05:00'
describe
'7040' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKI' 'sip-files00075.jp2'
021582c2c78b77f89925cb00ac501513
1f4b7e6d46bf01c45cc20bbe8b09d45e2782da24
describe
'11235' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKJ' 'sip-files00075.jpg'
181ed69b39fd9133fa6e0230f0723a85
2192af06bc771466b5c12a7d1c3cecdaf96789a3
describe
'4677' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKK' 'sip-files00075.pdf'
eef2f1205649c06024e8438b1a785758
4f9e964312246d64ee22107a65f89ebd0a766e0d
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACKK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:40:29-05:00'
normalize
'917' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKL' 'sip-files00075.pro'
ed72fc96753997900cc7d6a34ff1fada
6eccd291b5e2b0f86f694d07578428ef9f3732cc
describe
'3467' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKM' 'sip-files00075.QC.jpg'
a2759bbfc249e9fa0f9c25bf06e8f8fc
a1034a28921e6165b1ebfb6502677d329002759a
describe
'1584564' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKN' 'sip-files00075.tif'
c1eba24843419143a6038a0a6c877a1c
d4d36b5b9aa7e616022413ab4fac562969d48a7c
describe
'36' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKO' 'sip-files00075.txt'
27fca5835cc89913b6b377accbc9cfd7
1a12d69b5a376811da092a9a71dd5790988ed4e7
describe
'1465' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKP' 'sip-files00075thm.jpg'
0b8d88085405f276688128b373c3cdbe
36b559e3a4b2cc125da4a8c9931ede21e381c069
describe
'147728' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKQ' 'sip-files00076.jp2'
08b9c299b7327908320dba3ea2a6c7ba
fd5332e1549841949eb13d616096a3e2087e1489
describe
'89362' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKR' 'sip-files00076.jpg'
af25aecb88e064cb55d83e319a5f0cca
ad12fc44135edae95e6764daf397279205d6d380
describe
'54482' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKS' 'sip-files00076.pdf'
d1cdbe1ef4c1b92aef3951c0f5a1f1a1
49c0aed5d8bf2bb92bbda583dcc56c0eabc1fb48
'2017-03-08T18:19:06-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACKS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:19:08-05:00'
normalize
'133107' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKT' 'sip-files00076.pro'
56a8eaaf47627f21dbd4d0852300c147
906278cfb0a3ac474cbcccb422e27803dbed06e5
'2017-03-08T18:11:54-05:00'
describe
'29427' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKU' 'sip-files00076.QC.jpg'
9d8a2159597021c4e4f7f6e13bd1aa1a
522e3c2e03b7f9bac394fd2e27e6d02ed32afff1
describe
'1548172' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKV' 'sip-files00076.tif'
7035a523665dc4d172e148d76984f62d
62ae626a2fd532121a06ac7152434a7aa1584cdd
'2017-03-08T17:39:17-05:00'
describe
'4275' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKW' 'sip-files00076.txt'
28ee1babd4c373a2b428becf0e35b6f8
b2c9a198b55c4b46596ad9d846c5e977f726a59c
describe
'7580' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKX' 'sip-files00076thm.jpg'
cac09d105c01a9df49bfeab0c2516fc5
e8c2af62c3eb850a3849fc033c6d3eb701fdce9b
describe
'109604' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKY' 'sip-files00077.jp2'
b14c3d7507a94507297ae9b596989f4c
980cb3cdef6913f02f6e82d1c090a78acffcd9e7
describe
'68728' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACKZ' 'sip-files00077.jpg'
af2ff43135a40d6a102826b9e94b8da9
8ebc1a48eb5752fccb2da225c9588a74f1f0b753
describe
'45581' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLA' 'sip-files00077.pdf'
f8097dd3a14cf6940535ca43f9f455de
dad019ab90ccabb446685ec70a3d0fac41dccc52
'2017-03-08T18:10:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACLA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:26-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:42-05:00'
normalize
'42688' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLB' 'sip-files00077.pro'
5b00295991596b4e44f4d7d5d71726be
c0f559a1c3b948275fd451715103d1379e2e8884
'2017-03-08T18:15:13-05:00'
describe
'19763' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLC' 'sip-files00077.QC.jpg'
5095abcb9ecb22a4c31949bd9f2eced9
fd1245cf3ba454abc14b8414ce2bb5990624eb34
'2017-03-08T18:17:53-05:00'
describe
'1639060' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLD' 'sip-files00077.tif'
0f95b27d2ca981fa9ed8c64b55bb40eb
adf73c2146fba100418256ca06b7b380445ff1c4
'2017-03-08T18:18:35-05:00'
describe
'1595' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLE' 'sip-files00077.txt'
896f1cc66456c6d78017a2fea18fe7c4
d9a518a9c4c7d3353709bcfc742774a69400a9ea
describe
'5129' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLF' 'sip-files00077thm.jpg'
81da87c38b825bba7785245e2ad1cbd2
cb376d1b227faf9678b270a6fd485a596efa2f41
describe
'230421' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLG' 'sip-files00078.jp2'
eb0b9f4ff93018a334aa8998e8bb4525
a72b28f82e7b576694ef6137e2c73c48c2e4117c
describe
'149191' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLH' 'sip-files00078.jpg'
e6da00e56524fcfbb912b56326d06830
854ad68bddd148a8c605db404fc2b0c01c9bb0c6
describe
'93297' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLI' 'sip-files00078.pdf'
f58ce0869a938dbdbcc4fc5988e0f4a8
608f79719b54dcb8b1dff40295efdbc7fb62767e
'2017-03-08T18:17:01-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACLI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:17:03-05:00'
normalize
'92633' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLJ' 'sip-files00078.pro'
2d68ce94eef8c45a92c94e9bee412f06
1ccaef4a8f693c15957f4dcf4caa0042ce2b1c48
'2017-03-08T18:13:58-05:00'
describe
'41974' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLK' 'sip-files00078.QC.jpg'
76fb3884a9847c293b1cc9aafdf524fb
3d1074064d56bde4176126383cafb0d393081b47
describe
'1555064' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLL' 'sip-files00078.tif'
345d156800f02887142c0268acf91d1b
67f0cead33548006f4fc1b29a8c502c5c129cd72
describe
'3499' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLM' 'sip-files00078.txt'
c2ca251817316567bb909231dfab5f21
56e614176324e9ae2aabe52d00130f590a065e50
'2017-03-08T17:39:11-05:00'
describe
'10391' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLN' 'sip-files00078thm.jpg'
655a9eef155e35d36af1e5fbf995f962
58d796b8aeac9918224e161e4638afa952f3b2c0
describe
'217641' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLO' 'sip-files00079.jp2'
fb0d1105db2b4647ac3195b3af66ac0d
df7915dce59e63f919c866a1531582af74405acc
describe
'110530' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLP' 'sip-files00079.jpg'
a49eb16ec1c0a1bf3f6fdc2f11231b90
a0cf5fbb56594c2a2fef6f537ac380ff29a13168
'2017-03-08T18:09:44-05:00'
describe
'94668' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLQ' 'sip-files00079.pdf'
7aa2ea985db522774826bbf65f0c7a7a
b25eeff966bd37d2e4b0c21d291af4ecc3a30722
'2017-03-08T18:13:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACLQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:13:33-05:00'
normalize
'30225' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLR' 'sip-files00079.pro'
8709f7ec9913fbefec99838203344123
dd75c500a57226a8a098f79d98935cf596971435
describe
'33681' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLS' 'sip-files00079.QC.jpg'
7fe48b07b6af490347a7c293c2acfbe9
91a55519f7c436aa96181724586b7fea481c30d2
'2017-03-08T18:11:44-05:00'
describe
'1571188' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLT' 'sip-files00079.tif'
5a2912345e7e6b61cb574d3dd13c1816
200e4aa5ccbd14f228b8262c627506641970f50f
describe
'2210' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLU' 'sip-files00079.txt'
125d6b7fd687213f83b4a201fd2b2d06
a216f2008c3cfb60bf9de84b46727abc44b37b73
describe
'8994' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLV' 'sip-files00079thm.jpg'
33519d1564e5a62b7197a51833f9ca53
28fa05f28642c82c51a3cba0dce5290c9d9e8b38
'2017-03-08T18:09:08-05:00'
describe
'123223' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLW' 'sip-files00080.jp2'
2fac57ee89570300998dfb5109c1e94d
ed6fac287f8c5302747951edf3c7895c11a4c695
describe
'73222' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLX' 'sip-files00080.jpg'
2f794a4abf452463d97582f5aa2c21ee
e4ad0f6db45e76ff768c62ed33eba851dfbfc050
describe
'48018' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLY' 'sip-files00080.pdf'
80abf7bf414237c0e5a56fef7d4a14c4
8531543b3cdecc02681cdb07bf606a5563dac974
'2017-03-08T18:10:32-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACLY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:33-05:00'
normalize
'10540' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACLZ' 'sip-files00080.pro'
e722c65cb6428c117a330a6e9b8f844c
96af9a576c258b670db70fd67684d93e550cf577
'2017-03-08T18:16:37-05:00'
describe
'24209' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMA' 'sip-files00080.QC.jpg'
0f0cebb4a538865a0a8255a9ac7011a3
61cce381cb4988b763b382fd1ca132c26bcd71d9
describe
'1624776' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMB' 'sip-files00080.tif'
cd7c10f3f1c48349271088de18190c8e
01952dda15633f8201f2d3fcb5ff18b959614683
describe
'782' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMC' 'sip-files00080.txt'
fe95b93438a8f1bc27aba1c09f8b4912
7b5ef7625799b17919c2cb737c40109afafaaeb2
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'7084' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMD' 'sip-files00080thm.jpg'
c0ae1cf7cc066c2e74deb20a7636c110
6d9bcc84e33875dfe5cb6dbc03fc98bcea9695eb
'2017-03-08T18:11:14-05:00'
describe
'271150' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACME' 'sip-files00081.jp2'
b656553dae430d9da257a86425fed650
84486f9d18f65b4f820e8d9c95d5aad2e64fc26d
describe
'168115' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMF' 'sip-files00081.jpg'
9fae0ae8024fd88ddc0270660cbcb903
27907988bafdbd45318d31e9727c7a1728729abb
'2017-03-08T18:09:22-05:00'
describe
'110395' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMG' 'sip-files00081.pdf'
922504deb61bfa4372bafba9a728a0db
bee87f4325d12ebd98637382aa4fc1ed751ebc0b
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACMG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:20-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T17:38:51-05:00'
normalize
'109899' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMH' 'sip-files00081.pro'
3c726becbfad50d3743ec3f4670a406f
39f8a465b45d070cc4c2259979f26c44df266388
describe
'47703' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMI' 'sip-files00081.QC.jpg'
9e12c080bac35bf9bf192a050b4457a7
438a6457cd1d522398aa6018348288ef7719110e
'2017-03-08T18:17:09-05:00'
describe
'1617532' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMJ' 'sip-files00081.tif'
81951a680e68dac1637d230b5d807bc0
110483b2d735fe0af1282decb22d1140eafedf18
'2017-03-08T18:11:59-05:00'
describe
'4174' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMK' 'sip-files00081.txt'
5e1e8333007b42bacda66632f9d2e3b8
69a50f0ee01ba1304292e1dfa0b255f10fb78725
'2017-03-08T18:12:50-05:00'
describe
'11667' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACML' 'sip-files00081thm.jpg'
6d0cf80a41aeb9060b66e0ca0d50493d
c60a4462196a1654580e7f977ca95a744931505e
describe
'261201' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMM' 'sip-files00082.jp2'
cd95940866b8e3e8c93a95969fedc40c
be353dc9ac94b48aed0a6cb0eca0924acffd7ea2
describe
'165965' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMN' 'sip-files00082.jpg'
561f24d8b40281c6f7c78cf6746bf155
29ddbfe8599cbf402548c2cbd93fe5cca05fbc44
describe
'105619' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMO' 'sip-files00082.pdf'
324c1f9d8417520d711596a2186d1b05
cc27edef787af09a6a55dc77e4159f5a3a6e041e
'2017-03-08T18:18:27-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACMO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'104786' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMP' 'sip-files00082.pro'
bf79830079df655836e7aa0f6a2e89a7
e827332b3990695d2b954df6494567196d3ae1cf
'2017-03-08T18:16:08-05:00'
describe
'47770' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMQ' 'sip-files00082.QC.jpg'
bb2c00081c531a685c24f078d082baea
dd1495c1db085cdbfa89e283920c48d22553c947
'2017-03-08T18:12:15-05:00'
describe
'1554784' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMR' 'sip-files00082.tif'
c5c3a74c939be7a961f6b2f44a81d871
3e9c7d424848a3ddd1fc84a84ba9040c9665b5d1
describe
'3925' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMS' 'sip-files00082.txt'
2bd5d3b78ee5c08841f972302efd8f23
f11824627f20e1332f9ba6f12ac3d9be769b3e4e
'2017-03-08T18:16:28-05:00'
describe
'11326' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMT' 'sip-files00082thm.jpg'
0b2ef7ae9c3dfcab54c7133b9c50aa42
ef1c1cef23ddbf09208cc17c5c24d312ba9f72e6
describe
'259085' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMU' 'sip-files00083.jp2'
10b8946d2de40a25f893f3822277ecd6
ce2f49fdd10db537257ec2526ceda22151172b90
describe
'159236' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMV' 'sip-files00083.jpg'
5b6deb73d7d389f38651f2935d36154d
28634e244fd6800ed2e26355c777d4fbd059d596
describe
'104475' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMW' 'sip-files00083.pdf'
46713a37512cd570af9a8cf345622c6a
432054702a38205ff803cdcecaa15945e2a5b13b
'2017-03-08T18:12:26-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACMW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'100094' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMX' 'sip-files00083.pro'
02c4617daaad4a6b42aa503acb6ee976
446662b64e60e1c9e52fd537a1a320f1c16ab4ae
'2017-03-08T18:14:09-05:00'
describe
'45899' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMY' 'sip-files00083.QC.jpg'
25581a6410981b20c0205e269daad0a3
d179bee8ea3ffe03e9151cb40677487a8b7b6ad6
describe
'1617992' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACMZ' 'sip-files00083.tif'
ad81f794ae64d39db7afbe85a4244dcf
7b07b1474b4e6f52be17c5e14920e676f762eea5
describe
'3827' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNA' 'sip-files00083.txt'
e4bbbae4fc51f3c1d68552ff53540afe
38f314facf6efba2356a26c8868f755536ac79e3
describe
'11057' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNB' 'sip-files00083thm.jpg'
e34c86974d74fba1efdd5ff61dfb2259
889b489ad080c35ee4b98c305589a4e68ca70817
describe
'250814' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNC' 'sip-files00084.jp2'
ecfe6c82ef3fa1a0718008c17df081ce
a5903a4f6a7784f703e1199409c4427576f26a3c
'2017-03-08T18:18:26-05:00'
describe
'153161' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACND' 'sip-files00084.jpg'
2ba72fdeeb390e1521c811538035ba16
79cb0e94015a5013dab14ef8152e5d164f7b2113
describe
'101344' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNE' 'sip-files00084.pdf'
73d4cb410e789261e833161c89295681
10212a1d6b22f18d9018fd612e360ff9453b0561
'2017-03-08T18:16:13-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACNE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'99344' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNF' 'sip-files00084.pro'
2b610563213245f618865c004316465d
53d0909067cbea86cd415284150ee8e0dbe7d385
describe
'45008' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNG' 'sip-files00084.QC.jpg'
b7dd7c119fbd821c122e8a105e3b433b
282baea7e9a925ecca720a656d8f6baadf9c1a86
describe
'1555444' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNH' 'sip-files00084.tif'
c605d904d19c43c1044ba45ffd5ca5fc
6aa143f3052e80b031818be8d1479b171a42324d
describe
'3700' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNI' 'sip-files00084.txt'
60ceb8014fede3c5bf434edaeac386d0
add26a8b9c2af66564871e682534a9ff88388a4f
'2017-03-08T18:17:08-05:00'
describe
'11023' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNJ' 'sip-files00084thm.jpg'
a64cdce44edbf1c264444d47e348ba3d
1ec732157b76aa69d5d8aea96bd00d14c28f2bb4
describe
'129651' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNK' 'sip-files00085.jp2'
15e3378b9272e6a3ac426aa2576c10a7
fc165ba3606492c27b2ff24b3619248ef50d678e
describe
'86541' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNL' 'sip-files00085.jpg'
7754d913146e3b241a4a575b9e25a73f
dba1182159ca5f66e9650e7e01b4480b0d411fc8
describe
'49510' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNM' 'sip-files00085.pdf'
6257ee684c06134dc5009bef02099c87
335d5eec9113bc8739c99d3030300e23631c9db6
'2017-03-08T18:15:00-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACNM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:02-05:00'
normalize
'12758' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNN' 'sip-files00085.pro'
511a3bcca066fb375b3b7c015089af92
bff6d227c60dc1f303140f09348605fd59cb8f56
describe
'28032' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNO' 'sip-files00085.QC.jpg'
ed294f65c197f5d5d8a119ea409d9819
2b3f9dde17c93420f0787dbd1c9e32a49d02b888
describe
'1569840' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNP' 'sip-files00085.tif'
20f840b3c3fe4b55805d7b0189604d7f
ad5d3e2ca8a1821d141e1b4cfb71a71aafbb9f9a
'2017-03-08T18:11:48-05:00'
describe
'476' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNQ' 'sip-files00085.txt'
b8fe1bd7daa02a4207df50bd82c4e08f
c46a1b9fb3585850a87848c36407fe60361de7ed
describe
'8392' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNR' 'sip-files00085thm.jpg'
e57a0039d13fc468aadcafeab489df25
792078294167b62b03678f3ffe1e77232c4f19c7
describe
'269195' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNS' 'sip-files00086.jp2'
2cf27f7f293e36d3ee03ad59809a1266
6f2dddc19a9eb9b8ca913984e6447ecf3c886ba7
describe
'165963' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNT' 'sip-files00086.jpg'
c0f9ac10ed4537ae8568cb3ce6103c82
17c2b75685c8c99e929e2da2e95eddefcc6c5a09
describe
'109790' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNU' 'sip-files00086.pdf'
73928377ba51530d2ce18f1db98bcebd
ff1646df98801609a1339b5699c9eaedd2cdf3b7
'2017-03-08T18:13:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACNU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'108661' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNV' 'sip-files00086.pro'
9e69ca4290cd75ea7957a784d3b016d6
9d51b0fba2657412932af334507e286aaf847cbc
describe
'48976' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNW' 'sip-files00086.QC.jpg'
739e7a8e7cfdaa9f642622bfbb65a0c1
dc64f7fd0f0b5ce1869549de49893d57c8f1e446
describe
'1555372' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNX' 'sip-files00086.tif'
3bc5417336b13cc08ab03425b0df7d6e
ceb84825c14b82c1f41af74356f45a8fef174ce4
describe
'4040' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNY' 'sip-files00086.txt'
b1a025200fc5828fbfa36842de41bbde
d6f2443d0e10daea22818036c057974ac86c1df6
'2017-03-08T18:11:18-05:00'
describe
'11467' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACNZ' 'sip-files00086thm.jpg'
210b83c6468c2d3f067af8584430c1f1
d557e4728220c48f5c799d396f26ce121bc129e3
describe
'84958' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOA' 'sip-files00087.jp2'
cdd36432dab5dee3a3f59bedf4a2b855
c77ec5a04eb57123c3bcff00750ecbad93b829fc
describe
'52509' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOB' 'sip-files00087.jpg'
d462bc0311f0eac92896dcdf74d3e29c
361677a2b364a5b25de7f499b4a913b58e8c3bf5
'2017-03-08T18:09:12-05:00'
describe
'31802' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOC' 'sip-files00087.pdf'
af8314033c35df874ec1b060b2bbc9f7
9b72412e5fb86218378e66fd8516f51ee6c73eb4
'2017-03-08T18:17:36-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOC-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACOC-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
'2017-03-08T18:19:21-05:00'
describe
'2017-03-08T18:17:38-05:00'
normalize
'17827' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOD' 'sip-files00087.pro'
1ded173e677b5ceb22670fb6085c4519
7c5af7312edd2998a189ccaa628db2b8c016ad43
describe
'18094' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOE' 'sip-files00087.QC.jpg'
959a40eedcd205b392aa956da058013f
e120cbcccb49f09e646247db7bb9033d0f5f5073
describe
'1616420' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOF' 'sip-files00087.tif'
fc8ad4187196cf82daaea9a2e90ecde3
7f085efe1713226219632b7752e72dcc503ef295
'2017-03-08T18:18:45-05:00'
describe
'2057' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOG' 'sip-files00087.txt'
2eebc81b75b003c5cbf09df1f5c3c5bb
8285f1f011a2979f9158f531a14fdfaabce6cf1f
describe
'5670' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOH' 'sip-files00087thm.jpg'
89ae9f7c9af789e78e55485f784cf742
fa3addfc80075ab2379ecad656651a4377d8e8b9
describe
'295207' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOI' 'sip-files00088.jp2'
a569ab4a444ff4b0596704c831dc47c2
af48c316312198e27c5407d69944be3dd3ab9aa1
describe
'198339' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOJ' 'sip-files00088.jpg'
456a3fabf4a58d9305332518a73f328f
86e49d04324d13cdd2339620cb4ee3d872e2404a
'2017-03-08T17:40:04-05:00'
describe
'121064' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOK' 'sip-files00088.pdf'
f8adc7827864d099eea65707c5eb524d
5bec565af972717557e8199650a56fcf8273b811
'2017-03-08T18:15:15-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOK-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACOK-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'110010' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOL' 'sip-files00088.pro'
4da8af5503870635f9739856c28a347a
a7d62c440b5f8d36179788a03527894c1c030996
describe
'54295' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOM' 'sip-files00088.QC.jpg'
6c98f0b8993254104af61bc8ea40cbfa
ece8e4b7008f329875b9a319d1a30da7e1d19ae3
describe
'1554772' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACON' 'sip-files00088.tif'
5ed37d01f23b41442c4acafb217bd88a
928527b159d52b8b611ee91ba97d1d642d4d12e0
'2017-03-08T18:19:19-05:00'
describe
'4303' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOO' 'sip-files00088.txt'
3493f69f141dad436f27ec2b71674959
55a3ac9c9ec20ac3076a44793c7c957456a6456a
describe
'12031' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOP' 'sip-files00088thm.jpg'
72e4a6612202ea08136eed600d656b8b
35e4954d446daf860642d3b85df0a5f0ace23ace
describe
'121813' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOQ' 'sip-files00089.jp2'
12a8969add2d887d3d56b8c39c27e4f3
afb04d8d06c0b7d0695128826c7b92ac579b4a1e
describe
'77539' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOR' 'sip-files00089.jpg'
3c9600b331d08323a768bcd5cefed038
cc724cd24e0086e7d54627158d3e97249cb3b65d
describe
'47339' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOS' 'sip-files00089.pdf'
b29bd1370bb6cf04980649d9ee5b0c05
c3c6f9941ec3d76d2012e50a21f5f1580a77c302
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOS-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACOS-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:19:18-05:00'
normalize
'13538' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOT' 'sip-files00089.pro'
96692c33a11d664d51c23d5ca3c5d8fb
8252e2200f54e05f0fecff61874824e7de81481d
describe
'26380' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOU' 'sip-files00089.QC.jpg'
53472b8c332868b6baa7694069f9fb10
f0de8a7a5f0effc188a5d87372a8622d87416e95
describe
'1615492' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOV' 'sip-files00089.tif'
25f86800819f62727638f81e5bf706cb
ca63c91e29b3b12a9b07de39b5df6866899ffeb9
describe
'535' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOW' 'sip-files00089.txt'
8bfbf39d38a40146559c8912417dc719
bcca82d483a607967be3a71887b454b0d78b06a8
'2017-03-08T18:10:38-05:00'
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'7841' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOX' 'sip-files00089thm.jpg'
3b38f8850ce7fed8534320ea860ccc94
20cdc50e65a89acfb9a245113413cd1e0f9e90d8
describe
'176414' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOY' 'sip-files00090.jp2'
90d5077f2b2d8f7ae98af6f6304afdae
fb7045e21f8432dcfd0de24f37c34c4bfc1e35a5
describe
'102884' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACOZ' 'sip-files00090.jpg'
aacbb02db5a54df0cf37ad6c30203acc
8fd814157a6be1b14801319d835cb61ef5bf918e
describe
'69882' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPA' 'sip-files00090.pdf'
e8735a723d7b6fb8fb3f3fde383717f1
ffa16aa2d6cc5f183cd2f7daf7d6d98907f98bc9
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPA-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACPA-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'98407' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPB' 'sip-files00090.pro'
414411f05109bd91c14ec01c0445d3cb
bdd0e1cf4bae0084290cf95bb1e54228ab80ff62
'2017-03-08T18:17:41-05:00'
describe
'32744' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPC' 'sip-files00090.QC.jpg'
42d464300cdcc79a9a2ed6594baab0d5
7ad353d51f0185ef47e080624aacf151269ecce2
'2017-03-08T18:10:30-05:00'
describe
'1553876' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPD' 'sip-files00090.tif'
d61e41c21dbd25c4578f59ed9e97f044
91314806204e3f507daa34f7c0ae26a8c9187322
'2017-03-08T18:17:44-05:00'
describe
'5936' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPE' 'sip-files00090.txt'
cf1d9810e9eeb8e0fee4311d23b02303
cf564f8927e790f204df8a29b459433be388ad85
'2017-03-08T18:10:16-05:00'
describe
'8899' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPF' 'sip-files00090thm.jpg'
66404677d6e44a1cbc389cf3d5e83339
9e16c5871fb78217b9e813c5b9c2883da1bc9940
describe
'158087' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPG' 'sip-files00091.jp2'
39eefd6e06970bc571af8a893c1978f9
1caf22db7cee1b2da8ad521b94aad30f9201b678
'2017-03-08T18:12:48-05:00'
describe
'97568' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPH' 'sip-files00091.jpg'
0a3e55dcb6a860c79fa0b893492e323c
03785a849c481ee122e766deb6e94be526608144
'2017-03-08T18:14:46-05:00'
describe
'64650' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPI' 'sip-files00091.pdf'
91fdd6db0ac687d121015cf5ba7dca54
1e1b2278a3f4da3f7c0fe904eb65e8d349ee88d1
'2017-03-08T18:18:52-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPI-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACPI-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'63743' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPJ' 'sip-files00091.pro'
a50619116775f6d13f4db00b14470528
cfc4439339fc225650bc9b0bdce0b64d7af8b7a6
describe
'28443' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPK' 'sip-files00091.QC.jpg'
553f5c3d4a452a7f2df0457a31ec5c78
1d599ec2b50a1f4718e6d35ab9ca31cb56060f83
'2017-03-08T18:11:43-05:00'
describe
'1641884' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPL' 'sip-files00091.tif'
15b94dd46982154521487f241ffb5e16
1ecfc91202dc7ba98d21b14fb0e2fe114188c019
describe
'2387' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPM' 'sip-files00091.txt'
0d8c2261be942f2d3d2e3ea3918047bd
e49f3208b7e398b8b7aef1f8e583fa849562dd02
describe
'7034' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPN' 'sip-files00091thm.jpg'
4d36d2d62ee777bdc53ac660132a0746
0a910a487c8c0b44d7f77c49fb4b0fa5f4cbb6d1
describe
'162056' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPO' 'sip-files00092.jp2'
add2d9ca88847bac229c819bc4f86b2b
d2fabfab9dc50199a8a1735db9e462e606abf454
'2017-03-08T18:17:14-05:00'
describe
'104614' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPP' 'sip-files00092.jpg'
ed9958596b16d33008f2d721492097f0
ed821f27cf883a1a0346d1678dc7338d3a157533
describe
'63066' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPQ' 'sip-files00092.pdf'
51758d8a9ec25a39251e90e7907d7b4b
3db3e327d3e5d5fde5d787f7badbfa04fc2b9c4c
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPQ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACPQ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:30-05:00'
normalize
'62706' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPR' 'sip-files00092.pro'
a1ff83c2dbbbcf9adff40c331c637e41
a7d8ddad77a91cd26e30c37b830da22a0e80b3cb
describe
'30433' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPS' 'sip-files00092.QC.jpg'
f0a744c52c9d10384fcf8f6f7b8e12be
65e940487fb46681213e2f61ee1ea4421e7cc94b
describe
'1554212' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPT' 'sip-files00092.tif'
d6152efd682a86c0b241342843e31392
d18d3fb21391f59e822d66c0feba5cabe942f423
describe
'2452' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPU' 'sip-files00092.txt'
9aeac4151dec654a043175df9f87101b
c743c59177e25a69a83f11ba953dc09298fa0026
describe
'9573' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPV' 'sip-files00092thm.jpg'
198986c59c2608a466ea282f2c2cdc19
498582099c293bf4897a47e85badca73e9c54e60
describe
'48019' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPW' 'sip-files00093.jp2'
c902cc1754280348e4d1b6a5261bb5d2
213b9618861c87917d1a31a8fc5ee038eadbcc0b
describe
'34239' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPX' 'sip-files00093.jpg'
f010aaec39c5ef6d76e5c3c18b3f3829
ee0c817c40be4ed9ad37c68d6f42d6e83bfff7de
'2017-03-08T17:40:30-05:00'
describe
'20020' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPY' 'sip-files00093.pdf'
cf5111bf16c9e8d1dfa09fb66f4dabc8
5540be9a038b6e9b3d8942da98282475ef1507d0
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPY-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACPY-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:18-05:00'
normalize
'16770' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACPZ' 'sip-files00093.pro'
1d0fcf33175443cf9c4a6f24e2d1dd97
a20db3e4c9411c8574d339b4c3d21cbfcc150ffe
describe
'10791' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQA' 'sip-files00093.QC.jpg'
24c7a2bc878827d07cce2e5d199fd684
e5b0ec8915fd166f25a81dd7678edcf05c1eb481
describe
'1588500' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQB' 'sip-files00093.tif'
78f7e3ccd8fa8c47c2f02eacee9c8da5
3af585fa8668a63efd2764971dc648c39a4684e9
describe
'652' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQC' 'sip-files00093.txt'
13b12247d96460bda5a01982388dc75f
2c9dcfd2736b28e3f577f750786728505e33e190
describe
'3983' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQD' 'sip-files00093thm.jpg'
1d2c539fd0709975de0bc6ca01fa9794
fd91c897f76f9e62ef39929caea2d842ef792138
'2017-03-08T17:40:15-05:00'
describe
'17377' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQE' 'sip-files00094.jp2'
dd12831125b954084c2e2b4bdd4326e0
a08d8301038502dc6220035d3f781ae8aa6db955
describe
'17423' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQF' 'sip-files00094.jpg'
93a8fe799496a341112c58e1fbd612ce
8528cc62502d3a42ec5293cd0c851b29801a4055
describe
'7924' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQG' 'sip-files00094.pdf'
b4c38291eb1469cbab916f8415d1fee9
a1f1becd3e1dfb6a1820139e1d4071135d4888e5
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQG-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACQG-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:56-05:00'
normalize
'3720' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQH' 'sip-files00094.pro'
64539abef547b1850cdeedf650319941
804f7833b8af9b529c3ae7cc5858298c9a9a737b
'2017-03-08T18:17:20-05:00'
describe
'5261' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQI' 'sip-files00094.QC.jpg'
64fc9153b454c5cef5c28076517a08d7
91b1e837a56ffe763c16e9ca839b1ae3a2ab7a23
describe
'1523128' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQJ' 'sip-files00094.tif'
a6b2de0a3359d50e3105be9d331acd4c
10062f561ed9f21b95e52cc99d9ce7fbb814937b
describe
'199' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQK' 'sip-files00094.txt'
73b92103b0b65bea4ff0bd90ef08fb36
13b52afc8b597cf4937cd3d8884c27c033b677b3
describe
'2030' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQL' 'sip-files00094thm.jpg'
d78d36bcdae550da3f045bc6af63169b
888e71961b7c78ad63f16eeb373d12d208f7b6da
describe
'6624' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQM' 'sip-files00095.jp2'
7af29022edb6a35e16b690f013ab1666
b814828cf25bc99738f50cff89390439a1a8ecf2
describe
'11120' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQN' 'sip-files00095.jpg'
608f88be2e477437625df3ee76f5082d
c32e57e7f6c2f103461cd20dbe98f8562188bc4d
describe
'4629' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQO' 'sip-files00095.pdf'
5700eea4b85d2e16f7a6c705933212c6
5f0a0fd0c26e98beff0d8579c266d5951778d038
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQO-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACQO-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:20-05:00'
normalize
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQP' 'sip-files00095.pro'
0cc22100f10cd7f027f7a020982f1c85
17068894a497549863e70b27271b1ab65bd61e25
describe
'3298' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQQ' 'sip-files00095.QC.jpg'
40d184104d33efef4b29cb6a482aa634
93653ef21fc0a217b21852da0c4498801a427dcc
describe
'1585748' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQR' 'sip-files00095.tif'
274ec20ea4f7a8fed56f85214933d30f
9c9e13f4c001b82ceba62022d3ee5be84529d45a
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQS' 'sip-files00095.txt'
d67bab8bb88cd78c0f34898d67349558
07126bd8c21b5f0db5523e978bbb3a42dcf8e39d
describe
'1423' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQT' 'sip-files00095thm.jpg'
2a7621480d8ce2bd53c91f1848b38530
f675f7890909343713d96a330ba2f4c5e77d9938
describe
'133284' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQU' 'sip-files00096.jp2'
f5413043d80fca7b78119bcb2b5a2e35
e8f7df0ceb90d0229cdea28b1c4f3566f41747f1
describe
'85463' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQV' 'sip-files00096.jpg'
79e3807127f7eec6d8647368ae9e2447
4ce2ff05a396e622a83a2749f49b4b049cc1f084
describe
'48635' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQW' 'sip-files00096.pdf'
f2862e777fb6460bd8e6508881afe15b
11ab9cc056af5749f8098e1f550edc275e67efa2
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQW-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACQW-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:16:01-05:00'
normalize
'123502' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQX' 'sip-files00096.pro'
69a003e72c57524f48a518340902bd86
a8fd8772e963ada45f6962391a56812aea9e623e
describe
'32777' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQY' 'sip-files00096.QC.jpg'
292930409d394beae46aaa4fc4843f44
7da2af9d75a31017f917c6a4da0ff2aaceca802c
describe
'1528416' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACQZ' 'sip-files00096.tif'
7101be5985a08b6adbcc9441f9fcb3cc
b8fc887a175514eaeda861f11bc94f299ead87b4
describe
'4001' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRA' 'sip-files00096.txt'
64199468eb26530ad6e1c6f84eabf012
8769f955b163f4373cec194bd9dbdbc4ff28ffe5
describe
'7883' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRB' 'sip-files00096thm.jpg'
8fcae0c96541104529c21f19cb9af92d
ff22ee8c2c3f8f831365bc0357063eba9fdd217b
describe
'51831' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRC' 'sip-files00097.jp2'
ae0ba20d198c2ae44f8ce33a96532bf9
edd78f9506b1080acb3676d300a5d1f759375f69
describe
'33806' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRD' 'sip-files00097.jpg'
0c2ee438b7d22bdcee259ed831d86305
a94746d7b59a55f7e510704493e4628336c8e66b
describe
'20079' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRE' 'sip-files00097.pdf'
d3f23aec61acec4746a33a03ffc42638
5c362f83b28507c2d6c5f71c03d591ff162531bd
'2017-03-08T18:09:18-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRE-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACRE-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'28368' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRF' 'sip-files00097.pro'
466e81cb2bcb2621286c5034a0762da1
5875258a4992e66b9c8d064bb9d10de05ece2607
describe
'11463' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRG' 'sip-files00097.QC.jpg'
116b22ee47ed0b324c244573d3fde920
46d5c2db5308ee3a0dfb45841fc93d94f9ffa734
describe
'1611000' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRH' 'sip-files00097.tif'
548f3ac85cdc810c837e4fd95413edb0
32b7aa785f55b68ecdd1cdf9f136468a0fd492d1
'2017-03-08T18:16:48-05:00'
describe
'1117' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRI' 'sip-files00097.txt'
200aca48302af76dd9f4fd7325e3853e
c8720cdddff53950cb293aba582c453dc603a165
describe
'4271' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRJ' 'sip-files00097thm.jpg'
d59dc4f69081ff2cfd17c683e4e7917c
61a96ca43d6cdf5820b412cd4effe83824e6a8b3
describe
'192058' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRK' 'sip-files00098.jp2'
7e9041fb8d092debad98958c2d99a6b0
ba2fad2d56899b5bc756a33ae8b8ce02cbda7844
'2017-03-08T18:13:57-05:00'
describe
'117738' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRL' 'sip-files00098.jpg'
caea7e350158364586a0b5b7a727f786
33c68d5fbe1bec26610439a09cbb73874a6dda2c
describe
'79487' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRM' 'sip-files00098.pdf'
78aca3827c6542a6f229a2276f36a95c
e015baa988ec07163070ae96659c126e55e4bde0
'2017-03-08T18:18:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRM-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACRM-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:22-05:00'
normalize
'68861' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRN' 'sip-files00098.pro'
408b839a21df3298cb702f2b17741874
30d37b693b568d0955afccac791b61d7cf1d64aa
'2017-03-08T18:16:30-05:00'
describe
'35504' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRO' 'sip-files00098.QC.jpg'
12a5f060d1ebc5d55ec037bb02d30c41
c22609066d3f37c74762847e54d9d4b87cd0d5d3
describe
'1529948' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRP' 'sip-files00098.tif'
6e6afb7861f9c6f33a704091ebc51a6d
9c6be00ddeceafd7943b161e9b667f92d8172baa
describe
'2745' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRQ' 'sip-files00098.txt'
702b52f36b503522038863c756c42ce7
5e4c6acde0f3064e0417158cce1e9a1ae6a94541
'2017-03-08T18:10:58-05:00'
describe
'8457' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRR' 'sip-files00098thm.jpg'
f0c200e9e73f2077d629f845a55462ac
d0c0c850abb501652e8608f51fbf3aa342a79ab9
describe
'6536' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRS' 'sip-files00099.jp2'
91cdf59314995927e040e436c43de7b1
ab4e8189603ea96572b9e07786a9ab3af2a8885e
'2017-03-08T18:12:33-05:00'
describe
'11140' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRT' 'sip-files00099.jpg'
99491489521c8f4f2e7e0480cfe6ef5b
287f088f0dd49572a6728e3650de205ceccb32e8
describe
'4651' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRU' 'sip-files00099.pdf'
9b7bdb60fe3c0c522e782e7528b9c5a9
cc644de7d7f52cf0a731b488ad50bf6de1d3ac8c
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRU-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACRU-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:24-05:00'
normalize
'867' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRV' 'sip-files00099.pro'
f0782469d2579c584e564a36adfe7ceb
092e58641a1f55eef3153bfd6a3dcdd3b79711e7
describe
'3550' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRW' 'sip-files00099.QC.jpg'
fc207ba620109eae8475602f17ee54ab
00567b17659892d19f5b477e276f5cdf1c1ba849
describe
'1589824' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRX' 'sip-files00099.tif'
446ee9cfafe94ecaf7c139559f473a07
db80bb08a71825b897735605e0215fba9ff3a238
describe
'1490' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRY' 'sip-files00099thm.jpg'
80d0215eccf3b236b0de72a163863ef9
994c33e5aa4e9755217a67b5498a6f32d247c793
describe
'258950' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACRZ' 'sip-files00100.jp2'
2f63e230e06f025194d155c85ce91d55
b6c8d729e176a5bfa5ffd4e5c1968fcda7dda02f
describe
'163665' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSA' 'sip-files00100.jpg'
de9d19011930256e7c3f232549f0866f
8cbef39a44007a5285fce921452fabf05850d6c7
'2017-03-08T18:13:04-05:00'
describe
'105583' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSB' 'sip-files00100.pdf'
b8ac11f6330cadc773a5af485b480fda
6c3ba6025d328a53a8339137b868c63341819930
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSB-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACSB-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:18:37-05:00'
normalize
'97676' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSC' 'sip-files00100.pro'
e0ccdb64b6845f6662e8f177aff93424
1b163d570cf79503038b2a5bee7f6d7f56d9d438
describe
'47148' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSD' 'sip-files00100.QC.jpg'
1330976a39ed6c42c8da7bf44331c89e
778e2d04f89f829695fbd784fd3f5c640c5e7234
describe
'1531716' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSE' 'sip-files00100.tif'
2c6cde880633c5a513c82458b3a0a4f1
560dd156ce2cd8e6e7e19618f20b1fa91ef9b1de
describe
'3792' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSF' 'sip-files00100.txt'
9f4624d63dc59e43c0b14f1a89bed1de
3622decb5db57805ecf8c172b38f14c66cca2074
'2017-03-08T18:14:29-05:00'
describe
'11697' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSG' 'sip-files00100thm.jpg'
3ddfae9b7b83289cf4a84b352fbcdbe6
e597aa08c33cefb00b6ad128accf3ed8c2e756a6
describe
'99352' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSH' 'sip-files00101.jp2'
aae0dfaae10967f554f28f2900a4a811
aedfddce98397d5acbe24adb21cb19f7506cd0dc
'2017-03-08T18:17:10-05:00'
describe
'38997' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSI' 'sip-files00101.jpg'
0acdcfba8fbb5d68e5e9bb5bff2b2117
0872aacfeef76e056ddde1384a7fce5428a03b95
describe
'37152' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSJ' 'sip-files00101.pdf'
60da810a385580dec6b9355ba960666f
dbb2fa2ced1abfb13551b79cbfd677cb3193b29b
'2017-03-08T18:15:40-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSJ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACSJ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'2087' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSK' 'sip-files00101.pro'
ee041920b6b9ba188a8c4a0af719d9c8
4826b6ea965f70f25718473a6438555da3777252
describe
'13743' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSL' 'sip-files00101.QC.jpg'
24795ca3f720e1b67b5a9a624494cb30
99406d1d3d0d3f03e63f3f262f6c26fdc1d6716d
'2017-03-08T18:11:41-05:00'
describe
'1595212' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSM' 'sip-files00101.tif'
7c84f0dfbc26d4c56b61e55966bbf28e
40fbc04a2a365a37b1a0601e8d25fba6e86cbd43
describe
'154' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSN' 'sip-files00101.txt'
01e643a1689c112fea9f77336aaf210e
a81be57e75a474b4e63667e96ba7f801b169f3df
describe
'4755' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSO' 'sip-files00101thm.jpg'
909d26af214aec00159b7b2972a2f3bf
35902d5a65314d43317da1fba4831b3c46261dd7
describe
'83093' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSP' 'sip-files00102.jp2'
7296ee4c168e7ebca3b9f158f7e65656
a19a29b0934cb30a5286273c29060de35825dcf3
'2017-03-08T17:50:08-05:00'
describe
'53133' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSQ' 'sip-files00102.jpg'
15cfef08d967da4a36b6d34aca2a05e2
2fde139a8b135a696d1b2525833f8e3724942d42
'2017-03-08T18:15:49-05:00'
describe
'30703' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSR' 'sip-files00102.pdf'
ce11658c8c46a025515174c2cd3029c8
b22ac7d9212b1fbca4f0d25bf79790eef6ac21b2
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSR-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACSR-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:19:10-05:00'
normalize
'32681' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSS' 'sip-files00102.pro'
76a05c56c5c6777e46cb3efd637a5c48
c0851fda645e8767ddddb93654577b1b7ccf38c5
describe
'17689' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACST' 'sip-files00102.QC.jpg'
aee3912b4d0269fc354941d79a404747
dc09c574506199867e2b8472857d54d7a8b2446c
describe
'1527300' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSU' 'sip-files00102.tif'
885aa1e39de74b09787ca5a4e59ee6e1
05148e2232aacfe8e96a20e825a7e000e5c9e7cd
'2017-03-08T18:14:28-05:00'
describe
'1897' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSV' 'sip-files00102.txt'
612e0b7a282ccf3e990fcd5a2cd767d6
f5eff2d1e0250308826077aa0e68965eb8cefc3b
'2017-03-08T18:14:10-05:00'
describe
'5772' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSW' 'sip-files00102thm.jpg'
251f8ae390ff428a8e0f9099a8365bc9
7f72ecba8d740e53d5438259018c21662d7f1840
'2017-03-08T18:17:24-05:00'
describe
'80151' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSX' 'sip-files00103.jp2'
5f203ccea66a8b2e3c201f1c32ab6af7
2a3a15309ff3b481df75c3ee2582bb5a0bb38b0e
describe
'49622' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSY' 'sip-files00103.jpg'
82f2887da0f9f2407e786eaa9970bca6
2d55194ed0e6a602aa1bf5967d9f4dd5f261f233
'2017-03-08T18:13:30-05:00'
describe
'29360' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSZ' 'sip-files00103.pdf'
1119151e25cb04e6a2c4cdf20d0d8b08
9f7a7c32b3eb43fa879284180fd0326e2867ed7f
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACSZ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACSZ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'33404' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTA' 'sip-files00103.pro'
82aa08a14f10f227caa888e6af78601c
0ec2efe58c595bc02b8ebf02d0205921977a85d6
describe
'17437' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTB' 'sip-files00103.QC.jpg'
0da67c40b0e0f570c8046f88d2a7ffdb
2581fd45717264709c0ddc1bf6897b451b38c086
describe
'1631148' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTC' 'sip-files00103.tif'
1f9d95a59197b4274c333f98082f17ed
ab95e447a8f1424caab20e33932fcb9c360d0c9b
describe
'1823' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTD' 'sip-files00103.txt'
4f7e80f58cdc087c8e778568017a64de
5d56ead344fb0aaff43d9f9e8b106154a543ed3e
describe
'5859' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTE' 'sip-files00103thm.jpg'
db6c932331939efe5017180f9180d6ab
e5a8956c043a25fcb47a1bf1e119a468f17670b7
describe
'74509' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTF' 'sip-files00104.jp2'
5296172f9fc4c7e09cc4482fc9afc888
4278502481dbc67650e18f2c1cfbd41ef93e1606
describe
'46560' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTG' 'sip-files00104.jpg'
18ed38efdee3ab83cfc504deb6bfb81e
aaa18ceafd10f315f6b9c1895da972528f9fdf74
describe
'27572' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTH' 'sip-files00104.pdf'
d370c2c01f28db9f0f5e6aa10b8457ba
9352a8759944c05853fd948e26b406f2a41400ef
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTH-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACTH-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'31536' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTI' 'sip-files00104.pro'
4bf7ed6a0b52faffae0bfa79f97fce22
93aca64fbcca0daac122d8a9ebc480f58226e1c2
'2017-03-08T18:16:55-05:00'
describe
'15190' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTJ' 'sip-files00104.QC.jpg'
03b7ce899f3d3dfceaa9eb0d5b6d39f7
acb6ef494809e4ed446c6247e1aa990fd96321ce
describe
'1526692' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTK' 'sip-files00104.tif'
15daf19162de215982e5d0add48fa0e9
5ea02cc8de40fb9bf8f3e2864c6d5aabced1264e
describe
'1887' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTL' 'sip-files00104.txt'
40cbb9ab83c53ce2d713860944ca1bea
99ee48933b48d999154fb32ea3c2eb4d9168f709
describe
'5293' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTM' 'sip-files00104thm.jpg'
4c209757a6916d0766c15eb106336180
517b533c2a1b93fb13b512c1985eef17bc984257
describe
'72001' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTN' 'sip-files00105.jp2'
261580c09ddba16a205a4cb2ed010896
f15821428c2a71fdc553b5313c7a6bf203e1bbe1
describe
'44657' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTO' 'sip-files00105.jpg'
d79ee8cf21224c96a0c8a87bcbc476f5
bcd7802a375fb8fde229db6530e6dd0a840e1b6c
describe
'26858' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTP' 'sip-files00105.pdf'
f4b3f02b5870094b73138e71685e8321
4bd01995e6a84a6630991c7b02c6ad14602e7f3b
'2017-03-08T18:09:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTP-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACTP-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'27305' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTQ' 'sip-files00105.pro'
db0eb5ab2b9b10fb7615bbf8a6085c54
6f1651e9ea140aefa154612a905f374a51827dd7
describe
'14712' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTR' 'sip-files00105.QC.jpg'
f9676ed4a49d49973a4187773c2a2061
b63c8c12d7586ba23bbc06a9f7403cbfd80b165d
'2017-03-08T18:12:25-05:00'
describe
'1619016' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTS' 'sip-files00105.tif'
250c15ac6f89f1ed3f00fb66ba45c01b
79a60d41b79aee2c666cbcf2a70417f0413b0d28
'2017-03-08T18:12:40-05:00'
describe
'1372' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTT' 'sip-files00105.txt'
7e09dc776a6251b110e55173a8acb766
2b3abb61768bee3b17ecf039f083ffc2a8396cff
describe
'4632' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTU' 'sip-files00105thm.jpg'
356f9aa5cd7b35a27e08711536ed0129
947a4d8a0c543ce53c003ba5f68e7dfb7d510b68
describe
'127279' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTV' 'sip-files00106.jp2'
02ac06428c08ade5fb616d71c325a435
143c5769143799d452a7efb6636799b5215c4610
describe
'79712' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTW' 'sip-files00106.jpg'
92b0d9e04ecc7dd079c9d4cb0f3f5c82
d412e63cea799c13cae6f97df60928b5397fe696
describe
'50420' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTX' 'sip-files00106.pdf'
51174ac5152513dae914a7b4c1810cf8
9619960c6477e2d9cbb46e1e8b03fc1847606889
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTX-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACTX-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:16:12-05:00'
normalize
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTY' 'sip-files00106.pro'
d05c58bd08d676fb58359df1855660eb
2efc6318ee4efb5a812ce74424718d294bab920c
describe
'26129' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACTZ' 'sip-files00106.QC.jpg'
d9e6e30fc479d7bc04c997a590d4024c
e3a094cf11a0d56ada9370633b377a7f5ce6aed6
describe
'1562836' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUA' 'sip-files00106.tif'
751c300e01ad4c58bf852fefeeb73ebb
7be6b73b1a4b33bddb631d1afbc1e44b0a277703
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUB' 'sip-files00106.txt'
aa74d6866fc2f3478c4d09ba2fd661c1
a6e396f7fd178cca5bb531f86f67cff0f3ed2ea1
'2017-03-08T18:13:21-05:00'
describe
'8180' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUC' 'sip-files00106thm.jpg'
fcd09df826599b90061049326ad8170c
dd3ef6fa129e83c54b62b32191a4d41b431c0c75
describe
'109944' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUD' 'sip-files00107.jp2'
6ac80974ae55ab93170f4596040e1416
87c81bda7c64388e3c359c3e9336534f90263c1a
describe
'74452' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUE' 'sip-files00107.jpg'
3b1210f6b4303595ad040e4432065c71
34d90bbeb3b2950b362ae4e3fabf1892575fd64d
describe
'41530' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUF' 'sip-files00107.pdf'
21f95a2ff804f3120b8516f377108168
8448d7c471b3ae474232f88543d8907ead848710
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUF-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACUF-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:42-05:00'
normalize
'9043' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUG' 'sip-files00107.pro'
dc4b73c78857ebb11ce33af4ecbd7d45
29074b967c62d53973a7a3324f2af1a726dfda0c
describe
'26083' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUH' 'sip-files00107.QC.jpg'
fd55d30ae2130e416fc8629194601b98
54d1b2d3c98f444bb6c1e17cee05889d3e7036fc
describe
'1551600' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUI' 'sip-files00107.tif'
8c0a88bb16c5e7bceb34f9b896273ffc
f83c361024f800c3ff6c21b93b347fdb4a96c9a5
describe
'615' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUJ' 'sip-files00107.txt'
607013dd3972588a61c0b95fbcb2cb26
d1729648ea154b85c332827d99c556712aa625c8
describe
'8078' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUK' 'sip-files00107thm.jpg'
919b58e7df9bcc7d0c8217599dfde2de
3013f5949ed330225a24a33b7dd6d33fedb3644b
'2017-03-08T18:18:00-05:00'
describe
'281805' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUL' 'sip-files00108.jp2'
da411885ddb9e72135ca91ea5c7d6cf9
79238894d473222f003dd2fc65767e803fbb384a
describe
'173748' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUM' 'sip-files00108.jpg'
c2311a9a83e2b49c2f936ffb88284ad4
6d30ad3a9a586956a3e7f59377f2f36e16cd7d0a
describe
'114641' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUN' 'sip-files00108.pdf'
986009e77e7e7f87eb5d468b2713e955
70a6d0e678b5d02343cc50e21b62df87a3981d17
'2017-03-08T18:18:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUN-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACUN-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'111294' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUO' 'sip-files00108.pro'
98b05313ba876a3ea5285bd22a131ef4
28cbddcfb17550b2a4ef535531be62f7b0332674
describe
'48479' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUP' 'sip-files00108.QC.jpg'
de5e5e4e867c69bcd081ad40b9a576be
17473805a8bcf08e5b23056568af242371de0967
describe
'1564524' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUQ' 'sip-files00108.tif'
75351d0fee6220695ccb618a8d954644
4b43a7dad1b86b343cbf385c8112b926596c6944
describe
'4132' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUR' 'sip-files00108.txt'
b8a1f1baef4c6913f891e4947820e4cb
46439be256ddbe71b26ec22eb039806e700153ca
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11497' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUS' 'sip-files00108thm.jpg'
068a1145a36d8c745f2d19def3b93dc0
b702b2ef2d220cdf608f496f4796903e5f4b8fe7
describe
'135363' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUT' 'sip-files00109.jp2'
55c2529710aba6371276ef08d8167b45
123135ddb96eb18c6d6fd0c9c741e5fcd560c428
'2017-03-08T17:40:31-05:00'
describe
'53201' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUU' 'sip-files00109.jpg'
90e358df4dc2810ec092cf872ad559b5
0ec188212ada7be71a93f7969eff3490016badd3
describe
'50102' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUV' 'sip-files00109.pdf'
e20ccd02e2d858593169005d30277de0
28cda5e465c23cf1fa25af212bddbe8fce68eb6c
'2017-03-08T18:15:53-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUV-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACUV-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'11569' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUW' 'sip-files00109.pro'
ee07b308070a53edbac7664d54c03252
58ad71bd3234cd4dcdfd263fb56e745ccf29db9b
describe
'18165' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUX' 'sip-files00109.QC.jpg'
bafb3880aede84d65f6fff2bb5e047d6
bcb7745ff13b9c1a464ab0ac1fdf6682d67055de
describe
'1566616' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUY' 'sip-files00109.tif'
ac45bb522c4a3f2926463942d7a255d6
b015c50e3e96863383a7247c5d72781b72b8c9aa
'2017-03-08T18:13:45-05:00'
describe
'857' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACUZ' 'sip-files00109.txt'
8ec607376d2d194331a774d7bcd8f7c4
4b8dccc79840e4b979e258d232bd88ceeb5aec1b
describe
'5230' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVA' 'sip-files00109thm.jpg'
1af91f1cdff3766c150b8d04ad0eb590
4ebab3ecd6fcb7630a667934d1434d201f57a1be
describe
'298915' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVB' 'sip-files00110.jp2'
28cbb591562a8f0d122e4b5779193e9f
4b71db9ede4598251d3d6789c389ee54e071a18a
describe
'190509' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVC' 'sip-files00110.jpg'
9a4be95a98c8626dc5e630335225b2f9
c9f9d8f5c9f566a938b0b1d016d3b34f2873765d
describe
'122994' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVD' 'sip-files00110.pdf'
a0250c9af8d246913e9ad3a3d5109ca3
16b55d1fef7a9374d766b2a6effc1c0a3ebfaf04
'2017-03-08T18:14:49-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVD-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACVD-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'110591' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVE' 'sip-files00110.pro'
1b0e8e24fe76f4975c0bbe753780bfdd
35165d685036dd8dac6b76a45f1f70e8957c8de7
describe
'53160' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVF' 'sip-files00110.QC.jpg'
17f9e65f581e269e8cbafe69cbd3785e
49093b91178803954c2c1143c78b648e586c5b00
describe
'1532684' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVG' 'sip-files00110.tif'
cc2ec305d9a6bea2e16bffb1ed6e6086
014acf615766b1ac5d70dbfb490df51581f319ba
describe
'4308' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVH' 'sip-files00110.txt'
4c2ff5a62dbcc4bd5644327effafebe7
d0eeb265f9b72dca4c515f505a190efadd5c4f7b
describe
'12672' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVI' 'sip-files00110thm.jpg'
bffaa2374cf711a885b9532cda9ec0b1
8e4314caa6f820bcdc66a3b4ebaed4ec309920e0
describe
'74782' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVJ' 'sip-files00111.jp2'
d41e4dcb0192f88e3be53d43f20bf976
0f470241cb9fbb9ec89335d3409465fc8eca957a
describe
'43496' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVK' 'sip-files00111.jpg'
58ba05afff29b6f242f780eb56f8649a
bce6372ddd17b9bdc030e4701fd0efe9c461adaa
describe
'30312' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVL' 'sip-files00111.pdf'
052be5bdf33eda91633903c9310424c4
30cf10f2f6af06b63d1dc3741389509afd023ba8
'2017-03-08T18:16:06-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVL-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACVL-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'12720' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVM' 'sip-files00111.pro'
b4745be7cf6e746979a83fc032724487
f21d8800d970066bc0878ea4a682a5931f00b959
describe
'14576' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVN' 'sip-files00111.QC.jpg'
baaa00dd88afeecd3f107653c1bb12bc
a2d194639287a10b2508dfe560711964223a7145
describe
'1616076' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVO' 'sip-files00111.tif'
b04b10267d9cd206fdd85199bda4573c
325d541062f49de7c415e7ecfc79624bcdaf8c10
'2017-03-08T18:16:44-05:00'
describe
'469' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVP' 'sip-files00111.txt'
24f7719ba80b55a2c012be780e1a060c
54928b62c8e838cbce3969d329d5a869494212f8
describe
'4883' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVQ' 'sip-files00111thm.jpg'
479817e20161fd047b4aa63ec5e74b63
bead828cac223de632a916917b5d224c73849303
describe
'60503' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVR' 'sip-files00112.jp2'
e37175d5cc6ec6066cdcbd54fbe7e45d
7d05de100ee3eb1cfb17e1dc3edd7a7c26aafa7a
describe
'35827' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVS' 'sip-files00112.jpg'
f998e16505805ea6ea360f0de4fc3fd7
b7e07b40126c90b96849a77c826bdd6accc2fe93
describe
'27099' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVT' 'sip-files00112.pdf'
dcd0ffed80725ee08f0ad9c5feb1d989
a9f7bc1f242d65025c2d3ca611bb98dd0fd29db7
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVT-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACVT-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:16:46-05:00'
normalize
'7530' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVU' 'sip-files00112.pro'
6d203de6d3e48fb8eaa2273501d67d65
e5daea12ea267c47fe2447312be56f68b2cf92d8
describe
'11221' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVV' 'sip-files00112.QC.jpg'
9ef105e245e373bb2ddebbeaf80a3088
d03e8d998580effa753345f0265b62ac28740afb
describe
'1513012' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVW' 'sip-files00112.tif'
9a17f3fbc30be96f39f6a9d2337bb681
f368c9b6bdedf7f35541b5fb56642705f3bdc9dc
describe
'278' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVX' 'sip-files00112.txt'
5c23f5a63821fd6b09eb9e1b9d4fa4b5
96a24dab83103bf6221a769ceeeba1ee68de448b
describe
'3906' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVY' 'sip-files00112thm.jpg'
69f6a2b139cc9abe4f48681e31b2b528
9b8b6c3dd584a5810b5a6e60a50a8ad54a4544e3
describe
'37862' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACVZ' 'sip-files00113.jp2'
b89193fbc0bb76fe2ce7c18f0d8589f7
eafdb29c3588bf8ea0b3f8a3f705e13715007a0c
describe
'29485' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWA' 'sip-files00113.jpg'
3996e73fa0500abe8dd73597c970b751
8b5eaf4536b5d1ffc6b023603eb1c89d5a026b44
'2017-03-08T17:39:53-05:00'
describe
'15365' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWB' 'sip-files00113.pdf'
d883eac2a98200ceefa3c40bdb7c0f4c
5c262f7eb1d0257edf10b1422acae927d17b55dc
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWB-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACWB-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:13-05:00'
normalize
'11719' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWC' 'sip-files00113.pro'
2b0f62a5e8284000c75a58ca0edf6f3a
9f0583d5d564b8322dfc7812d980d64ca8cf0bb8
describe
'8894' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWD' 'sip-files00113.QC.jpg'
0efbca0faae3461c5cb0e0584b3aef98
05258a846b0f2d09585cb82e7d5194d4b6695d4e
describe
'1606720' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWE' 'sip-files00113.tif'
8032d51c790fae4a3bd56196b7989945
1eccc70d485578eeaa043d7b63ab2ebe8fe8d695
'2017-03-08T17:39:37-05:00'
describe
'433' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWF' 'sip-files00113.txt'
d91b1dae904763dba703a78a64b2553e
e6607baedd1aa219033604694bb62095ce9e60a1
describe
'3142' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWG' 'sip-files00113thm.jpg'
891fa8fc47e922e2718b7af75ad5da06
ec645826e3fe72bbc3d0bd608e76a4dab34a1f11
describe
'274111' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWH' 'sip-files00114.jp2'
7979bf16d3ea1b3cb06a1c89c9286949
c3e40fdf942b84c32af72b351b2119dcdd1c5a69
describe
'172658' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWI' 'sip-files00114.jpg'
b9d557eeeee4940a8e4379cf8026d48b
e3e2fa0ce4032f8584ec42deea3bae8a3d4ae3c9
describe
'110857' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWJ' 'sip-files00114.pdf'
d5ed13c55c9eb069cfd6a8c29474c2e7
43438547d018eacedbae5797df23e927706149ae
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWJ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACWJ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'110758' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWK' 'sip-files00114.pro'
488fa03cebaacd4a03038a0010fa91fb
01c176a30508b52e91baecf7f2fbc133e4a56147
'2017-03-08T18:11:50-05:00'
describe
'48965' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWL' 'sip-files00114.QC.jpg'
3c76cb344ed635f102be1ab30aa3d313
c637095b2b5221f8f9dd454f26c2785c544f0ecf
describe
'1532028' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWM' 'sip-files00114.tif'
2bfec89e5de82bc5e5e76c15538d0216
ab4a8b7fd63e5abbea85742b1ce04a8455ba1169
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWN' 'sip-files00114.txt'
2f928aec5f586bce50f4faf77a3fcc7a
203e2842c252c21755b6b5a139601eb0acc68459
describe
'11087' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWO' 'sip-files00114thm.jpg'
8c6ab74c45c821e971dcddd95f9d90e4
01f941ad8dfcb3582264bb7a093263c34b82cb83
describe
'55894' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWP' 'sip-files00115.jp2'
e93a9c7ec2edd16847557639419d8f11
14589b1d9eecd18d76c04fc0479642783ad0eb5a
describe
'38292' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWQ' 'sip-files00115.jpg'
259d85aeac288f0ec270a6a0ba0a53b2
6cffcb9af732ba9cbc81d43aa95c73a61188831f
describe
'21238' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWR' 'sip-files00115.pdf'
7896c09096936009d325f23ade9df378
2bf24e81fcc6a6418f104cec687f3afa6055c220
'2017-03-08T18:15:38-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWR-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACWR-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'10669' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWS' 'sip-files00115.pro'
c6ccc955a32abc4a7ff8a39f56a37cf6
2c2bb69b91cceddc07451ec2c4477a31ce9577b4
describe
'13315' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWT' 'sip-files00115.QC.jpg'
5c29dcfd275eb7f75c4c4d8dcbbb65c6
8487b89b35a4fb3c8bd098c137b683282261a43d
describe
'1611936' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWU' 'sip-files00115.tif'
5754398daf6f6ec5c1c04f6159d576f6
1fec6c045c6f99824360ed6e1a4c2a96d3f07923
'2017-03-08T18:09:30-05:00'
describe
'394' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWV' 'sip-files00115.txt'
c5e7f8e5eaa0911be88b87d14019e8bb
71afaab996cccb09fb71f82b8c176ebdeb17ecec
'2017-03-08T18:11:36-05:00'
describe
'4846' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWW' 'sip-files00115thm.jpg'
f31ff29a532c4c095d86b416e53efef9
6bc3eaf5c43a5e59191936b78b2ecd7e25a77c5a
describe
'107417' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWX' 'sip-files00116.jp2'
d631faf096594c3941532e4af5a143af
22f9ae9bb2ee3cf4287a60f05e4a9398bb2cfa68
describe
'70940' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWY' 'sip-files00116.jpg'
2cdfbaea998d2d43e595d5c62b4f7d8d
3c2e3b94d8d9dc0fb1082dba910061662c3f27b1
describe
'45903' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWZ' 'sip-files00116.pdf'
d553af904e1494b84f64b808fe19d5b5
5956c1a1d8fede3f01459c3aee3b1f685234bc78
'2017-03-08T18:15:22-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACWZ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACWZ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:24-05:00'
normalize
'7956' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXA' 'sip-files00116.pro'
b8f6746d9b87916fa6b4ef6becafdd7e
2bc0893402458ff10de3a7a3f4aee8b08656affc
describe
'21812' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXB' 'sip-files00116.QC.jpg'
3ee2443519717a2c3dcd3061e4bc8fb0
083933fb434b9952037a0528d8bd4c7d0b920508
describe
'1526452' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXC' 'sip-files00116.tif'
252ff74d808a146fc5111f4284d69515
d5c9b112b2cb690e1754845dcbeb82825d2ac4c8
describe
'295' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXD' 'sip-files00116.txt'
e781793b3d0db99797d98df47ed3aa58
1cb6647ff4906904983821ed0c2f91b48a56c46f
describe
'6039' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXE' 'sip-files00116thm.jpg'
557c9b25d7b418980df857eb30554a30
c30abfb3ef0d2ef2da3208e296903f029a85246e
describe
'83350' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXF' 'sip-files00117.jp2'
96dcc8a05e8211c784592d16f694940e
193f167e15dfd7031be850d971e247ce710109af
describe
'54414' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXG' 'sip-files00117.jpg'
8525780fd3b9e65f8137ce0bd5c8d1b6
e920c5c1fc0ed2d3c78c0a14a2241e0d235c06a5
describe
'32688' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXH' 'sip-files00117.pdf'
fee4ed7de8ea9cb82dc4c2e620c3b446
22a0e6043021c148aaebbd084ecdbfff6ba183d7
'2017-03-08T18:10:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXH-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACXH-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:10:55-05:00'
normalize
'11419' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXI' 'sip-files00117.pro'
c1c75d7a97b0725b5d2391c9d2a54565
a1a568ad3900c485d57422b36836888aef0ef831
describe
'18497' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXJ' 'sip-files00117.QC.jpg'
0b99dce1abb881bbbe2c2ffa612d8c00
8a99b61d741198ed18c675cee4e1a12b29d92498
describe
'1625120' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXK' 'sip-files00117.tif'
a27e72f2debab49d3a2ecacf7e499161
56671ebf299e11434fef1c56f9ab991c14efda2a
'2017-03-08T18:14:52-05:00'
describe
'425' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXL' 'sip-files00117.txt'
d616eb450f2a3f4f4933328b0184be27
6f26a802589ee50d412be2c2cfa545d2973fd0f4
describe
'5674' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXM' 'sip-files00117thm.jpg'
a73833c031ca8b3f55fc298bec98683e
8eaf1e4a71161590e137c0519d721d066d67e442
describe
'275561' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXN' 'sip-files00118.jp2'
560f3d7206c9d3b978a889c19431aa0b
3b2fd3781a5386916ec56d9d7929b7f9c7e6861e
describe
'173745' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXO' 'sip-files00118.jpg'
a3c95573660eb740947f1c9db5e82c4a
3bdc02cd1c095af75afc6291d3a524b90f33f1bc
describe
'112197' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXP' 'sip-files00118.pdf'
c191cf48a11fd9e3c9a68e94537ca42f
89a51972c77d92de3249246a2118b1bfa5eb9645
'2017-03-08T18:13:59-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXP-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACXP-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'114763' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXQ' 'sip-files00118.pro'
e480e4e72b74a6c295733372288db4f2
afdec6e5da62b1902a2fcdaf9633a1a2460efe64
describe
'48144' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXR' 'sip-files00118.QC.jpg'
6aebe34e942ff26e8c0fa1be1ae5539c
37902e508f5ca69649b3f0d2705f99350453434a
describe
'1543732' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXS' 'sip-files00118.tif'
41cc14bc219a20c6ecfd97582fd81901
6e31f494d3e771b4df7f0766a3c5a000738b8c0b
describe
'4210' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXT' 'sip-files00118.txt'
ee07bca9b1594b6632475984d6b02eb4
60a8b4179e89e724790afaec51567082f36f82a5
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'11336' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXU' 'sip-files00118thm.jpg'
4a7c6786d602cf61920678dcb76c310f
df6606c7c5adf1705e6c8da7697650be55999c9f
describe
'63908' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXV' 'sip-files00119.jp2'
933e194a0b11de4df835bca0e846c198
e7ede2e9c50279d50d72d36eaac677408579508a
describe
'43029' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXW' 'sip-files00119.jpg'
fb36580d5303ccffd9d0b49b6f957e7b
8754ed13ee04dd634a136e2604a06f027d6964de
describe
'26084' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXX' 'sip-files00119.pdf'
45cb9de4450cac7bbe9af3f04d73a84a
db5b070e82f40c0200875940abc9a61326c768e2
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXX-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACXX-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:12:09-05:00'
normalize
'10542' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXY' 'sip-files00119.pro'
0b268ac9f817565fd99e3ed831702a4e
c441e918e7bd0c56fe7961f0e77769bb83fee2fa
describe
'15462' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACXZ' 'sip-files00119.QC.jpg'
97579db90a4ce35ad6c1b164c5cea8bf
e2268dc0113cf87462fb29db35f60ab25a4163d7
describe
'1688200' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYA' 'sip-files00119.tif'
07d879ab4bf1e1205e499cd82812261c
509198ef5ffe2f45b629bffc49035e23ff91e01b
'2017-03-08T18:13:37-05:00'
describe
'783' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYB' 'sip-files00119.txt'
56bdbc1732bd277e30278722b2bb5c7d
8081c1bf880ac22a268d45c0ce8de5d7a12b0ac4
describe
'5515' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYC' 'sip-files00119thm.jpg'
ee36372eaf785ada41e7ac3ead4cba24
b0e9b17897226df28a01e4c8f44a7008bd4d5e7b
describe
'274569' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYD' 'sip-files00120.jp2'
a0f2a9de07220cfc27875cc5c4907078
8b085ae3813b5f98800401f943d027430f6f9b54
describe
'172853' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYE' 'sip-files00120.jpg'
3fe5a288d4ce2bdfa4c179a7f973b144
38c0486c6f1aecdc7da2adfb62ed5a64c8bf7e31
describe
'111955' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYF' 'sip-files00120.pdf'
3956ea74ca2d36c634e1c1b8d1e54c12
d85990ffc66d608c7281d626254ebcbbafe06440
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYF-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACYF-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'109466' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYG' 'sip-files00120.pro'
95e75f83712a30dbcf4a184000692fc7
aafd64e5643539d712d1ee3b4b9783ac1bb39b16
describe
'48607' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYH' 'sip-files00120.QC.jpg'
c642852f81edae083d3e754695b95339
f3983ca3636f1694e3583938d8a99b93f61e081e
describe
'1572428' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYI' 'sip-files00120.tif'
2af8727ee781a2ec76d30482d8a0dfb1
fbaa7ab8dc100a0c8266bbdf0701d99d21a55f1a
describe
'4045' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYJ' 'sip-files00120.txt'
bb77230672a64b38e50af79c4b526432
b5dc36dda781934e161676216b327d1588a934a4
'2017-03-08T17:39:46-05:00'
describe
'11304' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYK' 'sip-files00120thm.jpg'
f05f96a9035d2f66a7ac0ec6a5de1980
5d239a1bf8af9109597310e2cccc706ecd276a24
describe
'63140' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYL' 'sip-files00121.jp2'
c72e4b4c6e3006f1e3a033b688ce5ab6
dab7091101d30a717b91a156412141a83e02dc91
describe
'35234' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYM' 'sip-files00121.jpg'
2b7c9a302e8616c30812e74bbd355528
4edf9b260226ce8e6e63e38b383b4a6e7c39cefd
describe
'29444' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYN' 'sip-files00121.pdf'
a2b86b870389d4c69d39db3312cfb9cc
9a2c148791718f4f6c13c068eecc8afb822c5c68
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYN-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACYN-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'10668' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYO' 'sip-files00121.pro'
46d807eef3c94f714766cc588b465843
fb486ce3925b4207d84b5e0ad0192c2da56534a9
describe
'10962' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYP' 'sip-files00121.QC.jpg'
5b2e3c0b69c934628d1d81fc8131b6e2
5bf6f6297f4e0fd8bab76ef5112b0be6cca22e21
describe
'1647012' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYQ' 'sip-files00121.tif'
c11ef20e0aa7bb75cf88da272273e11e
17dc29890ff1faab4e08d1fedcbb3992f8e8924a
describe
'400' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYR' 'sip-files00121.txt'
392fa92cad0f1bf84a6b5a760d51569c
5550516b4622f206ba417aa4b8ea48a43912dc5b
describe
'3732' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYS' 'sip-files00121thm.jpg'
24974b72c9c37582d4c86c25ef8300ef
8ccf73d1120bc0a0470caa825a0c9358c7bcb0d7
describe
'97336' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYT' 'sip-files00122.jp2'
87326c9b98a1df672e76254a6817b36a
e595cdfd0931261dbe5257a6af23951c68d3d76d
describe
'56182' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYU' 'sip-files00122.jpg'
26e57fd9599256580970dfe5f511e8db
77e4e51e69841dd3d35208cdcea10c9d55fd1bb6
describe
'46287' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYV' 'sip-files00122.pdf'
0c807c083b4334496648677f32a1bb30
f4a3a1bf6fc5f6c24c76cb2bce6c996469da79cf
'2017-03-08T18:15:35-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYV-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACYV-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:15:37-05:00'
normalize
'9550' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYW' 'sip-files00122.pro'
1fb7e7340b7ba0b8e60fd4403d665acd
79fe9a9281d0d1c4a6099d967dbca7f780ec1ef6
describe
'15885' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYX' 'sip-files00122.QC.jpg'
50083c0338d8c7a003ec304754dd9fb4
d07eb399d53f2b4f61d5ba9a1c39c11a6a96c199
describe
'1578152' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYY' 'sip-files00122.tif'
b4300f0feff5fa3330449ac07e29b0e9
ee0f0add71061822f7eb854350923b6d295c286b
describe
'352' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACYZ' 'sip-files00122.txt'
1d226a5253cbd79b586ae8d1dc2d3c41
93e95c087da047be9323a1c4d4fe9eeda0c6d8b6
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZA' 'sip-files00122thm.jpg'
441cf8e198cd3480144be9a5cc777e01
45ec6cb8a0c519f90b1ec018f4862bb6e0eb6d85
describe
'72989' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZB' 'sip-files00123.jp2'
3ff302f8fdd0c449c0d259dbd299c8cc
ffe93f37e70f3dc7be7139d2900a6076d7db88b1
describe
'49165' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZC' 'sip-files00123.jpg'
f7c19fe9ceb13e6a60499353521a9f01
0bea3234bd88a0aedf81b890a5813a8ba8533bbc
describe
'29297' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZD' 'sip-files00123.pdf'
7fdcd742658c1e7c037b0234b2f60738
056aef453e596eeee2853dd085c597ae34441559
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZD-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACZD-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'8697' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZE' 'sip-files00123.pro'
a12c83529601225af69c602e9cc03c0a
274f4e6f508d9d064026513cb35d2d4c9ff666a8
describe
'16516' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZF' 'sip-files00123.QC.jpg'
d5d6289ab34867ab072663d9d8a1b941
fefef4254a588730c3267f058720e2368f50ee55
describe
'1595976' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZG' 'sip-files00123.tif'
177aa3e12d9a8ae72e9c88e229ad5b75
236e92ccd27002d842258d9907f81a66ca6ca21f
'2017-03-08T18:10:29-05:00'
describe
'322' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZH' 'sip-files00123.txt'
682b3c2a4b7cbf1b643bdd383638e76d
73db33a4afc1638b78a7696714c9bd6cb9adf00c
describe
'5229' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZI' 'sip-files00123thm.jpg'
d5c5dc717c7682210dea0f1fee4bed55
4fd65115dedda04a8c4c84f324283855bcedeb6e
describe
'284700' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZJ' 'sip-files00124.jp2'
8c74ff2782429c9b6c96e0be0578661f
89ecc2c1eabb05944fef0bb09d15bb159b37fd91
describe
'178662' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZK' 'sip-files00124.jpg'
714b49a646d5f1379f4a1b05bbfc6be0
29bdd69945f8c48d7d986ad67a06c39681892d34
describe
'115464' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZL' 'sip-files00124.pdf'
7bb44c73af8cc5001fc7b436905ce7bd
012288a7c570c7c82002164fdb92bbaa9d4fb263
'2017-03-08T18:15:20-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZL-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACZL-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'113418' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZM' 'sip-files00124.pro'
f40dcc579567e4af91d53ba3285e9a22
901d8a404aaccc91e18b5c1cbd6d4db7b50d3081
describe
'49121' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZN' 'sip-files00124.QC.jpg'
de2f9c6e10ff220d9eb75d0893dd5aaa
e709ac77e98b9137cf641965a56b02ddecf8a0c4
describe
'1585156' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZO' 'sip-files00124.tif'
f57d8687de34408b878d9c5d574dbfba
c25afcbbbceb740e16ee47709f8ef27b18aabe79
'2017-03-08T18:09:07-05:00'
describe
'4127' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZP' 'sip-files00124.txt'
c91b3665062d21cefb927e7f00aaafe4
3f4d92a9a74dd272eeb3ab43c4519f99b94829f9
describe
'11575' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZQ' 'sip-files00124thm.jpg'
48e7ee83c7519447da156951be6bd4f3
b6648228045f83516da426ab6bce6008bae35c91
describe
'36916' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZR' 'sip-files00125.jp2'
b6be19697eb1cabdc47830341c1add1a
96ada9b0a03dd2bc4445bda0d6601676eae7f067
describe
'26636' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZS' 'sip-files00125.jpg'
d042d796d5819c83512724537cbda04d
e2d543aced92982c2bd96f7d1f7656204c412c0c
describe
'15237' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZT' 'sip-files00125.pdf'
3cc0ed522460e0cad1496267f5212427
4e98da927642785d5ca86a9bdf0850caa5c9141d
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZT-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAACZT-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'11201' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZU' 'sip-files00125.pro'
9283bdc8b6e95fa1ad456a207177201f
cb063cb4ea59d901b2c6f879efd50fe2dd23e406
describe
'9172' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZV' 'sip-files00125.QC.jpg'
fb7617fbe86c4e05d27dfdce1c7fc287
82164a2e99b9e3fa89e330d95483ebb59fc79a18
describe
'1636584' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZW' 'sip-files00125.tif'
24112a449e20ec68700ab92feb9cf89b
7620fe54c50b5bcbe9e708019c2a7aaa4f15b7e8
describe
'416' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZX' 'sip-files00125.txt'
9d741c9f4cf8d56620854b0acb5a9d2d
b7f2462a7fe134b5e0958e30fa1b85efb9bcbffd
'2017-03-08T18:10:59-05:00'
describe
'3145' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZY' 'sip-files00125thm.jpg'
7a5410e55b1c286d26adc30c5418cb6d
c74cf1d1afb7fa5e28f6b8c1db1a3f6280b5ed0e
describe
'287637' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAACZZ' 'sip-files00126.jp2'
6c16b93d0e66753d5724bf3021c493e8
463cafb2d792c642f98c002a8499f584b063c076
describe
'180556' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAA' 'sip-files00126.jpg'
bd9715b9b14772c203daaa83f8c22695
260faeb0763fa2f43d97677ae54482aedc16b337
describe
'115919' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAB' 'sip-files00126.pdf'
7373ca89e0199f71aaabe9cf8c5ad4e7
e9eb9b57902457d2dffe60dcf60d2427c38c7012
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAB-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADAB-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'115095' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAC' 'sip-files00126.pro'
ae75c3ddbc19109d15087c381ea8e42e
88236552308d4812455f65281abc46b4b211335d
describe
'50195' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAD' 'sip-files00126.QC.jpg'
f71b4b5827adcf5cdcb3e6613c3678a7
abb710de60030ce6049a51a05b6ce6ee1e3b7141
describe
'1572452' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAE' 'sip-files00126.tif'
7d369fc8d8022e8df95c8bdf4c5328de
4d1a6df7095247f1add5d0140d56de411e202207
describe
'4201' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAF' 'sip-files00126.txt'
0573c153f0f50e83b2dfb67b806c4f7b
a2cc91a76ad3deb7734db8161a3176a3ce211ad3
describe
'11613' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAG' 'sip-files00126thm.jpg'
9cac0392480f2f8f97613dae2ad52c07
dc1f682d48e25ed02cc4ba200af93eec8b8be55b
describe
'117901' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAH' 'sip-files00127.jp2'
fc0f05a45475bba14b0da620aa414fe7
7facac21d96a2f92d21daae46b9c01c4e1c6f48b
describe
'40827' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAI' 'sip-files00127.jpg'
f28c6e1c4b212772ca3d10e4b43ce411
84625abb146d788d444a4c7f41bb00f0c6873558
describe
'47155' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAJ' 'sip-files00127.pdf'
86a56228d7c2c2134236352307a344d6
3272ede357ed99b5599095ddb041f6b7e97ed2ee
'2017-03-08T18:13:08-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAJ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADAJ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'17252' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAK' 'sip-files00127.pro'
bb415c296ba474b153c03d268365bb5c
f26fc39c6813f26f413d9e22a7fd31e4aeddd573
describe
'13584' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAL' 'sip-files00127.QC.jpg'
6c6354d6f9805abd3f78de286a687f83
8fa908e089067f65d3bc06c41565256428d312d1
describe
'1584480' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAM' 'sip-files00127.tif'
2a9e0363c1ff6f5356d290143997f307
68b429f9c624e05c3c709b70a3334f9fd3a49246
'2017-03-08T17:40:34-05:00'
describe
'743' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAN' 'sip-files00127.txt'
962ba9a44689038f3f348d7ebdb070ea
c001f98c1eb77a92fb9c7ffe360276fd9c2d6de4
describe
Invalid character
Invalid character
'4125' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAO' 'sip-files00127thm.jpg'
2087c3abdf7529f58ae510da49b5b9d7
ec66c33874ff8276b79e6e30162b32cc8e68be7a
describe
'134057' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAP' 'sip-files00128.jp2'
3a4e6804e8e0bedf3dbefebddf9edc57
08a7545e035eef1473946b4eebde960176c35bb7
describe
'41579' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAQ' 'sip-files00128.jpg'
f6b794c6dc6f970a032745bfc96e03c1
aed26632a3a72d860c11b2432e1af9f45289d801
describe
'54595' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAR' 'sip-files00128.pdf'
471e5624ac051b7bbbce1564834f2619
e5f65dff1c531d7fd6887067bbadedd666ec58e2
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAR-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADAR-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:39:15-05:00'
normalize
'2201' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAS' 'sip-files00128.pro'
a1f1fb8320f654837d712f785bd43e3c
4747a819acbd27bfc224352dc5e10f43b303ac4c
describe
'13379' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAT' 'sip-files00128.QC.jpg'
3185aa2e36cdca8410f6df387dfb30bf
bf261bf360cae2da45ad64ac4369e5dd80f9da2a
describe
'1575968' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAU' 'sip-files00128.tif'
db042bc00c2184d23dbc63e489262bf6
46dda9ef0e9716ab044a0f8e43739591e9b24a41
describe
'156' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAV' 'sip-files00128.txt'
98a14c0f96b770de167184678ceda115
d8a352a4323823875e7a7f290b0c331794c60ee8
describe
'4207' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAW' 'sip-files00128thm.jpg'
adf5c8cd3d8503d4e7d23ac9783acb90
95a0e8b12cd59b18152b9dc7e915c70474652a5e
describe
'160274' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAX' 'sip-files00129.jp2'
cd3fbeb866e86bfbc10eacf98ea4db71
84648879c9870baa847562a32adf2d250c0f9855
describe
'96293' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAY' 'sip-files00129.jpg'
2235b828b02b141c71cf16c6cd225770
aebd1edd3990e1c9fcdceb43a8357972db9ebe7d
'2017-03-08T18:13:51-05:00'
describe
'64673' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAZ' 'sip-files00129.pdf'
2392cd6603bca6bb0e02c1577c20f445
0669e74030c418c182de6b8d77ba6a068ab006b7
'2017-03-08T17:38:31-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADAZ-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADAZ-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T17:38:39-05:00'
normalize
'63856' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBA' 'sip-files00129.pro'
c04a99c99cc43230bc6427be3a3793fd
6e2a5134bc29b4534b3f837afddf2eb9417ec18a
describe
'26604' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBB' 'sip-files00129.QC.jpg'
6668a12d620db78aea437ce8384c0f46
0ba8823ad6ee23273349dd36d4741222cca1c07b
describe
'1657712' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBC' 'sip-files00129.tif'
ab546518b32631dfc246aea7620e3ec1
bb2d963792e9fe1f52ad6eeb6bc723ea845b0888
describe
'2415' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBD' 'sip-files00129.txt'
abd043fdf42ed9c9164a0b78d30ffa56
a7151484cfc27d33190935fb6df0a0adf02b56df
describe
'6715' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBE' 'sip-files00129thm.jpg'
744db77fa9281ece0f6c551b393e280b
2762f903ca53e7c15be48ae5f3040d9fbfc092ff
describe
'200906' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBF' 'sip-files00130.jp2'
2cf19b4a0bc496b848e927745846daee
f88de95f31bf0a501f0e8568bafbbbea11db2b1c
describe
'119924' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBG' 'sip-files00130.jpg'
99f3ed64055702ceef2fe85b25629cc5
f77825548fd350252588381c575b8ca684867393
describe
'79288' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBH' 'sip-files00130.pdf'
7d237938aa9619eaebd5df23cba6ba91
7761bb0086c3d0e521696522abe7aa4f07ed99a8
'2017-03-08T18:17:17-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBH-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADBH-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
'2017-03-08T18:17:19-05:00'
normalize
'77670' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBI' 'sip-files00130.pro'
12b89361076a31d307fa71f33789cce3
87de7a9b8bb567b2801512a26966c6ab2c4568b7
describe
'36255' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBJ' 'sip-files00130.QC.jpg'
cd7c364b4f72f6343f890fbdbc61cfc0
79fb51dd9925505ca1ba0ad119bd27263b488cd9
describe
'1594244' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBK' 'sip-files00130.tif'
fa12cf3f82b0649064227f1b5b1c32e1
9c084ec76db3dcc43215ba10bc81c17aae0bfd8e
describe
'2897' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBL' 'sip-files00130.txt'
2e94a85d2c98698fadb668f34c27658b
cf1b0d22d6a635608c4b731173f9af6ec9f748c9
describe
'9850' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBM' 'sip-files00130thm.jpg'
89d25a4c4c098177d0488f5cacee009b
6cd825852fca03e006f071b2e13923d81d7b71cf
describe
'81891' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBN' 'sip-files00131.jp2'
a7c5738513a613e76d6d202084229bf1
0dc55faaf12422bf6e253e8afcbf196e54b9d670
describe
'50997' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBO' 'sip-files00131.jpg'
5a00cf4f704a33cea13787ffce5441d0
adf4ded09568c6b45e856f40302fa8011912688d
describe
'33289' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBP' 'sip-files00131.pdf'
01a6388c1df363ecd618a0a095b2407c
38fe3ad36615f2bcffd5ce0d5c21015085e52da8
'2017-03-08T18:08:54-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBP-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADBP-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'30609' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBQ' 'sip-files00131.pro'
322104c571d56716c2f2d9f468c448bb
e16000870b4a1d33a73e9e6381e3387ebe0d55a7
describe
'16061' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBR' 'sip-files00131.QC.jpg'
bea0d374d28220c78893d2f6c7aa3f02
2a3a4f4323216c364f0c35472ffc706233c85e0b
describe
'1629020' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBS' 'sip-files00131.tif'
d83fe5b9ed7e00e65fa6958c88a2de77
e1e3acfbc74cd982ecb996341b4d1a6590ae3784
describe
'1134' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBT' 'sip-files00131.txt'
41e892ef86cc63d02c9d6485363893c0
cd24d3d07d2cf868a38b394b809e2541893c2362
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBU' 'sip-files00131thm.jpg'
acb13a74548ceccdb8d0c11b5762c660
cdd4980692d3e61747c98b1a2b4e5684b412a2c4
describe
'9917' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBV' 'sip-files00132.jp2'
c77867611da4e05f92a0572f19542d6c
394341a1243d7e35cb5faaf69d36bd2419a3e081
describe
'11748' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBW' 'sip-files00132.jpg'
b93881a7b4faae2a2767ea099aa7cc4e
69f02245ee9d0071389ab8c6bc3959e90c2896c4
'2017-03-08T18:17:52-05:00'
describe
'4972' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBX' 'sip-files00132.pdf'
735a32d79f707a9b5d94d08f6f9aee04
1ae43dca792296693b84f25e99e652e6f397f26f
'2017-03-08T18:09:28-05:00'
describe
'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBX-norm-0' 'aip-filesF20080624_AAADBX-norm-0.pdf'
8cbf40949b8b639101cd4e2c803d9b62
6e3842fc6d7fb92b4cf6a2346c8099c7289050d2
describe
normalize
'1083' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBY' 'sip-files00132.pro'
698c9289e48a1cbde3bfeb6d0e0a7ad4
ea6124906cf1d3d613a39aff26fcf64d6cd30785
describe
'3598' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADBZ' 'sip-files00132.QC.jpg'
7e89b02aac4bf5e2e6c33b027e130770
130d7bff10ad0f3c9c7b37d9c858e1b7d2a58530
describe
'1560480' 'info:fdaE20080623_AAAACNfileF20080624_AAADCA' 'sip-files00132.tif'
13f055aded4c73220bb3624fe1cbaa19
5e4d9599e220a8a5468f4680dc4e2e82f9b7c01d
describe
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PAGE 1

STATE OF FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES Tom Gardner, Executive Director DIVISION OF RESOURCE MANAGEMENT Jeremy A. Craft, Director FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Walter Schmidt, State Geologist and Chief INFORMATION CIRCULAR NO. 107 PART 1: 1988 AND 1989 FLORIDA PETROLEUM PRODUCTION AND EXPLORATION By Jacqueline M. Lloyd INCLUDING FLORIDA PETROLEUM RESERVE ESTIMATES By Charles H. Tootle PART II: PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICIES IN FLORIDA: RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONCERN FOR SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS By Jacqueline M. Lloyd and Joan M. Ragland UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LIDARI PART III: PETROLOGY AND PROVENANCE OF THE NORPHLET FORMATION, PANHANDLE, FLORIDA By Greg W. Scott Published for the FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Tallahassee 1991 i

PAGE 2

DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES DE" LAWTON CHILES Governor JIM SMITH BOB BUTTERWORTH Secretary of State Attorney General TOM GALLAGHER GERALD LEWIS State Treasurer State Comptroller BETTY CASTOR BOB CRAWFORD Commissioner of Education Commissioner of Agriculture TOM GARDNER Executive Director ii

PAGE 3

LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL Florida Geological Survey Tallahassee June 1991 Governor Lawton Chiles, Chairman Florida Department of Natural Resources Tallahassee, Florida 32301 Dear Governor Chiles: The Florida Geological Survey, Division of Resource Management, Department of Natural Resources, is publishing three petroleum-related reports as its Information Circular 107. Part I is "1988 and 1989 Florida Petroleum Production and Exploration;" Part II, "Petroleum Exploration and Development Policies in Florida: Response to Public Concern for Sensitive Environments;" and Part III: "Petrology and Provenance of the Norphlet Formation, Panhandle, Florida." These reports discuss 1988 and 1989 oil and gas production and exploration, the history of Florida's petroleum policy and legislation, and the geology of the gas-producing Norphlet Formation, respectively. This information is useful to the oil and gas industry and to the state in planning wise development of Florida's oil and gas resources. Respectfully yours, Walter Schmidt, Ph.D., P.G. State Geologist and Chief Florida Geological Survey iii

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Printed for the Florida Geological Survey Tallahassee 1991 ISSN 0085-0616 iv

PAGE 5

CONTENTS Page Part I: 1988 and 1989 Florida Petroleum Production and Exploration.......................................... vi Part II: Petroleum Exploration and Development Policies in Florida: Response to Public Concern for Sensitive Environments .................................................. 63 Part III: Petrology and Provenance of the Norphlet Formation, Panhandle, Florida....................... 83 v

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PART I 1988 AND 1989 FLORIDA PETROLEUM PRODUCTION AND EXPLORATION By Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. #74 vi

PAGE 7

TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Abstract.................................................................................................................................................. x Acknowledgements................................................................................................................................ x Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 1 1988 and 1989 Production.................................................................................................................. 1 1988 and 1989 Onshore Drilling Activity.............................................................................................. 8 Offshore Drilling Activity......................................................................................................................... 8 Exploratory Drilling in State W aters ............................................................................................... 8 1988 and 1989 Exploratory Drilling in Federal W aters,Offshore Florida........................................ 11 Geophysical Exploration Activity.......................................................................................................... 12 Florida Oil Field Descriptions.............................................................................................................. 12 North Florida Oil Field Sum maries ................................................................................................. 15 Introduction.................................................................................................................................... 15 Bluff Springs Field ......................................................................................................................... 15 McDavid Field................................................................................................................................ 17 Jay Field ........................................................................................................................................ 19 Coldwater Creek Field................................................................................................................ 19 Blackjack Creek Field.............................................................................................................. 22 Mt. Carmel Field ............................................................................................................................ 22 McLellan Field ............................................................................................................................... 25 Sweetwater Creek Field ............................................................................................................. 25 South Florida Oil Field Summaries ................................................................................................ 28 Introduction.................................................................................................................................... 28 Lehigh Park Field .......................................................................................................................... 28 Townsend Canal Field................................................................................................................ 28 W est Felda Field ........................................................................................................................... 30 M id-Felda Field.............................................................................................................................. 30 Sunoco Felda Field ....................................................................................................................... 30 Corkscrew Field............................................................................................................................. 32 Lake Trafford Field ........................................................................................................................ 32 Sunniland Field.............................................................................................................................. 34 Seminole Field............................................................................................................................... 34 Bear Island Field ........................................................................................................................... 34 Pepper Ham mock Field.............................................................................................................. 37 Baxter Island Field......................................................................................................................... 37 Raccoon Point Field ................................................................................................................ 37 Forty Mile Bend Field ................................................................................................................. 37 Sum mary................................................................................................................................................ 39 References............................................................................................................................................. 40 ILLUSTRATIONS Figure Page 1. South Florida oil field location map.............................................................................................. 2 2. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, south Florida....................... 3 vii

PAGE 8

3. Northwest Florida oil field location map....................................................................................... 4 4. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Middle Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, northwest Florida............... 5 5. Oil production, 1970 through 1989 .............................................................................................. 6 6. 1987, 1988, and 1989 oil production comparison........................................................................ 7 7. Oil exploration wells, Florida state waters .................................................................................. .9 8. Mesozoic structural features in Florida and offshore................................................................... 10 9. 1988 and 1989 oil exploration wells and active leases, federal waters, offshore Florida............ 13 10. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity .......................................................................... 14 11. Bluff Springs and McDavid fields structure map, top of Smackover Formation........................... 16 12. Geophysical log correlation, Bluff Springs and McDavid fields.................................................... 18 13. McDavid field production curve.................................................................................................... 20 14. Jay field structure map, top of Smackover Formation ................................................................ 21 15. Blackjack Creek structure map, top of Smackover Formation..................................................... 23 16. Mt. Carmel field structure map, top of Norphlet Sandstone......................................................... 24 17. McLellan and Sweetwater Creek fields well location map........................................................... 26 18. Geophysical log correlation, McLellan field ................................................................................. 27 19. Lehigh Park field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation...................................................... 29 20. Sunoco Felda, West Felda, and Mid-Felda fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation....... 31 21. Corkscrew and Lake Trafford fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation......................... 33 22. Sunniland field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation......................................................... 35 23. Bear Island field structure map, base of anhydrite in Upper Sunniland Formation...................... 36 24. Raccoon Point field preliminary structure map, top of Sunniland Formation............................... 38 viii

PAGE 9

APPENDICES Appendix Page 1. Florida oil field discovery well data .............................................................................................. 43 2. 1988, 1989 and cumulative production data................................................................................ 45 3. 1988 and 1989 field well statistics ............................................................................................... 47 4. 1988 and 1989 field wells drilled.................................................................................................. 49 5. 1988 and 1989 wildcat wells drilled ............................................................................................. 51 6. Oil exploration wells drilled in Florida state waters...................................................................... 54 7. 1988 and 1989 oil exploration wells drilled in federal waters, offshore Florida............................ 57 8. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity .......................................................................... 59 9. Florida oil and gas reserve estimates.......................................................................................... 61 ix

PAGE 10

ABSTRACT Florida oil production began to decline in 1979 and continued to do so during 1988 and 1989. Jay field, as the leading producing field for Florida, controls the rate of decline. Onshore exploratory drilling during 1988 and 1989 resulted in the discovery of McDavid field in Escambia County and Coldwater Creek field in Santa Rosa County. Offshore exploratory drilling included six wells which were completed in federal waters off Florida during 1988 and 1989; one of these was the second Norphlet discovery in the Destin Dome area and was classified by the federal government as a producible field. Geophysical exploration during 1988 and 1989 concentrated in the Florida panhandle and the south Florida peninsula. The panhandle exploration included the known oil-producing Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, an area offshore from Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, and the Apalachicola Embayment area. South Florida seismic activity was east of the known Sunniland-producing trend in Broward, Dade, Hendry and Palm Beach Counties. In addition to 1988 and 1989 data, a summary of offshore exploratory drilling in state waters, from 1947 through 1983, is included in this report. This information may be useful in evaluating future offshore and onshore development and exploration. Of similar value are descriptions of each of Florida's 22 oil fields. Descriptions include discovery data, geologic information, and production totals. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Several Florida Geological Survey staff members contributed to this report. Charles Tootle compiled oil field data and production statistics. The Oil and Gas Section maintains files on permitted exploratory and development drilling. Joan Ragland and Charles Tootle provided comments and assistance in using these files. Joan Ragland tabulated and assisted with the interpretation of the geophysical exploration permit data. Joel Duncan assisted with the interpretation of geophysical logs from the recentlydiscovered McDavid field. Jim Jones and Ted Kiper drafted and photographed the figures. Walt Schmidt, Tom Scott, Ed Lane, Joan Ragland, and Joel Duncan edited the manuscript and suggested improvements. x

PAGE 11

Information Circular 107 1988 AND 1989 FLORIDA PETROLEUM PRODUCTION AND EXPLORATION By Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. #74 INTRODUCTION number of production, injection, shut-in, and temporarily abandoned wells for each field. There are two major oil producing areas in Jay field dominates Florida production. The Florida. One is the Sunniland trend in South field was discovered in 1970 and reached peak Florida, the other is in the western panhandle production in 1978. It accounts for about 61 area. The Sunniland trend includes 14 oil fields; percent of the 1988 oil production total, about 66 the western panhandle includes eight. Appendix percent of the 1989 total, and about 70 percent 1 lists the discovery well data for these fields. of the cumulative total. Figure 5 graphically The Sunniland trend production began with illustrates both state wide annual oil production Florida's first oil discovery at Sunniland field in and Jay field annual oil production for 1970 September, 1943. Of the 14 Sunniland trend oil through 1989, clearly showing Jay field's fields, 10 are active, one is temporarily shut-in, dominance in Florida oil production trends. The and three are plugged and abandoned. These Jay field production curve is typical of oil fields fields are oriented along a northwest-southeast produced with tertiary recovery methods (David trend through Lee, Hendry, Collier, and Dade Curry, Oil and Gas Section Administrator, Florida Counties (Figure 1). Production is principally Geological Survey, personal communication, from rudistid reefs found in the upper one 1990). Production has leveled off during the last hundred feet of the Lower Cretaceous Sunniland three years (1987, 1988, and 1989, Figure 5). Formation (Figure 2). This generally agrees with the projections made Production in the western panhandle began by Christian, et al. (1981) in their discussion of with the discovery of Jay field in June, 1970. The tertiary recovery estimates for Jay field. They eight panhandle oil fields are located in predicted a production plateau of about 10,000 Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida barrels/day for about 12 years (1984 through (Figure 3). Seven fields are active and one is 1996). They estimated that tertiary recovery plugged and abandoned. Production is from would be terminated in 1996, followed by rapid Upper Jurassic Smackover Formation decline to depletion in about 2004. Total carbonates and Norphlet Sandstone sands production will be about 84.7 million barrels; 37.5 (Figure 4). million would have been produced through waterflood alone (Christian, et al., 1981). Figure 6 is a histogram comparing 1987, 1988, 1988 AND 1989 PRODUCTION and 1989 oil production for all Florida oil fields except Jay field. Jay field data would obscure the information for all other fields since its Florida oil production began to decline in 1979 production for 1987 was five times greater than and has continued to do so since then (Figure 5). that of West Felda field, the next most productive Total oil production for 1988 was 7,746,048 field in Florida during 1987. Northwest Florida barrels, down 6% from 1987. Production production increased by one percent from 1987 dropped another 6% during 1989 for a 1989 total to 1988 and by two percent from 1988 to 1989. of 7,289,390 barrels. Appendix 2 lists 1988, South Florida production decreased by 18 1989, and cumulative production statistics for percent from 1987 to 1988 and by 24 percent each of Florida's oil fields including oil, gas, and from 1988 to 1989. water production data. Appendix 3 lists 1988 and 1989 field well statistics including the 1

PAGE 12

Florida Geological Survey R24E _ R26E _ R28E_ ___R30E_ _ R32E_ ___ R34E R____B36E .. .. .. i .-.. .--i -...' --r-------------------------LEHIGH PARK I So |TOWNSEO D CANAL" I ' MIDELA HENDRCO.I 8UNOCO-FELDA I LEE CO PALM SWES LD -----BEACHrn ORKSCREW 1FIELDiCEI SLAK T RAFF D --I ) 8UNmLAND 0 8EMINOLE EAR ISI NDI T-i---------------PEPPER AMMOCK 1 SBAXTER ISLAND S I BROWARD O .I 0 J S( S PEPCOLLER C . IRAC O POINT I -g---------------IDADE CO. LORoA LANATION FORTY MILE BEND MONROE CO.----SACTIVE OIL FIELD 0 INACTIVE OIL FIELD 0 10 MILES F0S050491 Figure 1. South Florida oil field location map. 2

PAGE 13

Information Circular 107 2 S STAGE GROUPS AND FORMATIONS LITHOLOGY (/) Cl) RATTLESNAKE HAMMOCK _ _ _ _ _ . ,.J FORMATION A A -A-A-,r J ______ AAAAAAAAAAAAA_ n LAKE TRAFFORD 5< FORMATION 0 SUNNILAND FORMATION I -----------------------------A'AAiAAAAA'AAAiA PUNTA GORDA ANHYDRITE AAAAAAAAAAAA &AAAAAAAAAAAAA S APTIAN M ABLE MEMBER ,AAA, ,AA AAAA, 0 Il 0 TWELVE MILE BROWN :0 < MEMBER DOLOMITE n0 3 ZONE Ix L 00: 3 o -J WEST FELDA SHALE PUMPKIN BAY FORMATION A'AA A A A BARRIAMIAN A A A HAUTERIVIAN . VALANGINIAN BONE ISLAND FORMATION BERRIASIAN f AAAAAAAAAAAAA LAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAA viWOOD RIVER FORMATION ^----AAA. I) i i I I I I I =< TITHONIAN -, .. i. . BASSHALE CLASTICS A ANHYDRITE FGS060491 Figure 2. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, south Florida. 3

PAGE 14

Florida Geological Survey R33W R32W R31W R3" R2 W CR2E .R27W 2W 1-3w ---T.CARMEL FIELO( * --_ IMcLELLAN IIELD BLUFF SPRINGS FID JAY FIED SWEETWATER COLDWATER J .o.AD FIELD --REEIEL --. ! 1 dI LACKJACK I * CREEK FIELDO -..I K ---\ -.-x ------4 -EXPLANATION . A ACTIVE OIL FIELDv, ,( INACTIVE OIL FIELD 4^ 5 0 5 KM "''MILTON 5 0 5 MILES --CANTONMENT0 i SCALE iI FLORIDA LOCATIONX'. ENSAAOLA FGS010491 Figure 3. Northwest Florida oil field location map. 4

PAGE 15

Information Circular 107 SYSTEM STAGE GROUPS AND FORMATIONS LITHOLOGY LOW ER ................ CRETACEOUS BERRIASIAN TITHONIAN UNDIFFERENTIATED :::::::: UPPER HAYNESVILLE .?:: ..:.:. KIMMERIDGIAN FORMATION ....... UPPER *. JURASSIC , AAAAAAAAA. BUCKNER. A... ..... ... AA AAAAAAAAA i MEMBER "A""" """ LOWER (LOWER -"" 1 KIMMERIDGIAN HAYNESVILLE S .., , FORMATIO.N) SMACKOVER .,, , ,,• FORMATION ..... .. OXFORDIAN _____,__I,_I'_I'I NORPHLET SANDSTONE f ". JURASC CALLOVIAN LOUANN SALT : SANDSTONE :::::: SILTSTONE SHALE ^ LIMESTONE DOLOMITE CONGLOMERATE i CLASTICS A ANHYDRITE SALT FGS070491 Figure 4. Stratigraphic nomenclature, Middle Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous, northwest Florida. 5

PAGE 16

Florida Geological Survey FLORIDA OIL PRODUCTION 1970 THROUGH 1989 50 40 10 0 4 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 | 1982 1984 1986 1988 | 1971 1973 1975 1977 1979 1981 1983 1985 1987 1989 YEAR 0 Joy Field + State Wide FGS080491 Figure 5. Oil production, 1970 through 1989. 6

PAGE 17

Information Circular 107 1.1 0.9 V) 0.8 w 0.7 2 0.6 Oo , I 0.5 0.4 -J 0 0.3 0.2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ACTIVE FLORIDA OIL FIELDS EXCLUDING JAY 1987 1988 1989 FGS90491 FGS090491 FIELD PLOT CODE West Felda 1 Raccoon Point 2 Blackjack Creek 3 Bear Island 4 Corkscrew 5 Lehigh Park 6 Sunoco Felda 7 Mid-Felda 8 Townsend Canal 9 Bluff Springs 10 Mt. Carmel 11 Sunni land 12 McLellan 13 Lake Trafford 14 McDavid 15 Coldwater Creek 16 Figure 6.1987,1988, and 1989 oil production comparison. 7

PAGE 18

Florida Geological Survey 1988 and 1989 ONSHORE DRILLING Exploratory Drilling in State Waters ACTIVITY A total of 19 wells have been drilled in Florida Only three development wells were drilled state waters from 1947 through 1983 (Appendix during 1988 and 1989. A description of these 6 and Figure 7). Effective July, 1990, all drilling wells is given in Appendix 4. One of these was activity was prohibited in Florida state waters an injection well drilled at Jay field in Santa Rosa (details are discussed in Part II of this County. One was the first offset to the McDavid publication); however, the information obtained field discovery well in Escambia County and was from the wells that were drilled in state waters plugged and abandoned as a dry hole. The may be useful in future decisions concerning McDavid field discovery and this offset are offshore exploration and development in federal discussed under the "Florida oil fields waters. descriptions" section of this report. The third The 19 offshore wells tested three different development well was completed as a potential potential oil horizons. Ten of the wells are within producer at Raccoon Point field in Collier County. the South Florida Basin (off Charlotte and Lee Sixteen exploratory wells were drilled during Counties and off the Florida Keys, Monroe 1988 and 1989 (Appendix 5). Eleven of these County, Figure 8) and targeted the Lower were drilled in northwest Florida; the remaining Cretaceous. The six wells drilled off the Florida five were drilled in south Florida. Only one well panhandle sought to extend the onshore (and was completed as a potential producer. This offshore Alabama) Jurassic production (Figure was the discovery well for McDavid field 4). The remaining three wells drilled off the (Escambia County). northern portion of the Gulf coast (Permits 304, Coldwater Creek field was also discovered in 382 and 383) were Cretaceous or possibly 1988 with the first production test of the Red Paleozoic tests (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). Rock Oil and Minerals Corporation -Pittman As shown in Appendix 6, only one of the wells Estate No. 26-2A in Santa Rosa County. Further drilled in state waters had a significant oil show. discussion of this field is in the "Florida oil field A drill stem test of the Gulf Oil-Florida State descriptions" section of this report. Lease 826-Y (permit 275), located near the Marquesas Keys off Monroe County, recovered 15 barrels of 220 A.P.I. gravity oil and 14.1 OFFSHORE DRILLING ACTIVITY barrels of saltwater from the Lake Trafford (?) Formation. Another well, which was drilled in State ownership of the continental shelf off federal waters near the Marquesas, tested black Florida extends three miles into the Atlantic saltwater in the Lake Trafford and Sunniland Ocean and about 10.5 miles (three marine Formations and in the Brown Dolomite interval leagues) into the Gulf of Mexico. The federal (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). Charles Tootle government controls resources beyond these (1985, Florida Geological Survey, personal state boundaries out to 200 miles. The Outer communication, in Applegate and Lloyd, 1985) Continental Shelf (OCS) is a jurisdictional term believed this well could be a low volume oil that describes the offshore area which is under producer from the Lake Trafford and Sunniland control of the federal government. "Federal Formations. waters," in this context, does not refer to Applegate (1987) conducted an extensive ownership, but rather to responsibility (Johnson study of the Brown Dolomite Zone of the Lehigh and Tucker, 1987). Acres Formation in the South Florida Basin. He concluded that this zone could be a potentially prolific producing horizon offshore. He found that 8

PAGE 19

Information Circular 107 P-251" 17,9817 ./ / 7,479 198939 P2-281 10,526 P NME P6-430PH O 7 7,004 1961 T F0E09 14,332 1959 1147 1968 1L4,710C 1967 N -P-382 1967 P-304 \ 10,563 LEGEND * APPROXIMATE WELL LOCATION P-280 FLORIDA PERMIT NUMBER TOTAL DEPTH OF WELL, P3 6,009 P-37 1 FEET BELOW MSL 1 910 1967 1 1959 WELL COMPLETION DATE P-297.1961 P-289 3 1 13,961 1543 1960 SCALE 0 50 100 150 MILES 0 80 160 240 KILOMETERS p-232 -', P-275 12,599 15,422 1955 , FGS020491 P-292 4* P-16 109 7,686 P-298 6,077 \ 1961 1,793 1947 P-22 1962 15,432 1947 Figure 7. Oil exploration wells, Florida state waters. 9

PAGE 20

Florida Geological Survey N/ I o o SOUTH EAST 00 GEORGIA EMBAYMENT % BLAKE SII PLATEAU S \1S '* BASIN \ \ LAKE OKEECHOBEE "/''' 300M \"') fT ^ j BAHAMAS 300M SOUTH F ORIDA l BASIN ORBASINDOT I6. 4S,--CAY SAL ARCH MARQ ESAS /. CAY SAL do ,\ , IN, CAYO COCO \ ^ CUBA MESOZOIC / STRUCTURAL FEATURES YUCATAN PEN. IN FLORIDA AND OFFSHORE // SCALE / 100 0 100 200 300 400 500 mNls * a A I I n a FGS100491 Figure 8. Mesozoic structural features in Florida and offshore (after Applegate, 1987). 10

PAGE 21

Information Circular 107 the best development of the Brown Dolomite County, Florida (Appendix 6, Figure 7). Two onshore is in Charlotte and surrounding counties tests in the Smackover Formation produced only in the northern part of the South Florida Basin at saltwater. The Norphlet Sandstone and a depth of about 12,000 feet. Here, the Brown underlying Louann Salt, which together are Dolomite Zone attains a maximum thickness of responsible for production in the Mobile Bay 100 feet, of Which about one-half is porous and fields, were very thin in this well (Applegate and capable of high volume fluid production. Lloyd, 1985). Offshore, the maximum thickness occurs near The three wells drilled off Levy, Citrus, and the Marquesas Keys, where about 400 feet of Pinellas Counties do not fall within the obvious mostly porous dolostone has been found. Very target areas discussed above. None of these little oil staining has been found in the Charlotte wells had significant oil shows or porous zones. County area, but staining has been observed in Two of the three penetrated Paleozoic rocks; the the Marquesas area, as discussed above, third bottomed in the Lower Cretaceous Applegate (1987) concluded that the best (Appendix 6). These may have been drilled with possibility for finding oil in the Brown Dolomite interest in both the Lower Cretaceous and the Zone appears to be in the offshore portion of the Paleozoic potential. Amoco drilled five Paleozoic South Florida Basin. Brown Dolomite is present wildcat wells to the north of this area (Taylor, in at least three wells on the Sarasota Arch Madison, Lafayette, and Dixie Counties) in the (Figure 8) and probably continues around the rim early 1980's (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). All of the basin southeast to the Marquesas, where were dry holes and none had any shows of oil. thick porous dolostone is present. Applegate Paleozoics in Florida range from Devonian to (1987) believed that stratigraphic and structural Ordovician or Cambrian in age, and are faunally traps associated with this dolostone, which is related to African rocks (Cramer, 1971, 1973). capped by dense limestone and anhydrite, may Production from the West African rocks spurred have led to the formation of giant oil fields. interest in Florida; however, the Florida In addition to this South Florida Basin Paleozoic sandstones are extremely indurated potential, there has been interest in extending and have very little porosity or permeability Jurassic production in the Florida panhandle (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). area. Jurassic production occurs onshore in the Jay trend area (Figure 3) from the Smackover Formation and Norphlet Sandstone (Figure 4). 1988 and 1989 Exploratory Drilling in Federal There is also Jurassic production twenty miles to Waters, Offshore Florida the west of the Florida -Alabama boundary where several natural gas fields produce from The first federal oil and gas lease sale off the Norphlet Sandstone in Alabama state waters Florida was conducted in May, 1959 off the in Mobile Bay. The Mary Ann gas field was the Florida Keys in what is now the Straits of Florida first of these to be discovered in 1979. An Planning Area. Ten additional OCS lease sales additional six natural gas fields have been have occurred since then; seven in the Eastern established in Alabama state waters since then Gulf of Mexico Planning Area and three in the (Masingill, 1989). Recoverable reserves have South Atlantic Planning Area. There have been been estimated at 4.93 to 8.12 trillion cubic feet no sales in the Straits of Florida Planning Area of natural gas (Mink, et al., 1987). off Florida since the 1959 sale. The last lease A Jurassic test, the Getty Oil-Florida State sale in the South Atlantic Planning Area off Lease 2338, Well No. 1 (permit 1097), was Florida was Sale 78 in July, 1983. drilled in 1983 to a total depth of 18,011 feet The two most recent lease sales off Florida (-17,981 feet MSL) in East Bay, Santa Rosa were in the Eastern Planning Area. They were 11

PAGE 22

Florida Geological Survey Sales 79 and 94, held in January, 1984 and five were withdrawn or canceled by the January, 1985, respectively. Eastern Planning applicants, and four were placed on hold by the Area Sale 116, held in November 1988, excluded applicants. Appendix 8 summarizes the data for all areas originally proposed off the Florida coast these applications, including total survey mileage (see Part II of this publication for more details). by area (panhandle onshore, panhandle Lease sales 79 and 94 are discussed in offshore, and south Florida) and by survey Applegate and Lloyd (1985) and Lloyd and method (vibrator, airgun, and seismic gel). Applegate (1987). Historic leases in the Eastern Geophysical exploration was concentrated in Planning Area are shown on Figure 9. the Florida panhandle and the south Florida Six wells were completed off the Florida peninsula (Figure 10). The panhandle panhandle during 1988 and 1989 (Figure 9). exploration included the known oil-producing Appendix 7 includes data on these wells (Gould, Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, an area 1989). Three of the wells were in the Pensacola offshore from Santa Rosa and Escambia area; three were in the Destin Dome area. The Counties, and an area east of the known principal drilling targets in these areas are the production covering Okaloosa, Bay, Gadsden, Smackover Formation and the Norphlet Holmes, Jackson, Leon, Wakulla and Sandstone (Figure 4); however, three of the Washington Counties. This activity indicates wells were drilled to less than 3,000 feet, which is interest in potential east of the known production too shallow to have penetrated these potential including the Apalachicola Embayment area. targets. One of the Destin Dome area wells The Apalachicola Embayment area was (Chevron-6406, block 56, Figure 9) was a discussed by Applegate, et al. (1978) as an area Norphlet discovery and is described as a with significant Smackover oil potential. South producible field by Gould (1989). The AmocoFlorida seismic activity was east of the known 8338 well, which was completed in Destin Dome Sunniland-producing trend in Broward, Dade, block 111 in 1987, was also a Norphlet discovery Hendry and Palm Beach Counties. described by Gould (1989) as a producible field. This was the first commercial discovery in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico Planning Area (Gould, FLORIDA OIL FIELD DESCRIPTIONS 1989). The Oil and Gas Journal (1989) discusses the Chevron-6406 well and quotes Applegate and Lloyd (1985) provided a brief Chevron USA Inc. as stating that "the well was history of each of Florida's oil fields including not tested due to safety and cost considerations, discovery data, geologic information, and However, analysis of cores and wireline logs production totals. Structure maps were indicates the presence of gas in the Norphlet presented whenever possible. This publication is sandstone." These two discoveries extend the now out-of-print; therefore, this information is offshore Norphlet gas trend seaward and summarized again and presented in this report. eastward from the Mobile map area of the Somewhat more detailed information is Central Gulf of Mexico Planning Area, offshore presented for the five oil fields discovered since Alabama, into the Florida offshore. 1985. These are Bluff Springs, McDavid, Coldwater Creek, and McLellan fields in north Florida and Corkscrew field in south Florida. GEOPHYSICAL EXPLORATION ACTIVITY Fields are discussed in approximate geographic order from north to south and west to east Twenty-two geophysical permits applications (Figures 1 and 3). were received by the Florida Geological Survey during 1988; 15 were received during 1989. Of these 37 applications, 31 have been permitted, 12

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Information Circular 107 PENSACOLA GULI9STAR 6398 SOUTH ATLANTIC PLANNING AREA DESTIN DOME -APALACHICOLA GAINESVILLE DE SOTO CANYON FLORIDA MIDDLE GROUND TARPON SPRINGS LLOYD RIDGE S THE ELBOW I SAINT PETERSBURG EASTERN GULF OF MEXICO PLANNING AREA --___VERNON BASIN-. !_ CHARLOTTE HARBOR HOWELL HOOK PULLEY RIDGE S O EXPLANATION uN SOIL EXPLORATION RANKIN WELL LOCATIONS SHISTORIC LEASES -DISTRICT AREAS -NTORTUGAS PLANNING AREAS 0 25 50 MILES \ 0 40 80 KILOMETERS STRAITS OF FLORIDA FGS110491 SCALE PLANNING AREA Figure 9. 1988 and 1989 oil exploration wells and historic leases, federal waters, offshore Florida (Gould, 1989). 13

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Florida Geological Survey LEGEND PERMITTED AND SURVEYED PERMITTED) NOT SURVEYED APPLICATION RECEIVED) NOT PERMITTED SCALE 0 50 100 150 MILES 0 80 160 240 KILOMETERS ell F08120491 ADD Figure 10. 1988 and 1989 geophysical exploration activity. 14

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Information Circular 107 North Florida Oil Field Summaries Petroleum Corp. St Regis Paper Co. number 29INTRODUCTION ^4 (permit 1125), was a rank wildcat located in Section 29, Township 5 North, Range 31 West, Escambia County (Appendix 1). It is Production in north Florida began with the approximately 10 miles west-southwest of Jay discovery of Jay field in June, 1970. There are field and approximately four miles southeast of now eight panhandle oil fields located in the nearest previously drilled wildcat, permit Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida 1177 (Figures 3 and 11). This area, west and (Figure 3). Seven fields are active and one is southwest of Jay, is known to be underlain by plugged and abandoned. Production is from Louann Salt, with seismic studies indicating saltUpper Jurassic Smackover Formation induced fault structures in the overlying carbonates and Norphlet Sandstone sands formations (Lloyd and Applegate, 1987). Seismic (Figure 4). data has been interpreted by Hughes Eastern Jay field is located within a trend which Corporation (1988) (Figure 11) to indicate extends through Escambia and Santa Rosa several small structures in a northwest-toCounties in Florida, and Escambia County, southeast trend in this specific area. Alabama. Other fields within the trend include The discovery well produced 477 barrels of oil Mt. Carmel, Coldwater Creek, and Blackjack and 170 barrels of saltwater per day. Oil gravity Creek fields in Florida and Fanny Church, was 57.00 A.P.I.. Production is from JurassicFlomaton, and Big Escambia Creek fields in age Smackover Formation dolostones from Alabama. The fields are located along a normal -16,154 to -16,161 feet MSL. These dolostones fault complex which rims the Gulf Coast through are dark brownish-gray to brownish-black, fine Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and grained, microcrystalline, and show evidence of Texas (Moore, 1984). recrystallization from originally oolitic and Bluff Springs and McDavid fields are located possibly pelletal facies (Lloyd, 1986; Lloyd and west and southwest of the Jay trend in an area Applegate, 1987). known to be underlain by Louann Salt, with The first offset, permit 1136 (Stone Petroleum seismic studies indicating salt-induced fault Corporation -St. Regis Paper Company number structures in the overlying formations (Lloyd and 29-3) is located about one-half mile northwest of Applegate, 1987). The remaining two north the discovery well (Figure 11). The Smackover Florida oil fields, McLellan and Sweetwater Formation was encountered at -16,171 feet MSL, Creek, are located east of the Jay trend, near the structurally 17 feet lower than in the discovery approximate updip limits of the Smackover well (Figure 12). The well produced only Formation (Lloyd, 1989; Applegate et al., 1978; saltwater from two thin zones (-16,182 to -16,185 Ottman et al., 1973 and 1976) and could be the feet MSL and -16,192 to -16,195 feet MSL; result of stratigraphic pinchouts. They are also Figure 12) within the upper Smackover. Core located within the area known to be underlain by analysis by Location Sample Service, Inc. (LSS), the Louann Salt and may have salt-related trap Jackson, Mississippi, yielded mean porosity structures. Current data does not reveal which estimates for these zones of 11.4 and 8.4 trapping mechanism produced the Smackover percent, respectively. LSS found a trace of oil in reservoirs for these fields. one sample at -16,185 feet MSL. This well may be located too low on the structure. Alternatively, BLUFF SPRINGS FIELD as shown on the structure map (Figure 11) drawn by Hughes Eastern Corporation (1988; based on Bluff Springs field was discovered on March geophysical and well data), Hughes believes 25, 1984. The discovery well, the Stone there may be a permeability barrier between the discovery well and this well. 15

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BLUFF SPRINGS 20 21 22 AND McDAVID FIELDS ESCAMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA BLUFF SPRINGS FIELD STRUCTURE MAP B(L 29 I TOP OF SMACKOVER FORMATION r oo PERMEAILITY BARRIER? (AFTER HUGHES EASTERN CORP., 1988) S28 27 (PIl36 2oo0:p 11 2 --. 617 61 -16075 ,P33 --1204" n-,' ,P12 POSSIBLE 1 2oo POSSIBLE 0 c OIL/WATER \9 O CONTACT 0 .so EXPLANATION -------T 5 N P1136 PERMIT NUMBER T4<--N < -16176 DEPTH * PRODUCER , " IDRY HOLE McDAVID FIELD 0 PERMITTED LOCATION (NOT DRILLED) 3 2 C.I. = 50 FEET0 rsGso34 Figure 11. Bluff Springs and McDavid fields structure map, top of Smackover Formation (after Hughes Eastern Corporation, 1988).

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Information Circular 107 Ownership of the discovery well transferred to southeast trend in this specific area. Hughes Eastern Corporation in 1985. Permits The discovery well produced 235 barrels of oil were issued to Hughes Eastern to drill two per day and no saltwater. Oil gravity was 53.80 additional offsets, one east and one southeast of A.P.I.. Production is (as it is for Bluff Springs the discovery well (permits 1204 and 1205, field) from Jurassic-age Smackover Formation Figure 11). Permit 1204 was completed in dolostones from -16,075 to -16,089 feet MSL. August 1986. The Smackover was again found These dolostones were described by LSS as at a structurally lower position (Figure 12), this gray to dark gray, sucrosic to granular, with poor time 44 feet lower. Two zones of saltwater to fair porosity and permeability. Examination of production were also encountered (-16,208 to core chips with a binocular microscope concurs -16,211 feet MSL and -16,215 to -16,233 feet with this description. Core analysis by LSS MSL; Figure 12). LSS core analysis yielded yielded a mean porosity estimate of 15.9 percent mean porosity estimates of 23.9 and 13.6 for this zone. Geophysical log analyses by percent, respectively, and no indications of oil. Charles Tootle (Appendix 9) yielded a mean As interpreted by Hughes Eastern Corporation porosity estimate of 12.8 percent, an original oil (1988) (Figure 11), the Smackover in this well is in place estimate of 4,987,347 barrels, and a below the probable oil-water contact. The third recoverable oil estimate of 498,736 barrels. offset, permit 1205, has not been drilled. This The first offset, permit 1234 (Hughes Eastern well is now actually closer to the more recently Corporation -Jones Estate number 34-1) is discovered McDavid field (discussed below) and located about one-half mile southeast of the is outside the potential productive limits drawn by discovery well (Figure 11, Appendix 4). The Hughes Eastern Corporation (1988) (Figure 11). offset was completed in June 1989. The Production to date at Bluff Springs is solely Smackover Formation was encountered at from the discovery well. Total production for -16,099 feet MSL, structurally 24 feet lower than Bluff Springs field, as of the end of 1989, was in the discovery well (Figure 12). The structure 220,000 barrels of oil (Appendix 2). map (Figure 11) was drawn prior to the time this well was drilled. In fact, the map was submitted to the Florida Geological Survey in support of a MCDAVID FIELD request for an non-regular location for this well. As shown on the map, Hughes Eastern McDavid field was discovered on June 14, Corporation expected to encounter the 1988 with the first production test of the Smackover at about -16,050 feet MSL in this discovery well, the Hughes Eastern Corp. well. Based on the actual depth (-16,099 feet Walker-Baley number 34-2 (permit 1230). The MSL), the McDavid structure is probably smaller well is located in Section 34, Township 5 North, than that shown. The productive limit expected Range 31 West, Escambia County (Appendix 1). by Hughes is still below this depth (at about It is about one and one-half miles southeast of -16,200 feet, Figure 11); however, analysis of the Bluff Springs discovery well (Figures 3 and geophysical logs from this well indicate that the 11). As discussed above for Bluff Springs field, oil-water contact may actually be at about this area, west and southwest of Jay, is known to -16,102 feet MSL (Joel Duncan, Florida be underlain by Louann Salt, with seismic studies Geological Survey, personal communication, indicating salt-induced fault structures in the 1991). In addition, production from the discovery overlying formations (Lloyd and Applegate, well appears to have peaked around December 1987). Seismic data has been interpreted by 1988 and may have depleted this small structure Hughes Petroleum Corp (1988) (Figure 11) to enough to move the potential productive limits indicate several small structures in a northwest to above the level of the Smackover in the offset 17

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BLUFF SPRINGS FIELD MCDAVID FIELD .* * .. .. ..90 L Figure 12. Geophysical log correlation, Bluff Springs and McDavid fields.

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Information Circular 107 (Figure 13) (Joel Duncan, Florida Geological 1981; Vinet, 1984; Moore, 1984; Bradford, 1984; Survey, personal communication, 1991). Lloyd et al., 1986). As with Bluff Springs field, production from Despite the complexity of the Jay field McDavid field is solely from the discovery well. Smackover Formation reservoir, exploration and Production from this one-well field, as of development of the field have been extremely December 1989, totaled about 121,000 barrels of successful. Core analyses were combined with oil (Appendix 2). bottom hole pressure data, porosity log information, and other geologic data to arrive at a highly successful reservoir management program JAY FIELD (Shirer et al., 1978; Langston et al., 1981; Langston and Shirer, 1985). Jay field was discovered in June, 1970, by the As of December 1989, Jay field was producing drilling of the Humble St. Regis number 1 (permit from a total of 44 wells, 43 wells were temporarily 417) in Section 43, Township 5 North, Range 29 shut-in, and there were 27 injection wells. One West, Santa Rosa County (Figures 3 and 14 and of these injection wells was completed in 1989 Appendix 1). The well produced from the (Appendix 4). Total production for Jay field, as of Smackover Formation from -15,264 to -15,318 the end of 1989, was 365,479,000 barrels of oil feet MSL. The initial production test yielded (Appendix 2). 1712 barrels of 50.70 A.P.I. gravity oil and 23 barrels of saltwater per day. Jay field is located within the "Jay trend" of COLDWATER CREEK FIELD Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Florida and Escambia County, Alabama (discussed in north Coldwater Creek field was discovered on June Florida oil fields introduction above). The 4, 1988. The discovery well was a reentry of a northern extension of Jay, in Escambia County, Smackover wildcat. The original permit was Alabama, is the Little Escambia Creek (LEC) issued to Inexco Oil Company (permit 1173). field. Oil accumulation at Jay is within an The location is about two miles east of the asymmetric anticline with the fault complex southern portion of Jay field in Section 26, forming the eastern barrier to oil migration Township 5 North, Range 29 West, Santa Rosa (Figure 14) (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). County (Figure 3). Inexco began drilling in The northern limit of Jay field is a porosity November, 1985. They drilled the well to a total barrier in Alabama where the lithology changes depth of -15,407 feet MSL, logged the well, and from porous dolostone to dense, micritic recommended plugging and abandonment. limestone. The porosity at Jay field is due to The top of the Smackover Formation had dolomitization of the pelletal grainstones in the been encountered at -14,969 feet MSL; the upper, regressive section of the Smackover Norphlet Sandstone at -15,331 feet MSL. Side Formation. Dolomitization, fresh water leaching, wall core analyses by Location Sample Service, and an anhydrite cap rock (Buckner Member of Inc. (Jackson, Mississippi) indicated a potential the Haynesville Formation, Figure 4) have oil productive zone from -14,985 to -15,016 feet formed a complex, extensive reservoir. MSL. Mean porosity of the zone was about 14.8 Numerous analyses of the Jay area Smackover percent. Analysis of the same interval by Formation, including comparisons with modern Charles Tootle yielded a mean porosity of about carbonate environments, have been made in 12 percent, an original oil in place estimate of attempts to understand this complex reservoir 2,080,107 barrels, and a recoverable oil estimate (Ottman et al., 1973 and 1976; Sigsby, 1976; of 312,016 barrels (Appendix 9). Mancini and Benson, 1980; Lomando et al., Louisiana Land and Exploration Company 19

PAGE 30

Florida Geological Survey McDavid Field Production 11 10 98 7 C° 6 215/88 588 9/8811/88 1/89 3/89 5/89 7/89 9/8911/89 6/88 8/88 10/88 12/88 2/89 4/89 6/89 8/89 10/89 12/89 D Oil Production + Water Production FGS160491 Figure 13. McDavid field production curve. 20 20

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Information Circular 107 SJAY FIELD *" " I I \\ I E.Mi tantma I Could , F , 25 30 0 29 28 27 I "--"'". V STRUCTURE MAP _I~ --1--. -TOP OF SMACKOVER-NORPHLET ~---' "...-^ i OL POOL IIo (JO y-LEC F ld n i Ut eooicma l Co ti , 1074) / 4 948 T-O. Ni ... -4 93--i A **" ' e .474 463 450 493 0 1 '*-I16 4 1 6-UM 884A \ u7 573 L 4 I , 3/ \5 95 D.,s, / 27 U * u ' G 0 96IA 36 -172I 451 494 453 --\^ 1530 -1214 4 / -156144 -10 **15845 / \7.... -6 1 47 15104 T5N492 .57 ". .49 / -883481 -, --167 -1 6 15 15 6 -15 1971 443 39 48496 , 4---16 \1I I \ \ 91 8 \ @4-9,. 5114 -516.106 59"4 89 \ \ \\ \1 \ \' *13_ -15197 4Z9 7. ---1 68-4 5 1 S-1S147 i005 -4 -1 5434 1161 1 'O3 i L2 6.5 8 ^\ 3 1 2\\ \94 11 _I % I .708 11 I -1.-.1 + DRY HOL \ E-.-.-.44Wb/I" ^ -16976 --------\ -4 17 52 1 5 50 r2 10 90_ 1 ® WATWRHIECIMON WELL | \ * I C.A2 50A FEET 2 1 444 * 478 -2 IIQ6 • 1 F753 qA02 4P1 ,I -152 06 94 -15 -15412 *-1l43 0-1... 1073 • 537 69. V • iCommittee, 1974). I114 91 1 1 1 *" 5469"I I " -\1 5 I -1523I, 967 0 5 611\ 14 21 1 -I '------525 ---KIN +WDRYnHOwE -------... OL/WAIECONTACT, 1074 525 PNM C.L 0 FEET F68650491 Figure 14. Jay field structure map, top of Smackover Formation (after Jay-LEC Fields Unit Geological Committee, 1974). 21

PAGE 32

Florida Geological Survey (LL&E) took over operations on January 10, 1986 water production from the Norphlet Sandstone, and plugged and abandoned the well. Bruxoil, the well was recompleted as a Smackover Inc. then took over responsibility for the well. Formation producer from -15,633 to -15,743 They conducted a geophysical survey across the feet MSL. The initial production test from the area (geophysical permit G-70-86; see Lloyd, Smackover, on January 22, 1975, yielded 1,428 1989). The stated purpose was to determine barrels of 51.2° A.P.I. gravity oil and no whether to reenter the existing well or drill at a saltwater. new location. They decided not to reenter the Blackjack Creek field now produces primarily well and have not submitted any permit from oolitic dolostones of the Smackover applications to drill in the vicinity. Formation (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). The In 1987, Red Rock Oil and Minerals trapping structure is an anticline located on the Corporation, received permit 1220 (Appendix 1) downthrown, southwest side of the regional to reenter the well. They completed redrilling on Foshee Fault System (Figure 15). Similar to Jay May 24, 1987 and ran the first production test on field, Blackjack Creek has been carefully cored June 4, 1988. This test yielded 152 barrels per and analyzed to achieve a successful reservoir day of 46.5° A.P.I. gravity oil and 280 barrels per management and development program. day of saltwater. In a retest on December 27, About 160,000 barrels of oil have been 1988, the well flowed 259 barrels per day of produced from the Norphlet Sandstone at 46.5' A.P.I. gravity oil with no saltwater Blackjack Creek field. The remaining production, production. Production is from the zone 54,322,000 barrels through December 1989 discussed above, from -14,984 to -15,006 feet (Appendix 2), is from the Smackover. Through MSL in the Smackover Formation. Judging from January 1990, 20 producing wells had been the field's location within the Jay trend, it appears drilled at Blackjack Creek; only five dry holes had that reservoir formation may have been been drilled. Nine wells were actively being structurally related to the Foshee Fault System; produced as of December 1989 (Appendix 3). however, a single well does not yield sufficient information to test this hypothesis. No additional wells have been drilled at MT. CARMEL FIELD Coldwater Creek field. Total production, as of December 1989, from Coldwater Creek field was Mt. Carmel field was discovered in December 9,000 barrels of oil from this single well 1971 by LL&E. The discovery well was the LL&E (Appendix 2). -Finley Heirs number 39-3 (permit 504), located about one mile east of Jay field in Section 39, Township 5 North, Range 29 West, Santa Rosa BLACKJACK CREEK FIELD County (Figures 3 and 16). Initial production was 1,440 barrels of 470 A.P.I. gravity oil per day with The Blackjack Creek field discovery well was no saltwater. the Humble Oil and Refining Company -St. Mt. Carmel field is separated from Jay field by Regis Paper Company number 13-3 well (permit the Foshee Fault System (Figure 16). Mt. 523) drilled in Section 13, Township 4 North, Carmel field produces both oil and gas from the Range 29 West, Santa Rosa County, about eight Smackover Formation and the Norphlet miles southeast of Jay field. The well was Sandstone. Complex reservoir geometry has completed February 14, 1972, as a producer in apparently made development of this field more the Norphlet Sandstone from -15,965 to -15,975 difficult. As of January 1990, three producing feet MSL. Initial production was 371 barrels of wells and 10 dry holes had been drilled at Mt. 51.30 A.P.I. gravity oil and 4.5 barrels of Carmel field. saltwater per day. Due to limited productivity and 22

PAGE 33

Information Circular 107 \\ BLACKJACK CREEK FIELD SSanta Rosa County, Florida D STRUCTURE MAP S .I. TOP OF SMACKOVER FORMATION -----I .0 | 1 0 4000 FEET 10 %729 12 \ * -1568 0 1200 METERS -15721 ,687 S-15646\ 581 ' / I\ -15760 N 6 2 -1560 D4 U 678I * .I , 2 14 W T-156,04N 63-15S W L \ 1 815 ~ 1*886 \01 988A -15585 17 -15824 ,-15S70 "1 52\ *-15572 \-1561 S-157 78 -15701 -015714 * PRODUCER \\ \-1563 \ .IBOTTOM HOLE LOCATION 5 .4 \ \JUNKED HOLE24 -1 SOIL/WATER CONTACT 578 PERMIT NUMBER ---15714 DEPTH I-15714 C. I. 50 FEET | | I 32 ST4N4 FGS170491 I I Figure 15. Blackjack Creek structure map, top of Smackover Formation (after Blackjack Creek Geological Committee, 1974). 23

PAGE 34

Florida Geological Survey MOUNT CARMEL FIELD 4 35 Santa Rosa County, Florida U D i STRUCTURE MAP TOP D OF NORPHLET SANDSTONE \\1 (Jim MIler, 1974) ESCAMBIA COUNTY ALABAMA -" ATTA ROSA COUNTY FLORIDA I TON---i2 28 0 2000 FEET --20 600 METERS \\ t -14930 -/ * I N UU 1219 660 116\ 4 I \ , \\o+ ** \'\ ' \\ S--18410 \ \ S-14770 0 27 / 6 I II\ I 77 533 -141+0 DEPTH 0 5000 * PRODUCER BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION / 6 ~ oo -DRY HOLE N1^ | SABANDONED LOCATION -2 -*..OIL/WATER CONTACT, 1974 \ uI C.I. 100 FEET 1 7 3 I FQ8tl0411 Figure 16. Mt. Carmel field structure map, top of Norphlet Sandstone (after Miller, 1974). 24 24

PAGE 35

Information Circular 107 There is currently one* producing well in the Mt. barrels of saltwater per day. The Smackover Carmel field. As of the end of 1989, the field had Formation was encountered at -13,788 feet MSL, produced 4,666,000 barrels of oil (Appendix 2). 27 feet higher than in the discovery well (Figure 18). Production is from the Smackover Formation from -13,797 to -13,847 feet MSL. MCLELLAN FIELD Core analysis by All Points, Inc. (Houston, Texas) yielded a mean porosity of 11.5 percent McLellan field was discovered on February 15, for the productive zone. 1986, with the initial testing of the Exxon A second offset to the discovery well, Exxon Corporation -State of Florida number 33-1 Corporation -State of Florida number 28-4 (permit 1194, Appendix 1, Figures 3 and 17). (permit 1226) was drilled about one-half mile The well is located about 3.25 miles north of the north of the discovery well (Figure 17). During abandoned Sweetwater Creek field in Section initial production tests, in February 1988, the well 33, Township 6 North, Range 26 West, Santa flowed 154 barrels of oil (gravity not reported) Rosa County. and 171 barrels of saltwater per day. The An initial flowing test of the discovery well Smackover was encountered 42 feet higher in produced 152 barrels of 410 A.P.I. gravity oil per this well than in the discovery well (Figure 17), day and no saltwater. Production is from indicating a fairly steep gradient between these Smackover Formation dolostones from -13,827 wells. to -13,845 feet MSL (Figure 18). Core analysis Operations at the second offset well were of a potential oil and gas productive zone from suspended in March 1988 and the well has since -13,819 to -13,845 feet MSL by Core been temporarily abandoned. As of December Laboratories, Inc. (Dallas, Texas) indicated a 1989, production for McLellan field was from the mean porosity of 12.3 percent. The analysis two remaining wells and totaled 174,000 barrels showed additional oil and gas production of oil (Appendix 2). potential between -13,854 and -13,863 feet MSL. Mean porosity is about 15 percent for this zone. Both of the analyzed zones contained dark, fine SWEETWATER CREEK FIELD grained, microcrystalline dolostones with vuggy porosity. Sweetwater Creek field was discovered on McLellan field is located within the area known April 22, 1977, with the successful flow test of the to be underlain by the Louann Salt and may have Houston Oil and Minerals Corporation -W. M. a salt-related trap structure. It is also located Stokes number 15-2 well (permit 881, Appendix within a few miles of the approximate updip limits 1, Figures 3 and 17). The well is located in of the Smackover Formation (Lloyd, 1989; Section 15, Township 5 North, Range 26 West, Applegate et al., 1978; Ottman et al., 1973, Santa Rosa County. In the initial test the well 1976); thus, the trap could be a stratigraphic produced 624 barrels of 43.50 A.P.I. gravity oil pinchout. Current data does not reveal which and only a trace of saltwater from a Smackover trap mechanism produced the Smackover limestone interval from -14,044 to -14,085 feet reservoir for this field. MSL. This test data spurred rumors that a "new The first offset and confirmation well for the Jay" field had been discovered. Rumors proved field was the Exxon Corporation -State of Florida to be false and an offset drilled in 1978 to the number 34-2 (permit 1206). It is located about south of the discovery well was dry (permit 890, one-half mile east of the discovery well (Figure Figure 17). Core analyses of the Smackover 17). It was tested on March 9, 1987 and flowed Formation in the offset well by Core Laboratories, 641 barrels of 43.40 A.P.I. gravity oil and 24 Inc. (Dallas, Texas) indicated very fine 25

PAGE 36

Florida Geological Survey ALABAMA -. -,. ,g mmFLORIDA R26W R25W 30 29 P1226 27 26 25 -13773 P 15 3 -------------P153 P 4 P1194 0 P1206 31 32 P1194 -13788 35 36 McLELLAN FIELD T 6 N 6 5 4 3 2 P175 8 10 SWEETWATER 12 I I 1 0 1 Ml CREEK FIELD 1.6 0 1.6 KM P881 SCALE -14045 1 O 13 -NEXPLANATION o P890 < -14071 Ol 0 P1136 PERMIT NUMBER --1-4071 -16176 DEPTH TO TOP OF SMACKOVER < FORMATION (FEET BELOW MSL) < 0 PRODUCER 22 23 24 < 4 DRY HOLE G s2oo491 Figure 17. McLellan and Sweetwater Creek fields well location map. 26

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SP-1194 |P:1206 .* ...::::: : :.L ANHYDRITE MEAN ^ ....// %.12.3% POROSTY 11.5% 5 -:: L SMACKOVER "E-:'. :V ~FORMATION Dual Inductlon-SFL/Gamma Ray Dual Induction-SFL/Gamma Ray FGS220491 Figure 18. Geophysical log correlation, McLellan field.

PAGE 38

Florida Geological Survey crystalline, gray brown limestone and dolostone, 22-4 (permit 712) drilled in Section 22, Township with low porosity and permeability, and potential 44 South, Range 26 East, Lee County. This is for only saltwater production. The field produced the most northwesterly field in the Sunniland a total of 13,695 barrels of oil during its entire trend (Figure 1). The discovery well was lifetime (Appendix 2). The discovery well was completed on July 30, 1974, in the -11,349 to the only producer at Sweetwater Creek field and -11,354 foot MSL interval of the Sunniland was plugged and abandoned in December 1980, Formation. Initial production was 490 barrels of after it began producing 100 percent saltwater. 27.60 A.P.I. gravity oil and 48 barrels of saltwater per day. This well was later abandoned and a deviated well (permit 712A) was drilled at the South Florida Oil Field Summaries same surface location to produce higher on the INTRODUCTION structure. A total of nine dry holes were drilled to delineate this field. All of the producing wells South Florida oil production began with were directionally drilled because bottom hole Florida's first oil discovery at Sunniland field in locations are beneath the town of Lehigh Acres. September, 1943. There are now a total of 14 oil Figure 19 is a structure map on the top of the fields in South Florida, oriented in a northwestSunniland Formation (Ferber, 1985) at Lehigh southeast trend through Lee, Hendry, Collier and Park field. The reservoir appears to be typical of Dade Counties (Figure 1). Of these 14 the south Florida Sunniland trend fields -a Sunniland trend oil fields, 10 are active, one is leached limestone bioherm. Core analysis by R. temporarily shut-in, and three are plugged and E. Laboratories, Inc. (Dallas, Texas) yielded an abandoned. average porosity of 19.7 percent for the Reservoirs found along the Sunniland trend Sunniland Formation from -11,337 to -11,364 are composed of localized buildups of organic feet MSL. They described this interval as a tan debris into mounds or pods which formed porous to brown, fossiliferous, partially dolomitized grainstones within the upper Sunniland limestone. Formation (Figure 2). The fauna which make up Two wells were actively producing and these bioherms include rudistids, algal plates, production totaled 5,165,000 barrels of oil at the gastropods, and foraminifera. Dolomitization has end of December 1989 for this field (Appendices enhanced the porosity of these grainstones. The 2 and 3). grainstones grade laterally into nonporous, miliolid-rich mudstones (Means, 1977, MitchellTapping, 1984, 1985, and 1986). These miliolid TOWNSEND CANAL FIELD mudstones often provide the trapping mechanism for these reservoirs. Townsend Canal field is located in Section 2, The exception to the above general description Township 45 South, Range 28 East, Hendry of south Florida oil fields is Lake Trafford field. approximately three miles north of MidLake Trafford produces oil from a fractured Felda field, within the Sunniland trend (Figure 3). limestone in the lower Sunniland Formation limestone in the lower Sunniland Formation It was discovered on June 27, 1982, with the first (Means, 1977). production test of the Natural Resources Management Corporation -A. Duda & Sons LEHIGH PARK FIELD number 2-3 well (permit 1070). The test produced 160 barrels of 28.40 A.P.I. gravity oil and 42 barrels of saltwater per day. Production is The discovery well for the Lehigh Park field from the Sunniland Formation between -11,363 was the Exxon Consolidated -Tomoka number and -11,368 feet MSL (Appendix 1). 28

PAGE 39

Information Circular 107 LEHIGH PARK FIELD S3 Lee County, Florida T 44 S SSTRUCTURE MAP TOP OF SUNNILAND 6 5 4 (Robin Ferber, 1985) *_5 4000 FEET S 11259 \ I cIc cc 0 1200 METERS 7 * 1 9 10 I II" I -11295 -11303 -1202 959 A --11297 1 S 0 / * 6 HI -\_, _ _ _ -"-_----------I\---[I g0 I1 \ I "-11319" '!1 1 20 1 21 12: ..,o \ + PERM1T 804 841 -16 I D P-1H'"-0 -1 B ' BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION -(-r ,--,+ DRY HOLE I SSALT WATER DISPOSAL \ T44 S T45S C.I .10 FEET FGS210491 Figure 19. Lehigh Park field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation (after Ferber, 1985). 29

PAGE 40

Florida Geological Survey Two wells were producing at Townsend Canal MID-FELDA FIELD field at the end of 1989 (Appendix 3). Production totaled 406,000 barrels of oil at the end of 1989 The Mid-Felda field discovery well was the R. (Appendix 2). L. Burns -Red Cattle number 27-4 (permit 904) in Section 27, Township 45 South, Range 28 WESCT FELDA FIELD East in Hendry County, Florida. The well was completed in the -11,433 to -11,437 foot MSL interval of the Sunniland Formation on October West Felda field was discovered on August 2, 13, 1977. An initial production test on October 1966, with the drilling of the Sun -Red Cattle 24, 1977 yielded 281 barrels of 260 A.P.I. gravity number 21-3 well (permit 371) in Section 21, oil and 53.6 barrels of saltwater per day Township 45 South, Range 28 East, Hendry (Appendix 1). County (Appendix 1, Figures 1 and 20). The first The well is located on a small subsurface production test yielded 56 barrels of 24.60 A.P.I. feature between West Felda field and Sunoco gravity oil and 148 barrels of saltwater per day Felda field (Figure 20). Samples from the from the -11,437 to -11,440 foot MSL interval of producing zone show a partially dolomitized the Sunniland Formation. fossil hash with about ten feet of oil staining. The field is mainly a stratigraphic trap; Geophysical log analysis indicated approximately however, structural closure is more evident than 20 percent porosity for an eight-foot interval at Sunoco Felda field (Figure 20). The main (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). producing unit has a composition typical of the At the end of 1989, two wells were actively south Florida Sunniland trend fields (Means, producing (Appendix 3). Cumulative production, 1977, Mitchell-Tapping, 1986). Means (1977) as of the end of December, 1989 was 1,239,000 summarized the reservoir characteristics for barrels of oil (Appendix 2). West Felda field as follows: average pay thickness of 17 feet, average porosity of 20 percent, average water saturation of 35 percent, SUNOCO FELDA FIELD A.P.I. oil gravity of 260, and average daily oil production of 4,600 barrels. Values indicate The Sunoco Felda field, located in Hendry and improved reservoir quality over Sunoco Felda Collier Counties, was discovered in July 1964 by field. Sunoco, when they drilled the discovery well Means (1977) believed that the reservoir (Appendix 1). The well (the Sun -Red Cattle quality was improved because West Felda field number 32-1; permit 315) is located in Section "experienced higher energy and more-normal 32, Township 45 South, Range 29 East. Sunoco marine conditions" than did Sunoco Felda field. Felda was the second commercial oil field Alternatively, Mitchell-Tapping (1986) considered discovered in Florida and was discovered 21 the energy levels about the same for both fields years after the first commercial discovery and believed that the improved quality is "due to (Sunniland field). Forty Mile Bend field was greater sub-aerial exposure as the mound discovered in 1954 but turned out to be nonstructure is larger and topographically higher" at commercial and was abandoned in 1956. The West Felda field. Sunoco Felda discovery well location was based At the end of December 1989, eleven wells on a combination of subsurface and seismic data were producing at West Felda field and (Tyler and Erwin, 1976). cumulative production totaled 41,226 barrels of In an initial pumping test in November 1964, oil (Appendices 2 and 3). the discovery well produced 427 barrels of 25.40 A.P.I. gravity oil and 11 barrels of saltwater per 30

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U I I N ct SUNOCO FELDA, WEST FELDA, AND MID-FELDA FIELDS I I \ I '1\ 1 1\ \ I -I I'1 -".aay~n, aaaL, m aaanrot~kFl' W EST FELDA ---.--4. _. .---. ~ .-----------MI r^ \ \ 1\ \ \ ^ Y.l \SMRCTUM MAP , \.,\ I TOP OF SUNNLAND S\ ,..^lC .'^r^ ," ,. . ."I ." ", 10 I ii I s 8 I I0 s.' , b ,, ,. _ " -,.. I _ _, _ , ... _ ___ ._.. , --,I, ...... 113. , ;, ', ", 1 ,," i f3 i iP 35 isI3 7 iw Is1 735 Is+Itr * ' 51.... " -" ... -"----. "1 +-"211,01174 343 740 .153 .'f-i .n SUNOCO ELDA -3 1111 TOI Il i Its Figure 20. 1 West and 39 3ed scu m tp o F 143,' HA , an" ++1 .117 340 1 1 --i, ..-. .....1-~ 59 + "l *111" 0 33" .3 -112I -1 , 1 34 i t's *-11:5 38,1 3N"601lr 35 -18 +.422 -'5? \rl4l5-7bnJ-'471-1, 331 I 431 so--.... ..2 ........-l ia-1 ....e' ' ,s l I ....* .' C ) 4326 asn.-, so 3*9.. .t -28 \i3 I4 to55 I 9. ) 1 .1 "" .i4! 98? 36 I V -I"'a' -'" I I t9137 F ig u re9 3 * 4 -11n o 1 -11d a , -est 355 a nd M id d I ? II a 3 PROUE 352 -iu Its T419~~I~ -too8 ? .14 MI ED 1 "'a 3-t *13U 0 455 41--NS -.i s-1 -----------------------------------------------------------------I1 3 I3s Iý I p Figure~~~ ~~ 20. SuooFla etFla n MdFlafed3tutr ap ofSniadFrain

PAGE 42

Florida Geological Survey day. Production is from the Sunniland Formation 21), are again consistent with a bioherm from -11,417 to -11,430 feet MSL from a leached formation for the reservoir. limestone bioherm. The faunal composition of Two successful offsets have been drilled at the bioherm is somewhat typical of the Sunniland Corkscrew field (Figure 21, permits 1199 and reservoirs (as described in the south Florida oil 1201A) (Lloyd, 1989). These two wells and the fields introduction above) (Means, 1977, Mitchelldiscovery well were all producing at the end of Tapping, 1986). Mitchell-Tapping (1986) 1989 (Appendix 3). Total oil production as of observed faunal differences at Sunoco Felda January 1, 1990 was 524,000 barrels (Appendix field which indicated formation in "the shallow 2). lagoonal zone of the back-reef environment." The reservoir has a permeability barrier to the northeast which prevents migration of the oil upLAKE TRAFFORD FIELD dip (Tyler and Erwin, 1977). Means (1977) summarized the reservoir Lake Trafford field was discovered by Mobil Oil characteristics of Sunoco Felda field. These Corporation on the Baron Collier Jr. lease in include an average pay zone thickness of 11 Section 9, Township 47 South, Range 28 East in feet, average porosity of 18 percent, average Collier County (Figures 1 and 21). The discovery water saturation of 50 percent, A.P.I. oil gravity of well (permit 401) was completed on March 30, 25', and average daily oil production of 1,700 1969 (Appendix 1). During initial production tests barrels. the well pumped 118 barrels of 25.60 A.P.I. As of December 1989, Sunoco Felda field was gravity oil and 78 barrels of saltwater per day. producing from 18 wells (Appendix 3). Total Production was from the Sunniland Formation production was 11,529,000 barrels of oil from -11,830 to -11,892 feet MSL. The well was (Appendix 2). later squeeze cemented to shut off water from above the perforations. The well is unique in ^CORKSCREW FIELD south Florida in that it has not produced water CORKSCREW FIELDthat time. Lake Trafford field is also unique in south Corkscrew field was discovered on November Florida as the only field which produces oil from 10, 1985 with an initial swab test of the R. K. a fractured limestone in the lower Sunniland Petroleum -Rex Properties number 33-2 (permit Formation (Means, 1977). Core material from 1170). Corkscrew field is located about two and the discovery well has been described as an one-half miles north and slightly west of the oneargillaceous, burrowed, limestone "rubble." The well Lake Trafford field in Collier County, Florida combination of burrowing and fracturing was (Figures 1 and 21). In its initial test, the believed to be responsible for the development of discovery well produced 435 barrels of 250 A.P.I. producible permeability and porosity (Jim gravity oil per day with no saltwater. Production Richter, Mobil Oil Corporation, personal was from open hole in the Sunniland at -11,502 communication, in Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). to -11,520 feet MSL. Offsets drilled northwest and south of the Core analysis by Analytical Logging, Inc. (Ft. discovery well were dry holes. The discovery Myers, Florida) indicated an oil producing zone well remains the single producing well for Lake from -11,506 to -11,515 feet MSL. The zone was Trafford field. The well was shut-in in March described as a "fossil-hash" of dolomitic 1988 and remained shut-in for the rest of 1988 limestone with an average porosity of 15.25 and all of 1989. Total oil production for this field, percent. This description, and the small closed as of the end of 1989 was 278,000 barrels structure drawn by Cheeseman (1988) (Figure (Appendix 2). 32

PAGE 43

Information Circular 107 CORKSCREW AND LAKE TRAFFORD FIELDS COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA STRUCTURE MAP TOP OF SUNNILAND FORMATION u |U (O (CHEESMAN,1988) I\--9 t7----3 1 9 2 2 21 1 27 26 1201 I -11516 _4. -_1.A8 --'..... _ \,,48 10-1OOl 1 CORKSCR V FIELDF 1573. 36. -1153 1 9_114 / 72 199 -11492 TI 0 T46S l-11565 I j 1208 I T4\S 2 W1 6 4 3 2 SLAKE TRAFFORD FIELD 408 PERMIT NUMBER 0 ^^bvu I \ -S 75841 \_ ss^ SBOTTODM HOLE LOCATION 1 ->DRY HOLE I /-0 6CI. 20 FEET "-"l .4287 2/6 0 1200 2400 METERS I I I FGS230491 Figure 21. Corkscrew and Lake Trafford fields structure map, top of Sunniland Formation (after M. Cheeseman, independent petroleum geologist, Pensacola, Florida, 1988, personal communication). 33

PAGE 44

Florida Geological Survey SUNNILAND FIELD production totaled 18,445,000 barrels at the end of December 1989 (Appendix 2). In September 1943, Humble Oil and Refining Company discovered Sunniland field in Collier SEMINOLE FIELD County, Florida (Figure 1); this was the first commercial oil discovered in Florida. The discovery well was the Humble Oil and Refining The discovery well for the Seminole field was Company -Gulf Coast Realties number 1 (permit the Weiner-Oleum Corporation well number 12-1 42) located in Section 29, Township 48 South, (permit 662) in Section 12, Township 48 South, Range 30 East. The well was completed in an Range 32 East, Hendry County (Figure 1). The open hole interval between -11,568 and well was completed in the -11,379 to -11,384 foot -11,592 feet MSL. Initial production was 97 MSL interval of the Sunniland Formation on barrels of 260 A.P.I. gravity oil and 425 barrels of November 14, 1973. Initial production was 26 saltwater per day by pumping. barrels of 25.40 A.P.I. gravity oil and eight barrels The well was drilled on a prospect outlined by of saltwater per day. This three-well oil field was magnetic, gravity, seismic, and core data. abandoned in 1978 after producing a total of Production in the field is from various porous 85,000 barrels of oil (Appendix 2). zones in rudistid mounds in the upper 60 feet of the formation. Mitchell-Tapping (1985) described the producing horizon as consisting of leached BEAR ISLAND FIELD rudist and algal particles together with pellets and foraminifers. Mitchell-Tapping's (1985) Bear Island field was discovered on December study of Sunniland, Bear Island, and Forty Mile 5, 1972, with the completion of the Exxon -Gulf Bend fields concluded that the depositional Coast Realties number 2-4 well (permit 563) in environment of these fields was that of a tidal Section 2, Township 49 South, Range 30 East shoal with a landward (east-northeast) mud-flat (Figure 23). The field is located about two miles area and a seaward (west-southwest) shallowsoutheast of Sunniland field (Figure 1). The water back-reef area. The structure map (Figure discovery well pumped 132 barrels of 260 A.P.I. 22) for the Sunniland field shows a northwestgravity oil and 545 barrels of saltwater per day southeast trending dome that formed as these from perforations between -11,558 and -11,564 rudistid beds grew with slowly-rising sea level feet MSL in Sunniland carbonates. during the Lower Cretaceous. The dome is The structure map of Bear Island field (Figure about four miles long and two miles wide with 23) indicates a northwest-southeast trending closure of about 40 feet. dome about 4.5 miles long and 2.5 miles wide Twenty-six producing wells and ten dry holes with a closure of about 55 feet. Mitchell-Tapping have been drilled at Sunniland field. Sunniland (1985) found this field to have the same faunal field has been producing oil for almost 50 years; assemblage as Sunniland field; his conclusion increased saltwater production has forced concerning the general depositional environment abandonment of many of the old Sunniland wells. is listed above in the description of Sunniland Eighteen of the producers had been abandoned field. Despite the generally similar origin, by the end of 1989. Of the remaining eight Mitchell-Tapping (1985) found Bear Island field to producers, five were shut-in during 1988 and be lithologically different than Sunniland field. 1989. The other three produced intermittently Most of the Sunniland Formation at Bear Island during 1988 and 1989 and were all also shut-in field is dolomitized and is more leached than at as of December 1989 (Appendix 3). Oil Sunniland field. Anhydrite and some secondary dolomitization has reduced the effective 34

PAGE 45

Information Circular 107 R26W R25W SUNNILAND FIELD ICOLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA -p2 1 STRUCTURE MAP 11 -11630 7 8 TOP OF SUNNILAND P106 P23 P25 p99 -11515O '1655 14 11548-11519 16 311514 00 -11531 \ P18 P82 P2 PI( 02 S11513 -11514 0"P --1505\ 115\1-115Q.0. 3 P1142 CONF. \ P \ 406 -11500 P384 R11517 50 1 2P P345\ P3601 P2718 r-11504 P312 P35 I23 N \ -11510 10 1 P3 -11498 -11507 \1-151493 \ P65 1 .28 \1P400 p15 \1 5 0 ' -11511 1 1 1 -11510 "Ti I' 00 ORIGIONAL OIL P" , P106 0 -1 1 _ 1496 P76 -/WATER CONTACT -N 1515 -115 0 -11563' 0 SCALE 1 MI3 r. 0 .KM 25 N, 28 EXPLANATION // P31 P1136 PERMIT NUMBER l ~ P42 -16176 DEPTH W961 &-1155 0 PRODUCER -11570 "9 DRY HOLE SALT WATER DISPOSAL " -^ 6 JUNKED HOLE 31 32 33 ---OIL/WATER CONTACT FGS240491 Figure 22. Sunniland field structure map, top of Sunniland Formation. 35

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Florida Geological Survey I -BEAR ISLAND FIELD Colr County, Florid 2a 27 STRUCTURE MAP BASE OF ANHYDRITE IN UPPER SUNNILAND FORMATION Son (From Beer t1e"nd Geoolownl Conmtee,1978) 0 4000 FEET I902 1 ; " I ' 1907 -11i43 0 1200 METERS 0115 4020 -113 33 3 N /-11847 8273 t 981 1 I003 --11524 15 36 4 56 -11543 I802 800 03 .115823 -11525 -11534 C. I.'--5L FEET 79 733 8385-11529 * -11542 36 4824 727 -11543 -11-524 1 BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION 11562 no + DRY HOLE Sa....m1 @ WATER INJECTION WELL -..... OIL/WATER CONTACT, 1978 733 PERMIT NUMBER C. I. 8 FEET 1 D FGS250491 Figure 23. Bear Island field structure map, base of anhydrite in Upper Sunniland Formation (after Bear Island Geological Committee, 1978). 36

PAGE 47

Information Circular 107 permeability in some sections. Dolomitization in RACCOON POINT FIELD the lower units of the upper Sunniland, however, enhanced both porosity and permeability Raccoon Point field is the southeastern-most (Mitchell-Tapping, 1985). active field in the Sunniland trend (Figure 1). Its A total of 25 producing wells have been drilled discovery well was the Exxon -Oleum at Bear Island field; seven of these were active at Corporation number 33-4 (permit 829) drilled in the end of 1989 (Appendix 3). Total oil Section 33, Township 51 South, Range 43 East, production, through December 1989, was Collier County (Figure 24). Initial production was 10,575,000 barrels (Appendix 2). from the -11,371 to -11,375 foot MSL interval of the Sunniland Formation. In a production test on June 20, 1978, the well pumped 57 barrels of 23.30 A.P.I. gravity oil and 845 barrels of saltwater per day. Pepper Hammock field was discovered on Figure 24 is a preliminary structure map for September 28, 1978. The discovery well, the Raccoon Point field. The map indicates an Exxon Corporation -Collier Company number elongated series of small highs trending north23-1 well (permit 897) is located in Section 23, south. The limits of the field are still not Township 29 South, Range 30 East, completely defined since no dry holes have been approximately one and one-half miles south of drilled at Raccoon Point to date. A total of 15 Bear Island field (Figure 1). The initial production producing wells have been drilled, one during test yielded 20 barrels of 270 A.P.I. gravity oil and 1989 (Appendix 4). 206 barrels of saltwater per day. Production was At the end of 1989, 12 of the 15 wells were from Sunniland limestones between -11,586 and active (Appendix 3). Oil production totaled -11,590 feet MSL. The discovery well is the only 4,444,000 barrels at the end of December 1989 well at Pepper Hammock and is shut-in. A total (Appendix 2). of 323 barrels of oil were produced before the well was shut-in in October 1978 (Appendix 2). FORTY MILE BEND FIELD BAXTER ISLAND FIELD Commonwealth Oil Company drilled the Wiseheart -State Board of Education number 1 Baxter Island field is a one-well, abandoned wildcat (permit 167) in Section 16, Township 45 field located approximately eight miles southeast South, Range 35 East, Dade County. It was of Bear Island field (Figure 1). The single located 50 miles southeast of Sunniland field producer and discovery well was the Diamond (Figure 1). The well was completed in the Shamrock -Gerry Brothers Ltd. number 31-3 well -11,298 to -11,315 foot MSL interval of the (permit 865) located in Section 31, Township 49 Sunniland Formation and was initially tested on South, Range 32 East, Collier County. In its February 5, 1954. In this initial test, the well initial production test on August 11, 1977, the pumped an estimated 76 barrels of 21.30 A.P.I. well pumped 35 barrels of 22.4° A.P.I. gravity oil gravity oil and 96 barrels of saltwater per day. and 220 barrels of saltwater per day. Production Core examination (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985) in was from the Sunniland Formation from -11,482 the open interval showed a partially to fully oilto -11,485 feet MSL. The field produced a total saturated, finely crystalline dolostone and of 1,859 barrels of oil before the well was shut-in limestone with pin-point porosity, which did not in 1978 (Appendix 2). The well was plugged and appear to be commercial. abandoned on January 12,1980. The second well in the Forty Mile Bend field, 37

PAGE 48

Florida Geological Survey 0I 21 22 RACCOON POINT FIELD o 1 ' P167 COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA S -11320 STRUCTURE MAP -P'?2TOP OF SUNNILAND \ P1162 1 1 1 1, Ml 28 -11334 -I II | P1150 0 SCALE 1.6 KM --11347 P1149 P1215 26 P1 130 P915 -11314 ' & 35 -11360 P1031 3-11330 33 -11310 I92 36NUBE P829 BLWM -11352 26 -11357 -113 O T51S P106 HL LO-A M T52S 125P1082 P1121 \-11298 !(% --"J |* P\997 4 3 -11352 P 1 1 O 31 P998 P1190 Q -11360 EXPLANATION P1136 PERMIT NUMBER -16176 DEPTH TO TOP OF SUNNILAND FEET BELOW MSL 11 12 " . * BOTTOM HOLE LOCATION t' A SALT WATER DISPOSAL FGS280491 Figure 24. Raccoon Point field preliminary structure map, top of Sunniland Formation. 38

PAGE 49

Information Circular 107 the Gulf Oil -State of Florida number 1 well producer and was the discovery well for McDavid (permit 182), was completed in 1954. The well is field (Escambia County). Coldwater Creek field located about three and one-quarter miles east of was also discovered in 1988 with the first the discovery well (Figure 1). It was completed production test of the Red Rock Oil and Minerals as a pumping well in the -11,309 to -11,316 foot Corporation -Pittman Estate No. 26-2A in Santa MSL interval of the Sunniland Formation. Initial Rosa County. production was 112 barrels of 21.70 A.P.I. gravity Six wells were completed in federal waters off oil per day. Water production was not tabulated. Florida during 1988 and 1989. Three of the wells The distance between the two wells were in the Pensacola area; three were in the comprising Forty Mile Bend field indicate that Destin Dome area. The principal drilling targets they probably did not produce from the same in these areas are the Smackover Formation and reservoir. Mitchell-Tapping (1985) studied the the Norphlet Sandstone (Figure 4). One of the fauna and lithology of Sunniland, Bear Island, Destin Dome area wells (Chevron-6406) is the and Forty Mile Bend fields. His description of the second offshore Norphlet discovery in this area. depositional environment for these fields is Geophysical exploration during 1988 and 1989 discussed above in the Sunniland field concentrated in the Florida panhandle and the description. He found the lithology and fauna at south Florida peninsula. The panhandle Forty Mile Bend to be similar to that of Sunniland exploration included the known oil-producing field, except for the presence of anhydrite in the Santa Rosa and Escambia Counties, an area pore space and an increase in the dolomite offshore from Santa Rosa and Escambia content. Counties, and the Apalachicola Embayment Low oil gravity and low porosity and area. South Florida seismic activity was east of permeability in the Sunniland at both well the known Sunniland producing trend in Broward, locations made this field non-commercial. In Dade, Hendry and Palm Beach Counties. addition, a half-inch hole was found in the casing of the Gulf well (permit 182) at -10,027 feet MSL. This could have caused excessive water flow, and thus shortened the productive life of this well. Both of the Forty Mile Bend wells were abandoned in 1956, after producing only 32,888 barrels of oil in about 17 months in 1954 and 1955 (Appendix 2) (Gunter, 1955 and 1956). SUMMARY Florida oil production continued to decline during 1988 and 1989. Jay field, as the leading producing field for Florida, controls the rate of decline. The field appears to be following the production curve predicted by Christian, et al. (1981) in their discussion of tertiary recovery estimates for Jay field. Three development wells and sixteen exploratory wells were drilled during 1988 and 1989. One exploratory well was completed as a 39

PAGE 50

Florida Geological Survey REFERENCES Applegate, A. V., 1987, The Brown Dolomite Zone of the Lehigh Acres Formation (Aptian) in the South Florida Basin -A potentially prolific producing horizon offshore: Florida Geological Survey Information Circular no. 104, Part II, p. 46-66. , and Lloyd, J. M., 1985, Summary of Florida petroleum production and exploration,onshore and offshore, through 1984: Florida Geological Survey Information Circular no. 101, 69 p. , Pontigo, F. A., Jr., and Rooke, J. H., 1978, Jurassic Smackover oil prospects in the Apalachicola embayment: Oil a*id Gas Journal, January 23, 1978, p. 80-84. Bear Island Geological Committee, 1978, Bear Island field structure map, Exxon Corporation Sunniland oil pool report: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 40. Blackjack Creek Geological Committee, 1974, Blackjack Creek field unit, Exhibit M-1: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 38. Bradford, C. A., 1984, Transgressive-regressive carbonate of the Smackover Formation, Escambia County, Alabama: in Ventress, W. P. S., Bebout, D. G., Perkins, B. F., and Moore, C. H. (editors), The Jurassic of the Gulf Rim: Proceedings of the third annual research conference, Gulf Coast Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, p. 27-39. Christian, L. D., Shirer, J. A., Kimbel, E. L., and Blackwell, R. J., 1981, Planning a tertiary oil-recovery project for Jay/LEC fields unit: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 33, p. 1535-1544. Cramer, F. H., 1971, Position of the north Florida Lower Paleozoic block in Silurian time; phytoplankton evidence: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 76, no. 20, p. 4754-4757. , 1973, Middle and Upper Silurian chitinozoan succession in Florida subsurface: Journal of Paleontology, v. 47, no. 2, p. 279-288. Ferber, R., 1985, Depositional and diagenetic history of the Sunniland Formation, Lower Cretaceous, Lehigh Park field, Lee County, Florida: Master's thesis, University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette, Louisiana. Gould, G. J., 1989, Gulf of Mexico Update: May 1988 -July 1989, U. S. Department of the Interior Minerals Management Service: OCS Information Report, MMS 89-0079, 51 p. Gunter, H., 1955, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1954 Supplement to Information Circular no. 1, 35 p. , 1956, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1955 Supplement to Information Circular no. 1, 31 p. 40

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Information Circular 107 Hughes Eastern Corporation, 1988, McDavid Prospect, Escambia County, Florida, top Smackover, Geophysical Map: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 42. Jay-LEC Fields Unit Geological Committee, 1974, Structure map-top of Smackover-Norphlet oil pool, Exhibit no. G-1: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 36. Johnson, P. G. and Tucker, D. L., 1987, The federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing program; a Florida perspective, February, 1987: Office of the Governor, Office of Planning and Budgeting, Intergovernmental Unit, 16 p. Langston, E. P., and Shirer, J. A., 1985, Performance of the Jay-LEC field unit under mature waterflood and early tertiary operations: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 37, p. 261-268. , Shirer, J. A., and Nelson, D. E., 1981, Innovative reservoir management -key to highly successful Jay-LEC waterflood: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 33, p. 783-791. Lloyd, J. M., 1986, Bluff Springs field discovery renews interest in Florida's western panhandle: Oil and Gas Journal, June 30, 1986, p. 105-108. , 1989, 1986 and 1987 Florida petroleum production and exploration: Florida Geological Survey Information Circular no. 106, 39 p. , and Applegate, A. V., 1987, 1985 Florida petroleum production and exploration: Florida Geological Survey Information Circular no. 104, Part I, p. 1-42. , Ragland, P. C., Ragland, J. M., and Parker, W. C., 1986, Diagenesis of the Jurassic Smackover Formation, Jay field, Florida: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 36, p. 201-211. Lomando, A. J., Jr., Schreiber, C., and Nurmi, R. D., 1981, Sedimentation and diagenesis of Upper Smackover grainstone, Jay-field area, west Florida (abstract): American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, v. 65, no. 5, p. 950. Mancini, E. A., and Benson, D. J., 1980, Regional stratigraphy of Upper Jurassic Smackover carbonates of southwest Alabama: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 30, p. 151-165. Masingill, J. H., 1989, The petroleum industry in Alabama, 1988: Alabama State Oil and Gas Board, Oil and Gas Report 3-L, 100 p. Means, J. A., 1977, Southern Florida needs another look: The Oil and Gas Journal, v. 75, no. 5, p. 212225. Miller, J., 1974, Mount Carmel field structure map: Florida Department of Natural Resources Hearing no. 27. 41

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Florida Geological Survey Mink, R. M., Hamilton, R. P., Bearden, B. L., and Mancini, E. A., 1987, Determination of recoverable natural gas reserves for the Alabama coastal waters area: Alabama State Oil and Gas Board, Oil and Gas Report 13, 74 p. Mitchell-Tapping, H., 1984, Petrology and depositional environment of the Sunniland producing fields of south Florida: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 34, p. 157-173. , 1985, Petrology of the Sunniland, Forty Mile Bend, and Bear Island fields of south Florida: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 35, p. 233-242. , 1986, Exploration petrology of the Sunoco Felda trend of south Florida: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 36, p. 241-256. Moore, C. H., 1984, The Upper Smackover of the Gulf Rim: depositional systems, diagenesis, porosity evolution and hydrocarbon development: in Ventress, W. P. S., Bebout, D. G., Perkins, B. F., and Moore, C. H. (editors), The Jurassic of the Gulf Rim: Proceedings of the third annual research conference, Gulf Coast Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, p. 283-307. Ottman, R. D., Keyes, P. L., and Ziegler, M. A., 1973, Jay field -a Jurassic stratigraphic trap: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 23, p. 146-157. , 1976, Jay field -a Jurassic stratigraphic trap: in Braunstein, J. (editor), North American oil and gas fields: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir 24, p. 276-286. Shirer, J. A., Langston, E. P., and Strong, R. B., 1978, Application of field-wide conventional coring in the Jay-Little Escambia Creek Unit: Journal of Petroleum Technology, v. 30, p. 1774-1780. Sigsby, R. J., 1976, Paleoenvironmental analysis of the Big Escambia Creek-Jay-Blackjack Creek field area: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 26, p. 258-278. Tyler, A. N. and Erwin, W. L., 1976, Sunoco-Felda field, Hendry and Collier Counties, Florida: in Braunstein, J. (editor), North American oil and gas fields: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Memoir 24, p. 287-299. Vinet, M. J., 1984, Geochemistry and origin of Smackover and Buckner dolomites (Upper Jurassic), Jay field area, Alabama-Florida: in Ventress, W. P. S., Bebout, D. G., Perkins, B. F., and Moore, C. H. (editors), The Jurassic of the Gulf Rim: Proceedings of the third annual research conference, Gulf Coast Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Foundation, p. 365-374. 42

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 1 FLORIDA OIL FIELD DISCOVERY WELL DATA 43

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Florida Geological Survey FLORIDA OIL FIELD DISCOVERY WELL DATA PERFORATIONS DATUM FOR DEPTH OR OPEN HOLE TOTAL DEPTH DISCOVERY PERMIT MEASUREMENTS, DEPTH BELOW BELOW DATUM,NAME OF PROOUDISCOVERY OIL GRAVITY, DATE NO. FIELD COUNTY FT. MSL (1) DATUM, FT. FT. CING FORMATION STATUS DEGREES API 9-2643 42 Sunnitand Collier 34 (OF) 11,602-11,626 11,626 Sunniland Pumping 26 2-5-54 167 Forty Mile Bend Oade 24 (DF) 11,322-11,339 11,557 Sunniland Pumping 21 7-22-64 315 Sunoco Felds Hendry 55 11,472-11,485 11,485 Sunnitand Pumping 25 8-2-66 371 West Felda Hendry 49 11,486-11,489 11,675 Sunniland Pumping 26 3-30-69 401 Lake Trafford Collier 40 11,870-11,892 11,987 Sunniland Pumping 26 6-15-70 417 Jay Santa Rosa 206 15,470-15,524 15,984 Smackover Flowing 51 12-19-71 504 Mt. Carmel Santa Rosa 274 15,260-15,280 15,399 Snackover Flowing 47 & Norphtet 214-72 523 Blackjack Creek Santa Rosa 157 15,790-15,900 16,235 Smackover Flowing 51 12-5-72 563 Bear Island Collier 31 11,589-11,595 11,817 SunniLand Pumping 26 11-14-73 662 Seminole Hendry 36 11,415-11,420 11,651 Sunnitand Pumping 25 7-30-74 712 Lehigh Park Lee 40 11,389-11,394 11,630 Sunniland Pumping 28 4-22-77 881 Sweetwater Creek Santa Rosa 255 14,299-14,340 14,611 Smackover Pumping 45 8-11-77 865 Baxter Island Collier 30 11,512-11,515 11,823 Sunniland Pumping 22 10-13-77 904 Mid-Felda Hendry 59 11,492-11,496 11,686 Sunnitand Pumping 26 6-20-78 829 Raccoon Point Collier 39 11,410-11,414 11,658 Sunniland Pumping 23 9-28-78 897 Pepper Hammock Collier 43 11,629-11,633 11,897 Sunnitand Pumping 27 6-27-82 1070 Townsend Canal Hendry 53 11,416-11,421 11,462 Sunniland Pumping 28 3-25-84 1125 Bluff Springs Escambia 178 16,332-16,339 16,800 Smackover Flowing 57 11-10-85 1170 Corkscrew Collier 45 11,547-11,565 11,565 Sunnitand Pumping 26 2-19-86 1194 McLellan Santa Rosa 245 14,072-14,090 14,475 Snmackover Flowing 41 6-4-88 1220 Coldwater Creek Santa Rosa 166 15,150-15,170 15,407 Smackover Flowing 47 6-14-88 1230 McDavid Escambia 271 16,346-16,360 16,800 Smackover Flowing 54 1. This is usually the kelly bushing elevation; where this was unavailable, drill floor (DF) elevation is given. 44

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 2 1988,1989 AND CUMULATIVE PRODUCTION DATA 45

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Florida Geological Survey 1988, 1989 AND CUMULATIVE PRODUCTION DATA (1) FIELD (2) 1988 PRODUCTION 1989 PRODUCTION CUMULATIVE PRODUCTION Oil Gas Water Oil Gas Water Oil Gas (Bbts) (MCF) (Bbts) (Bbts) (MCF) (Bbts) (MBbts) (MMCF) NORTHWEST FLORIDA Bluff Springs 26,737 13,993 171,510 15,889 5,369 158,041 220 122 McDavid 38,417 12,478 7,536 82,789 35,886 33,566 121 48 Jay 4,729,067 7,443,364 46,050,785 4,814,354 7,595,813 51,452,328 365,479 466,858 Coldwater Creek 5,759 238 11,485 1,766 203 700 9 0 Blackjack Creek 462,464 740,047 6,252,039 517,142 1,016,557 9,581,475 54,482 51,989 Mt. Carmel 63,081 17,138 483,995 12,520 0 55,147 4,666 4,797 HcLet tan 64,107 29,549 17,981 44,541 20,302 15,313 174 77 Sweetwater Creek (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 15 Subtotal 5,389,632 8,256,807 52,995,331 5,489,001 8,674,130 61,296,570 425,165 523,906 SOUTH FLORIDA Lehigh Park 168,605 16,493 1,297,670 104,109 8,956 1,510,456 5,165 519 Townsend Canal 30,283 0 156,898 46,590 0 216,085 406 0 West Felds 634,923 44,879 4,954,270 494,652 34,818 3,404,318 41,226 3,427 Mid-Felda 79,221 0 222,258 77,195 0 243,795 1,239 10 Sunoco Felds 82,636 4,513 1,046,974 36,591 1,308 404,823 11,529 980 Corkscrew 159,838 0 5,505 108,037 0 33,616 524 0 Lake Trafford 1,790 0 0 0 0 0 278 0 Seminote (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 85 0 Sunniland 30,459 2,629 726,203 5,325 482 124,390 18,445 1,824 Bear Island 337,823 27,815 2,450,255 245,024 19,609 2,443,173 10,575 837 Pepper Hammock 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Baxter Island (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 Raccoon Point 830,838 99,863 643,621 682,866 81,989 626,993 4,444 529 Forty Mile Bend (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 33 2 Subtotal 2,356,416 196,192 11,503,654 1,800,389 147,162 9,007,649 93,951 8,128 STATEWIDE TOTAL 7,746,048 8,452,999 64,498,985 7,289,390 8,821,292 70,304,219 519,116 532,034 1. Statistics compiled by Charles Tootle, Florida Geological Survey, Oil and Gas Section. 2. Fields are listed in approximate order from north to south and west to east. 3. Plugged and abandoned oil fields. Abbreviations: Bbts -Barrels (42 US Gallons) NBbts -Thousand Barrels MCF -Thousand Cubic Feet MMCF -Million Cubic Feet 46

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 3 1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELL STATISTICS 47

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Florida Geological Survey 1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELL STATISTICS (1) FIELD (2) 1988 1989 Number of Wells Number of Wells PRO INJ SI TA TOT PRO INJ SI TA TOT NORTHWEST FLORIDA Bluff Springs 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 McDOvid 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 Jay 38 22 59 0 119 44 27 43 0 114 Coldwater Creek 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 Blackjack Creek 7 7 11 0 25 9 7 10 0 26 Mt. Carme 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 2 McLellan 2 0 1 0 3 2 0 1 0 3 Sweetwater Creek (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Subtotal 49 29 74 0 152 59 34 55 0 148 SOUTH FLORIDA Lehigh Park 1 0 3 0 4 2 0 2 0 4 Townsend Canal 1 0 3 0 4 2 0 2 0 4 West Felda 13 0 27 0 40 11 0 21 0 32 Mid-Felda 1 0 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 2 Sunoco Fetda 2 0 19 0 21 1 1 16 0 18 Corkscrew 3 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 3 Lake Trafford 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 Seminole (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sunni land 0 0 13 0 13 0 0 8 0 8 Bear Island 10 0 17 0 27 7 2 17 0 26 Pepper Hamock 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 Baxter lsland (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Raccoon Point 12 0 3 0 15 12 0 3 0 15 Forty Mlle lend (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Subtotal 27 0 54 0 81 23 3 46 0 72 STATEWIDE TOTAL 92 29 162 0 283 99 37 126 16 262 1. Statistics compiled by Charles Tootle, Florida Geological Survey, Oil and Gas Section. 2. Fields are listed in approximate order from north to south and west to east. 3. Plugged and abandoned oil fields. Abbreviations: PRO -Producing Wells INJ -Injection Wells SI -Shut In Welts TA -Temporarilty Abandoned Wells TOT -Total No. Wells 48

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 4 1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELLS DRILLED 49

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Florida Geological Survey 1988 AND 1989 FIELD WELLS DRILLED Drill Floor Total FIELD Well (1) and Operator-Well Completion Elev., Ft. Depth, County Permit No. Name & No. Location (2) Date Above MSL Ft. (3) Status MC DAVID FIELD Escantia W-16368 Hughes Eastern 2420' FNL & 6/13/89 20 16,750 Plugged and abandoned P-1234 Corp.-Jones Estate 1637' FEL as a dry hole, 6/16/88. No. 34-1 Sec. 34, T5N, R31U JAY FIELD Santa Rosa W-16369 Exxon Corp.Jones 2,337.66' FSL & 8/04/89 235 15,735 Injection well. P-1249 McDavid No. 7-8 3,381.86' FEL Sec. 7, T5N, R29U RACCOON POINT FIELD Collier W-16121 Exxon Corp.SHL: 1/07/89 34 MD: 11,796 Completed as a potential P-1215 Collier Land £ 2,651' FNL & TVD: 11,542 producer. Cattle Corp. 1,738' FEL No. 27-4 BHL: 1,320' FSL & 1,320' FEL Sec. 27, T51S, R34E 1. Florida Geological Survey well number for samples (cuttings or core chips). 2. For directionally drilled wells, SHL is surface hole location, BHL is bottom hole location. 3. For directionally drilled wells, MD: measured depth; TVD: true vertical depth. 50

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 5 1988 AND 1989 WILDCAT WELLS DRILLED 51

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Florida Geological Survey 1988 AND 1989 WILDCAT WELLS DRILLED Drill Floor Total Well (1) and Operator-Well Completion Etev., Ft. Depth County Permit No. Name & No. Location (2) Date Above MSL Ft. (3) Status 4ORTHMEST FLORIDA Calhoun U-16298 Zilkha Energy Co.1049' FSL & 08/26/88 141 9,758 Plugged & abandoned P-1235 Donald Leonard 1330' FUL as a dry hole, 10/24/88. No. 15-3 Sec. 15, T2S, R8W Escambia U-16126 ARCO Oil & Gas 1029' FSL & 03/17/88 193 17,262 Plugged & abandoned P-1228 Co.R. H. Sherritt 1050' FUL as a dry hole, 3/17/88. No. 34-3 Sec. 34, TSN, R33U Escambia W-16406 Hughes Eastern 1500' FNL & 07/14/88 269 16,800 Completed as a potential P-1230 Corp.-Walker-lotey 1050' FWL producer, 7/14/88. No. 34-2 Sec. 34, (McDavld Field) T5N, R31W Escanbisa U-16506 ARCO Oil & Gas 977' FSL & 08/11/89 30 17,500 Plugged and abandoned P-1250 Co.A. Grimes 976' FEL as a dry hole, 8/11/89. No. 8-4 Sec. 8, T4N, R32W Okatoosa W-16503 Hardy Oil & Gas 1320' FSL & 10/12/89 22 14,105 Plugged & abandoned P-1253 U.S.A., Inc.1650' FEL as a dry hole, 10/12/89. State of Florida Sec. 30, No. 30-4 T6N, R25W Santa Rosa W-16180 Louisiana Land & 1600' FNL & 06/24/88 182 16,080 Plugged & abandoned P-1232 Exploration Co.1100' FEL as a dry hole, 6/24/88. Jeffreys No. 20-1 Sec. 20, T4N, R28W Santa Rosa U-16244 Exxon Corp.1330.75' FNL & 01/28/89 25 17,400 Plugged & abandoned P-1244 Exxon-Chapion 923.22' FEL as a dry hole, 1/28/89. International Sec. 5, No. 5-1 T2N, R29U Santa Rosa U-16301 Harkins & Co.SHL: 03/20/89 76 MD: 16,236 Plugged & abandoned P-1245 Champion No. 16-2 1988.7' FSL & TVD: 16,123 as a dry hole, 3/20/89. 186.7' FWL Sec. 15, BHL: 2220' FSL & 660' FEL Sec. 16, T5N, R30W Santa Rosa U-16302 Exxon Corp.1600' FNL & 04/26/89 25 15,589 Plugged & abandoned P-1246 Shriners Hospital 1100' FEL as a dry hole, 4/26/89. et al. No. 28-1 Sec. 28, T4N, R26W Santa Rose No WU (4) Hardy Ofil Gas 1200' FSL & 10/12/89 25 14,970 Plugged & abandoned P-1252 U.S.A., Inc.1200' FEL as a dry hole, 10/12/89. T.R. Miller Mill Sec. 13, Co. No. 13-4 T5N, R27W Santa Rosa U-16498 Cation Petrol. 859' FSL & 12/21/89 191 6,600 Plugged & abandoned P-1257 Co.-S. Decker 1783' FEL as a dry hole, 12/21/89. Ellis No. 18-4-3 Sec. 18, T4N, R28W 52

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Information Circular 107 1988 AND 1989 WILDCAT WELLS DRILLED Drill Floor Total Well (1) and Operator-Well Completion Elev., Ft. Depth County Permit No. Name & No. Location (2) Date Above MSL Ft. (3) Status SOUTH FLORIDA Collier W-16122 Sabine Corp.1320' FNL & 01/28/88 43 11,850 Plugged & abandoned P-1208 Collier Co. 1600' FWL as a dry hole, 2/1/88. No. 4-2 Sec. 4, T47S, R28E Collier W-16165 Sabine Corp.1042.81' FNL & 05/27/88 36 11,750 Plugged & abandoned P-1216 Collier Co. 1027.51' FWL as a dry hole, 6/13/88. No. 18-2 Sec. 18, T50S, R33E Collier W-16195 Sabine Corp.1584.97' FNL & 07/09/88 46 12,000 Plugged & abandoned P-1217 Collier Co. 1644.89' FWL as a dry hole, 7/9/88. No. 29-2 Sec. 29, T47S, R29E Collier W-16457 Sabine Corp.1081.92' FNL & 11/13/89 51 11,620 Plugged & abandoned P-1238 Alico Land 1398.02' FEL as a dry hole, 11/13/89. Development Sec. 3, No. 3-1 T46S, R28E Collier W-16243 Sabine Corp.SHL: 12/10/88 38 MD: 12,345 Plugged & abandoned P-1240 Collier Co. 656' FNL & TVD: 11,879 as a dry hole, 12/10/88. No. 5-5 868' FWL Sec. 9, BHL: 967' FSL & 967' FEL Sec. 5, T49S, R30E 1. Florida Geological Survey well number for samples (cuttings or core chips). 2. For directionally drilled wells, SHL is surface hole location; BHL is bottom hole location. 3. MD: measured depth; TVD: true vertical depth (determined by directional survey). 4. Well samples have not been submitted yet. 53

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Florida Geological Survey APPENDIX 6 OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN FLORIDA STATE WATERS 54

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Information Circular 107 OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN STATE WATERS Rotary Wellt (1) and Lease No. Table Elev. Total Geological Year Permit No. Operator and Area County Ft. above MSL Depth, Ft. Significance 1947 P-16 Gulf Oil State of Florida offshore 23 6,100 Bottomed in Upper Cretaceous(?). W-1413 Corp. Lease 374 No. 1 Monroe Sugarloaf Key Area 1947 P-22 Gulf Oil State of Florida offshore 23 15,455 No porosity in Sunnitand Fm. W-972 Corp. Lease 373 No. 1 Monroe Wellt bottomed in Pumpkin Bay Big Pine Key Area (Late Coahuilan). Very difficult to correlate this well because of anhydrite development. Structurally very low. 1947 P-43 Magnolia State of Florida offshore 10 7,019 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous. W-1502 Petroleum Block 5-B No. 1-A Franklin Co. St. Vincent Sound 1955 P-232 Gulf Oil State of Florida offshore 32 12,631 Well cored from 11,661-12,544' W-3510C Corp. Lease 826-G No. 1 Monroe in Sunni and and Punta Gorda. Florida Bay Encountered some salt stringers in Punta Gorda. Only 60' of dark, dense calcitutite in Sunnitand. 1956 P-251 HORC State of Florida offshore 26 7,505 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous. W-4122 Lease 833 No. 1 Santa Rosa Pensacola Bay 1959 P-275 Gulf Oit State of Florida offshore 56 15,478 Four drill stem tests: W-5094 Corp. Lease 826-Y No. 1 Monroe 12,474-12,533'(Lake Trafford?) Marquesas 12,534-12,544'(Sunnitand) 12,582-12,822'(Sunni and) 14,642-14,702'(Brown Dolomite) The 12,474-12,533' test recovered 15 barrels of 22 degree API gravity oil and 14.1 barrels of saltwater. Brown Dolomite from 14,650-15,036' was somewhat vuggy. This may be the principal target in this area. Net dolomite estimated at 400'. 1959 P-280 California State of Florida offshore 21 6,030 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous. W-5152 Coastal Lease 1011 No. 1 Monroe Big Pine Key Area 1959 P-281 California State of FLorida offshore 26 7,030 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous. W-5103 Coastal Lease 224-A No. 1 Franklin St. George Island Area 1960 P-289 California State of Florida offshore 39 14,000 Brown Dolomite: 12,485-12,589'. W-5574 Coastal Lease 224-B No. 1 Lee Estimated net dolomite: 103'. Boca Grande Area 1961 P-292 California State of Florida offshore 36 7,722 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous. W-5713 Coastal Lease 1011 No. 2 Monroe Marquesas 1961 P-293 California State of Florida offshore 34 10,560 Did not encounter Smackover Fm. W-5654 Coastal Lease 224-A No. 2 Franklin Bottomed in Eagle Mills Fm. of South of Alligator Triassic Age. Diabase found in Point Eagle Mills. 1961 P-297 California State of Florida offshore 40 12,600 There is an estimated 40' of doloW-5785 Coastal Lease 224-B No. 2 Lee mite in the 12,445-12,560' Brown Boca Grande Area Dolomite interval. No evidence of oil staining. Dolomite microcrystalline to finely crystalline. Core analysis from 11,255-11,625' Sunnitand interval showed no permeability, extremely low porosity, and no oil. 55

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Florida Geological Survey OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN STATE WATERS Rotary Well (1) and Lease No. Table Etev. Total Geological Year Permit No. Operator and Area County Ft. above MSL Depth, Ft. Significance 1962 P-29i California State of Florida offshore 57 12,850 Bottomed in Punta Gorda. No shows W-5970 Coastal Lease 1011 No. 3 Monroe of oil and no porosity reported. Marquesas Dritt stem test of the 12,52112,600, interval tested saltwater. Rebecca Shoals Reef (Paleocene and Upper Cretaceous) present. 1963 P-304 California State of Florida offshore 37 10,600 Bottomed in Lower Cretaceous. w-6278 Coastal Lease 224-8 No. 3 Pinellas Very poor samples. No oil shows. Honeymoon Island Carbonates-clastics below 7,000'. Area 1967 P-375 Nobit Oil State of Florida offshore 21 12,931 This well drilled into Pumpkin w-8139 Corp. Lease 224-B No. 1 Charlotte Bay Fm. (Upper Coahultan) at Boca Grande Area 12,230'. Drilled into basement (rhyotite porphyry) at 12,830'. No shows in Sunni and Fm. Brown Dolomite Zone: 11,920-12,000'. Estimated net dolomite: 70'. Poor samples. 1967 P-382 Mobilt Oil State of Florida offshore 22 6,041 Mixed facies (carbonates, sandw-8304 Corp. Lease 224-A No. 1-A Citrus stones, and shales) at 4,325'; W-SU of Crystal Triassic, Eagle Mitlls at 5,625'; River Paleozoic at 5,920'. Very indurated shale and sittstone. Some quartzite. Bedding planes vertical in this core. No shows and no porosity. 1967 P-383 Mobil Oil State of Florida offshore 25 4,735 Mixed facies (carbonates, sandW-8305 Corp. Lease 224-A No. 1-8 Levy stones, and shales) at 2,882' in Cedar Key Area Cretaceous. Predominantly varicolored unconsolidated sandstone below 4,180'. Highty indurated quartzites and interbedded shales in core (Paleozoic) from 4,7204,735'. 1968 P-387 Nobit Oil State of Florida offshore 37 14,369 This well encountered Jurassic U-8487 Corp. Lease 224-A No. 1-C Franklin limestone. First indication of Little St. George possible Smackover in ApalachiIsland Area cola area. 1983 P-1097 Getty Oil State of Florida offshore 30 18,011 Smackover tests at 17,405-17,411' u-15391 Coopany Lease 2338 No. 1 Santa Rosa and 17,328-17,411' produced only East Bay saltwater. Norphlet Ss. and Louann Salt were very thin. 1. Florida Geological Survey well number for samples (cuttings or core chips). 56

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 7 1988 AND 1989 OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN FEDERAL WATERS, OFFSHORE FLORIDA 57

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Florida Geological Survey 1968 AND 1989 OIL EXPLORATION WELLS DRILLED IN FEDERAL WATERS, OFFSHORE FLORIDA PLUGGED & WELL DEPTH, FT. SPUD ABANDONED AREA NO. OPERATOR LOCATION BELOW MSL DATE DATE COMMENTS Oestin Dome OCS-0-6406 Chevron Block 56 22,572 06/12/87 01/26/88 Tenporarfty abandoned Producible Norphlet discovery. Peneacolt OCS-0-6391 Tenneco Block 948 19,200 10/14/87 01/19/88 Tefrporarfly abandoned. Pensacola OCS-0-6396 Texaco, Inc. Block 996 17,910 04/08/88 09/07/88 Destin Dame OCS-0-6397 Gulfetar Block 1 2,000 01/09/89 01/18/89 Tecporarfty abandoned. Destin Dome OCS-G-6398 Gulfstar Block 2 1,800 01/21/89 01/27/89 Tefrporarity abandoned. No. 2 Pensacola OCS-G-6390 Gulfstar Block 881 2,700 01/29/89 02/07/89 Temporarily abandoned. Date from Gould, 1989. 58

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 8 1988 AND 1989 GEOPHYSICAL EXPLORATION ACTIVITY 59

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198 AND 1989 GEOPHYSICAL EXPLORATION ACTIVITY GEOPMYSICAL SURVEYED PWMIT EXPIRATION ENERGY DEPTN, CIARGE SNOT NOLE SURVEY PERMIT COMPANY FOR COUNTY APPMOVED DATE STATUS SOURCE FEET SIZE, LBS SPACING LENGTM,NI 6-96-M Shell Western UEP Shell Western E&P DD,CL N/A N/A Withdraim Seismic Gel 27 3 ISO 133.2 -99-88 GFS Markins & Co. SR.ES 14-mar-8 14-Mar-89 Copleted Seismic Gel 100 20 440 6.3 G-100-88 Teledyne First Seismic SROK 27-May-88 27-May-89 Copleted Seis/Airgun 7.5 .5 110 113.8 a-101-88 astern Western SR.OK 20-Apr-M 20-Apr-9 Co4pleted Vibroseis I/A N/A N/A 45.0 6-102-88 GFS Davis Petroleum SR 08-Apr-88 08-Apr-89 Completed Seimic Gel 100 15 220 4.7 G-103-88 GFS Union TX SR 11-Ar-88 11-Apr-89 Completed Seimic Get <10 .33 10 28.3 G-104-8 Dee Exploration Exxon ES 11-Apr-8 11-Apr-89 Completed Seimic Gel 100 15 220 5.0 6-105-88 GFS Pruat Oil SR 27-ay-88 27-May-89 Completed Seimic Gel 100 5 330 1.6 6-106-88 IGC Coastal 011 & Gas SR 17-Aug-88 17-Aua-89 Cotted Seismic Ge 5 .33 220 9.4 G-107-88 Conaco Conoco TY,GA,NO.,J, 21-Jun-86 21-Jun-89 Completed Vibrosels N/A N/A N/A 140.0 LN,WK,US 6-108-8 GFS Exxon SR,ES 17-AuD-88 17-Aug-89 Completed Seismic Gel 80 10 440 149.0 6-109-88 Teledyne First Seimic SR,OK 17-Au-8B 17-Aug-89 Copleted Seis/Airgui 7.5 .5 110 46.0 G-110-88 Teledyne First Seismic SR,OK,ES 30-Jun-88 30-Jun-89 Completed Seis/Airgun 7.5 .5 110 18.0 G-111-88 Shetl Western SP Shet IWtern E&P DD 19-Sep-M 19-Sp-89 Completed Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 35.0 G-112-88 Shell Ustrn WP Shell Western E&P DO 19-Oct-8U 19-Oct-90 Pending Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 90.5 6-113-88 Shell Mastern EP Shellt Western EUP DO,R 02-Dec-88 02-Dec-89 Coipleted Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 55.5 G-114-88 Conoco Conoo NO 07-Sep-88 07-Sp-89 Cancelled Vibroseis N/A N/A N/A 19.2 11 6-115-88 Petty Ray ARJ ES 19-Sp-UM 19-Sep-89 Copleted Seismic Get 150 6 440 65.0 5 6-116-88 ShelL Western .P Shell Western E&P DO 02-Dec-88 02-Dec-89 Copleted Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 24.1 G-117-88 ShelL Western EP Shell Western EUP DO,BR,HE 19-Dec-88 19-Dec-a89 Completed Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 37.7 1D 6-118-88 Shell Western EP Shell Western EUP BR,HE,CL 27-Jan-89 27-Jan-90 Pending Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 26.0 6-119-88 Shell Western UP Shell Western E&P DO 27-Jan-89 27-Jan-90 Completed Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 2.5 6-120-89 IGC Coastal OiL & Gas SR,OK N/A N/A Cancelled Seismic Get 5 .33 220 46.0 6-121-89 Coastal Petroleu Coastal Petroleum GL,HE,NT,OE,PB N/A N/A Withdrsam Air/Watergup N/A N/A N/A 225.0 6-122-89 GFS Paramount OK 13-Jul-89 13-Jul-90 Completed Seismic Gel 60 15 165 4.3 0-123-89 GFS First Seismic SR 13-Jul-89 13-Jul-90 Coapleted Seismic Gel 0.33 5 110 8.0 0-124-89 Shell Western EP SheLL Western EUP BR,PB Pending Seismic Gel 27 3 150 27.9 D 6-125-89 Halliburton ARCO ES 11-Aug-89 11-Aug-90 Expired Seismic GeL 150 6 440 7.0 6-126-89 Malliburton Exxon ES 11-Aug-89 11-Aug-90 Completed Seismic Get 80-90 6 352 11.0 6-127-89 Shell Western EP SheLl Western EUP D,BR Pending Seis/Vib 27 3 150 25.8 0 G-128-89 atlliburton Exxon SR,ES 26-Sep-89 26-Sep-90 Completed Seismic Gel 30-90 .3-5 352 31.5 G-129-89 Digicon Nobil Offshore 09-Nov-89 09-Nov-90 Completed Airgun N/A N/A N/A 185.0 6-130-89 Halliburton Chevron ES 11-Oct-89 11-Oct-90 Completed Seismic GeL 30-90 1-20 660 12.5 6-131-89 Shell Western EP Shell Western EUP DO 05-Dec-89 05-Dec-90 Pending Vibrator N/A N/A M/A 70.8 G-132-89 GFS Paramount OK Cancelled Seismic GeL 60 15 165 4.6 6-133-89 Shell Western UEP Shell Western E&P DO 05-Dec-89 05-Dec-90 Pending Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 50.0 G-134-89 Shetll eestern ENP Shet Western E&P DO Pending Vibrator N/A N/A N/A 8.5 County Abbreviations: 1988 1989 TOTAL Total Miles in Applications: 1,055.8 717.8 1,773.6 BR-Brouard GL-Glades OE-Okeechobee Total Surveyed: 786.9 252.3 1,039.2 BY-Bay HE-Hendry OK-Okaloosa Surveyed Mites by Area: CL-Colltier HO-Holmes PB-Palm Beach Panhandle Onshore: 632.1 67.3 699.4 Panhandle offshore: 0.0 185.0 185.0 DD-Dade JK-Jackson SR-Santa Rosa South Florida: 154.8 0.0 154.8 ES-Escambia LN-Leon WK-Wakulta Surveyed Mi tes by Method: GA-Gadsden MT-Martin WS-Washington Vibrator: 339.8 0.0 339.8 Airgun: 0.0 185.0 185.0 Seismic Gel: 269.3 67.3 336.6 Seis.Gel/Airgun: 177.8 0.0 177.8 Total Pending: 116.5 183.0 299.5 Total Withdrawn, Cancelled, Expired: 152.4 282.6 435.0

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Information Circular 107 APPENDIX 9 FLORIDA OIL AND GAS RESERVE ESTIMATES By Charles H. Tootle, P.E. #40,500 61

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FLORIDA OIL AMD GAS RESERVE ESTIMATES ORIGINAL OIL REMAINING ORIGINAL GAS REMAIING AVERAGE ORIGINAL ESTIMATED RECOMERPODUCED RECOVERABLE RECOVERPRODUCED RECOERALE OIL AVERAGE P "DUCGAS-OIL OIL IN RECOVERT ABLE OIL TMROU OIL RESERVES ABLE GAS TMIOUGM GAS RESERVS GRAVITY, PAI TY, TIVE RATIO, PLACE, FACTOR, IN PLACE, 1-1-90, AS OF 1-1-90. IN PLACE, 1-1-90, AS OF 1-1-90, FIELD (1) A.P.I. PERCENT ACRES SCF/STB BARRELS FRACTION ARRELS BARRELS BAELS NCF NCF NCF NORTW.ST FLORIDA Bluff Springs 53 19.6 160.00 550 1,300,'40 0.19 247,066 220,111 26,973 135,795 120,791 15,004 Ncogwid 53 12.8 160.00 400 4,967,347 0.10 496,736 121,206 377,530 199,494 48,364 151,130 Jay (FL & AL) 51 14.0 14,414.50 1,277 820,569,503 0.60 492,341,702 395,356,327 96,95,375 626,720,354 505,466,642 123,251,712 Jay (FL anly) 51 14.0 13,021.14 1,277 763,129,636 0.60 457,677,783 365,479,210 92,398,573 584,709.929 466,58,558 117,851,371 Coldster Creek 47 12.1 160.00 500 2,060,107 0.15 312,016 8,802 303,214 156,006 537 155,471 Blackjack Creek 48 16.5 5,719.96 954 100,500,000 0.60 60,300,000 54,482,137 5,817,863 57,526,200 51,909,890 5,536,310 Mt. Caretl 43 9.1 481.28 1,028 17,500,000 0.29 5,075,000 4,665,696 409,304 5,218,140 4,797,292 420,848 NcLtllan 43 9.0 480.00 430 2,915,540 0.14 412,686 174,289 238,397 177,455 74,905 102,550 Swetwater Creek (2) 44 11.0 160.00 1,070 624,000 0.10 62,400 13,695 48,705 66,768 14,655 52,113 Subtotal (3) 20,342.40 893,037,072 524,785,705 425,165,146 99,620,559 648,189,789 523,904,992 124,284,797 SOUTN FLORIDA Lehigh Park 28 17.7 800.00 100 8,211,707 0.65 5,337,609 5,164,594 173,015 533,761 518,448 15,313 -Tiesend Canal 28 13.7 640.00 0 4,504,699 0.20 900,940 406,117 494,823 0 0 0 Mest Felds 26 15.0 7,500.00 80 125,802,366 0.35 44,030,828 41,225,828 2,805,000 3,522,466 3,221,145 301,321 0. NId-Felda 26 11.9 480.00 10 5,090,419 0.30 1,527,126 1,239,166 287,960 12,726 10,094 2,632 Sunoco Folds 25 15.0 3,840.00 85 28,946,578 0.40 11,578,631 11,528,631 50,000 964,184 981,329 2,855 ) Corkscrew 26 6.9 480.00 0 1,667,806 0.40 667,122 524,462 142,660 0 0 0 Lake Trafford 26 7.9 160.00 0 7,690,293 0.04 307,612 277,746 29,866 0 0 0 0 SeminoLe (2) 25 14.1 480.00 0 2,366,565 0.10 236,657 84,755 151,902 0 0 0 Sumi tand 26 15.0 2,080.00 100 37,685,118 0.50 18,842,559 18,444,812 397,747 1,884,256 1,824,628 59,628 Bear Island 26 11.9 2,880.00 80 42,811,959 0.35 14,984,184 10,575,398 4,408,786 1,198,735 836,093 362,642 0 Peppe Hamock 27 15.3 160.00 0 976,713 0.10 97,671 323 97,348 0 0 0 Baxter Island (2) 22 19.6 160.00 0 1,276,617 0.10 127,662 1,859 125,803 0 0 0 CO Raccoon Point 23 13.9 2,400.00 120 42,437,790 0.25 10,609,448 4,443,959 6,165,489 1,273,134 530,070 743,064 Forty Mile Bend (2) 21 10.0 320.00 50 1,112,701 0.07 77,889 32,888 45,001 3,894 1,656 2,238 Subtotal 22,380.00 310,581.331 109,325,938 93,950,538 15,375,400 9,413,156 7,923,463 1,489,693 STATEWIDE TOTAL 42,722.40 1,203,618,403 634,111,643 519,115,684 114,995,959 657,602,945 531,828,455 125,774,490 1. Fields are Listed in approximite order from northwest to southeast. UNITS: MCF -Thousand Cubic Feet 2. Plugged and abandoned oil fields. SCF -Standard Cubic Feet 3. Northwest Florida subtotals use Jay (FL only) data. STB -Stock Tank Barrels METHODS USED TO DETERMINE RESERVE ESTIMATES: Archie's Equation was used to estimate the oil saturation in two feet increments. The formation water resistivities used were 0.018 ohm-meters for the Smackover Fi. (northwest Florida) and 0.022 ohm-meters for the Sunni Land Fm. (south Florida). Formation temperatures were estimated SST * 76 + depth/80 for northwest Florida and SST a 76 * depth/100 for south Florida. SST is subsurface formation temperature in degrees Fahrenheit, and the depth is the distance in feet below ground surface. The volumetric calculation procedure was used to estimate the reserves for aLL of the oil fields except SunniLand, Sunoco Felda, and West Felda fields. Decline curve analysis was used to estimate the reserves for these three oil fields. This type of analysis will give credible results for these fields because they are well into the decline part of their production curves. In addition, few porosity Logs were available for these three fields and resistivity Logs yield anomalous values because the wells were drilled with water. DISCLAIMER: An attempt was made to present realistic estimates; however, no guarantee or warranty is expressed or implied. Anyone who uses this information does so at their own risk.

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Information Circular 107 PART II PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICIES IN FLORIDA: RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONCERN FOR SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS By Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. 74 and Joan M. Ragland, P.G. 298 63

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Florida Geological Survey 64

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TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Abstract.................................................................................................................................................. 66 Acknowledgem ents................................................................................................................................ 66 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 67 Phase I: Encouraging Exploration and Petroleum Legislation............................................................ 67 Early Exploration ............................................................................................................................... 67 Early Legislation ................................................................................................................................ 67 Phase II: Econom ic Concerns and Petroleum Legislation.................................................................. 70 Early Rules and Regulations .......................................................................................................... 71 Early Offshore Geophysical Perm itting........................................................................................... 71 Phase III: Petroleum Policy Development in Response to Environmental Concern........................... 72 South Florida Developm ent History................................................................................................ 72 Policy Development in Response to South Florida's Sensitive Environments ............................... 72 Current Regulation of Geophysical Exploration.............................................................................. 73 Offshore Activity and Policy Developm ent...................................................................................... 73 Jurisdictional Boundaries ........................................................................................................... 73 Offshore -State W aters ............................................................................................................ 73 Offshore -Federal W aters......................................................................................................... 75 Activity....................................................................................................................................... 75 Policy ........................................................................................................................................ 75 Sum m ary................................................................................................................................................ 80 References............................................................................................................................................. 81 ILLUSTRATIONS Figure Page 1. South Florida oil field location map showing boundaries of the Big Cypress Swamp drainage area, the Big Cypress Swamp Area of Critical State Concern, and the Big Cypress Swam p National Preserve......................................................................................... 68 2. Northwest Florida oil field location m ap......................................................................................... 69 3. Florida portion of the 1987-1992 federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing program ......................................................................................................................... 74 4. O il exploration wells, Florida state waters ..................................................................................... 76 5. O il exploration wells, federal waters, offshore Florida................................................................... 78 65

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ABSTRACT Florida's oil and gas policies have evolved in response to its increased awareness of the economic and aesthetic value of its other natural resources. The history of state oil and gas regulations and policy in Florida can be divided into three phases. The first phase encouraged exploration with no stated concern for other natural resources. This phase culminated in the legislative offer of an award for petroleum discovery. The second phase began in 1945 with the passage of the conservation law and spanned the mid-1940's to -60's. This period was characterized by economic concern for tourist trade and commercial fisheries. Finally, environmental concerns became an issue in the early 1970's. The effects of these concerns are especially apparent in the development of recent offshore policies and regulations. The following text describes the history of oil and gas development and regulation in Florida as it relates to concerns for the economic and aesthetic value of Florida's other (non-petroleum) natural resources. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Walt Schmidt, Tom Scott, Steve Spencer, David Curry, Ed Lane, and Frank Rupert, all staff members of the Florida Geological Survey, reviewed this report and suggested improvements. Debbie Tucker (Office of the Governor, Environmental Policy, Community and Economic Development Unit, Tallahassee, Florida) reviewed the section on offshore activity and policy development and suggested clarifications. Jim Jones and Ted Kiper drafted and photographed the figures. 66

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Information Circular 107 PETROLEUM EXPLORATION AND DEVELOPMENT POLICIES IN FLORIDA: RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONCERN FOR SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS By Jacqueline M. Lloyd, P.G. 74 and Joan M. Ragland, P.G. 298 INTRODUCTION was on encouraging exploration. The only petroleum legislation passed prior to this Florida currently produces oil from two areas discovery was the reward bill, which was passed (Figures 1 and 2). One is in south Florida, the in 1941. Attempts to pass petroleum other is in the western panhandle area. The conservation legislation began after the state's south Florida area includes 14 oil fields; the first deep oil test was drilled in 1939. These western panhandle area includes seven, attempts were not successful until 1945. The South Florida production began with Florida's attempt to pass this legislation and the history first oil discovery at Sunniland field in September, leading up to the passage of the conservation 1943 (Gunter, 1949) (Figure 1). The south law in 1945 are described in detail by Fields Florida fields are oriented along a northwest(1959). The following discussion of this history is southeast trend through Lee, Hendry, Collier, summarized from his report. and Dade counties (Figure 1). The trend is the The first test for oil in Florida was in 1900 at Sunniland trend and is approximately 12-miles Pensacola in Escambia County (Gunter, 1949). wide by 145-miles long and happens to lie within This well was drilled to only 1320 feet. An some of south Florida's most sensitive wetland additional 79 exploratory wells were drilled environments, between 1900 and 1939; however, many of Production in the western panhandle began these were very shallow and may have been with the discovery of Jay field in June, 1970 more "promotional" than serious oil tests (Gunter, (Babcock, 1972). Although Jay field straddles the 1949). In 1939, the first significant deep oil test Escambia River, most of the field is within less was completed near Pinecrest, in Monroe sensitive upland environments (Figure 2). Even County, at a depth of 10,006 feet (Gunter, 1949). though ecological and environmental concerns Information yielded by this deep test drew the affected development at Jay field (Oil and Gas attention of major oil companies to Florida and Journal, 1972), most of Florida's environmental marked the beginning of more "serious" oil regulations have evolved in response to exploration in Florida. development in south Florida. Early Legislation PHASE I: ENCOURAGING EXPLORATION AND PETROLEUM LEGISLATION The interest shown by these major oil Early Exploration companies prompted the first attempt to pass conservation legislation in Florida in 1939. The bill was supported by the petroleum industry and The years 1900 to 1939 were characterized by proposed to make "waste" in production, storage, sporadic, shallow wildcat exploration in Florida. and transportation of oil or gas unlawful. The bill Florida's "first phase" (1900 to 1945) policies briefly: concerning petroleum exploration somewhat 1. Prohibited waste of oil and gas. parallels this same period. Until Florida's first 2. Defined waste. commercial oil field discovery in 1943, emphasis 3. Set up the State Board of Conservation. 67

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Florida Geological Survey SOUTH FLORIDA OIL FIELD LOCATION MAP A249 R26 _R2E_ R3E _ R32E __%_3E ___ LEHIH ARKI I _I _ K kOWNSEhID ANAL MIDEIlA HENDRY CO. SUNOCO-FELDA HENDR)' CO IEE CO. PALM I .. BEACH EVWEST LOA CO COaKSC1E0W Knn C I ~ -----------4----4 AN ND I FOS 130868 MlD O ...EEINVISED AUGUST 19 ..... ...... l FORIOA ORTY MILE BEND EXPLANATION CRITICAL CONCE RN CAIQ BIG CYPRESS I0 ----. INACTIVE OIL FIELD IIB CYPRESS o 10 MI SWAMP BOUNDARY Figure 1. South Florida oil field location map showing boundaries of Big Cypress Swamp drainage area, Big Cypress Swamp Area of Critical State Concern, and Big Cypress Swamp National Preserve. 68

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Information Circular 107 R33W R32W R3IW RQW R29W R28W-R27W R26W --I -,.^,--r-----McLELLAN IELD BLUFF SPRINGS FIED AY FIE4D SWEETWATER i M I --DCR E CGREEK FIELD MAI D 1ED LACKJACK SCREEK FIELD-\------.---------------.------------------4--EXPLANATION I P ACTIVE OIL FIELD Q INACTIVE OIL FIELD 4%t \ ..4 5 0 5 KM 5 0 MILES MILTON CANTONMENT IV SCALE FLORIDA LOCATION SWE1 3T • NA4NENACOLA ( 1FGS010491 Figure 2. Northwest Florida oil field location map. 69

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Florida Geological Survey 4. Required notice of intention to drill, deepen avoid the alteration by the opposition that had or plug a well. occurred in 1941. The bill had stronger backing 5. Required that log and plugging records be but failed to be voted on during this session. The filed with the State Board of Conservation. session closed with the bill on the calendar. A 6. Authorized the State Board of Conserseparate bill, which sought to protect ground vation to promulgate and enforce rules and water by regulating drilling practices, was also regulations and prescribe necessary forms. introduced in 1943. This bill passed the Senate, 7. Prescribed penalties for violations, but died in the House, primarily due to a lack of Opponents to the legislation argued that such Interest by its sponsors. a law would doter rather than encourage The 1943 legislature adjourned in June; just exploration. A quote from one of the opposition three months before the first oil discovery. If the leaders states: " ... as long as the state has no discovery had been made before the end of the production ... there is about as much necessity session, the conservation law may have passed. for legislation to regulate or control production as By the end of 1943, more than 15 major oil there would be to require paupers to rent lock companies and numerous independents were boxes in banking institutions." This first effort to buying leases in the state. Major newspapers pass legislation failed, began publishing oil news and discussing Florida's leqislature only met every two years conservation issues. so the next attempt to pass a conservation bill The September 1943 discovery, named the was not made until 1941. The proponents had Sunniland field, was made by Humble Oil and enlisted petroleum industry lawyers to prepare a Refining Company (HORC) in Collier County, much more detailed bill than the previous one. Florida (Figure 1). In 1944, after proven The opposition revised the bill to the extent that it commercial production, HORC was awarded the dealt more with ground-water pollution concerns $50,000 for finding the first oil production in than with conservation of oil and gas. The Florida. HORC donated the award to the original proponents, therefore, fought the University of Florida and Florida State College for passage of the bill in the House of Women (now Florida State University) and added Representatives after it passed the Senate. It $10,000 as a gift (Elliot, 1945). died on the House calendar at the end of the session. Efforts to pass a conservation law were again delayed by two years. PHASE II: ECONOMIC CONCERNS AND 1941 was also the year that the discovery PETROLEUM LEGISLATION award bill (Chapter 20667-No. 459, Laws of Florida, 1941) was passed to encourage The second phase of Florida's petroleum exploration for oil and gas. The bill offered an legislative history began in 1945 with the award to the explorer and operator of the first passage of the conservation law and spanned commercial oil or gas discovery. The award the mid-1940's to -60's. The public began to included $50,000 and a five-year oil and gas show concern for the value of Florida's other lease covering four tracts of land up to 10,000 natural resources. This concern was prompted acres each "free of any bonus, rental or lease primarily by potential economic impact on tourist charges except the reservation of one-eighth trade and commercial fisheries. royalty usually retained in such leases." This act In 1945, due to the Sunniland discovery and became law without the Governor's approval and the resulting increase in exploration, Governor was filed in the Office of Secretary on June 4, Millard F. Caldwell appointed an Oil Advisory 1941. Committee to study the petroleum laws and In 1943, the conservation bill was introduced practices of other states. The State Bar again. A briefer, simpler version was proposed to Association also appointed an oil and gas 70

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Information Circular 107 committee to study legislation of other states. c. establish drilling units, and The two committees worked together, with d. regulate production procedures as necadvice from the Interstate Oil Compact essary to prevent waste. Commission, to prepare what was to become the 3. Set penalties for violations. first conservation law. The 1945 legislature saw 4. Restricted drilling on or near improved the introduction of this conservation law and beaches or municipalities. several other related oil bills. The bills included: A taxation law was not passed until the next 1. The conservation law. legislative session. The oil and gas taxation act 2. A bill to ratify the Interstate Oil Compact (Chapter 22784-No. 270, Laws of Florida, 1947) and to make Florida a member of the Interbecame law without the Governor's approval and state Oil Compact Commission. was filed in the Secretary of State's office June 3, 3. A bill for taxation of oil and gas produced 1947. in Florida. 4. A state lease law. Unexpected opposition arose to all of the oil bills; this time from the cities along the west coast of Florida. They were not opposed to the The first rules regulating oil and gas subject matter of the oil legislation, but wanted exploration and production were adopted in 1946 provisions to be inserted in all the proposed bills (Section 115-B-2.05, Florida Administrative Code that would ensure protection of the Florida west (F.A.C.)). There was no mention in the rules of coast beaches from pollution and "unsightly environmental concerns. As discussed operations." Their concerns were not previously, the statutory protection for improved environmental but rather economic. They beaches was enacted in response to an contended that oil operations might "destroy the economic issue. Primarily, the rules were written beauty of the west coast and do irreparable to "... prevent waste of oil or gas ..." damage to the tourist trade." Rule revisions in 1949 (Gunter, 1950), 1962 Newspapers of these cities "clamored" for and 1963 (Babcock, 1964) were procedural in beach protection. Amendments were adopted nature and did not include environmental which addressed this issue and were made a concerns. The 1949 and 1962 revisions added part of Florida's conservation bill. After six years provisions for the temporary abandonment of of effort, a law providing for the conservation of wells and defined an abandoned well. The 1963 oil and gas in Florida was finally passed and revision changed the time for supplying the Oil signed by the Governor on June 5, 1945 and Gas Section of the Division of Geology with (Chapter 22819-No. 305, Laws of Florida, 1945). electrical logs and other surveys made in the The bill to ratify the Interstate Oil Compact and drilling of a well from six months to ninety days. It make Florida a member of the Interstate Oil also provided that the State Board of Compact Commission (Chapter 22823-No. 270, Conservation would keep information confidential Laws of Florida, 1945) and the state lease law for a period not exceeding one year from the (Chapter 22824-No. 310, Law of Florida, 1945) date the information is filed, unless exceptional were also passed by the 1945 legislature. hardship was proven. The conservation law: 1. Prohibited the waste of oil or gas. 2. Set up the State Board of Conservation and Early Offshore Geophysical Permitting gave them the authority to: a. administer and enforce the Conservation In 1963, the first five offshore geophysical Act, permits were granted by the State Board of b. adopt necessary rules and regulations, Conservation (Babcock, 1964). In 1965, a 71

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Florida Geological Survey statement of policy outlining rules and Florida following the opening of the Sunniland regulations to be observed in performing offshore field. During the years between Sunniland field geological and/or geophysical work was discovery (1943) and the first rule revision to prepared by the State Board of Conservation include extensive environmental concerns (Babcock, 1966). These covered "submerged (1972), only 92 exploratory wells were drilled in lands, other than inland waters of Florida and south Florida. The Sunniland discovery was not applicable to federal lands seaward of Florida's followed by the usually rapid successes seen boundary." The rules were supposedly "pursuant when new production areas are opened. Forty to authorization of the Department of the Interior Mile Bend field was discovered in 1954, but of the United States dated April 3, 1965, and showed disappointing production from only two published in the federal register (Federal wells and was abandoned in 1955 (Gunter, 1955 Register Document 56-2450, Volume 21, No. and 1956). The second really successful oil field 64)." was not discovered until 1964, 21 years after the Approximately 100 offshore geophysical Sunniland discovery. This was the Sunoco Felda permits were issued. In the early 1970's, it was field (Babcock, 1966). Discoveries of West Felda determined that there was no statutory authority field in 1966 (Babcock, 1968), Lake Trafford field to issue these permits and geophysical in 1969 (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985), and Bear permitting was discontinued (David Curry, Florida Island in 1972 (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985) Geological Survey Oil and Gas Section followed. Administrator, personal communication, 1989). These rules expressed concern for natural resources other than oil and gas, primarily for Policy Development In Response to South commercial fisheries; thus, the concern was Florida's Sensitive Environments again prompted by economics. They included; however, a brief reference which indicates an The rule revision of 1972 included the first aesthetic or environmental concern (Babcock, statutory evidence of serious environmental 1966): concerns and the first mention of concern for "All operators conducting seismic operations onshore native and sensitive environmental shall use reasonable precaution in resources. These rules incorporated the accordance with approved and accepted concerns that developed through the years with methods to prevent destruction of, or injury the recognition of the importance of wetland to, fish, oyster, shrimp and other aquatic life, environments, especially as it related to oil wildlife, or other natural resources." exploration and development in south Florida. South Florida oil production is partially within the Big Cypress Swamp and is adjacent to the PHASE V ll: PETROLEUM POLICY Everglades (Figure 1). The wetlands of these EVEOPMENTA SONSE areas provide important feeding, nesting, and wintering grounds for migrating and several endangered and threatened species. are South Florida Development History dependent upon the wetland ecosystem for subsistence (Big Cypress Area Management The minimal legislative activity and apparent Task Force, 1984). lack of environmental concern between the time The Big Cypress Swamp Advisory Committee of the passage of the conservation law and the was created by the Governor and Cabinet in early 1970's may have been partly due to the 1971 in response to pressures exerted on the Big slow development and limited success in south Cypress ecosystem by many external factors, not 72

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Information Circular 107 solely by oil and gas exploration. This Committee Florida." provides a forum for industry, various regulatory There were major revisions to the geophysical agencies, and environmental groups to allow oil rules in 1985 and 1986 that resulted from safety exploration and development while ensuring the violations by some geophysical companies and protection of sensitive environmental and wildlife from additional concerns about wildlife habitat resources (Big Cypress Area Management Task and sensitive environments. Force, 1984). In 1974, Congress set aside about 40 percent of the Big Cypress Swamp (570,000 acres) as Offshore Activity and Policy Development the Big Cypress National Preserve (Figure 1). In JURISDICTIONAL BOUNDARIES the legislation creating the Preserve, the National Park Service acquired the surface land rights, but, in most cases, not the mineral rights. This State ownership of the continental shelf off legislation (Public Law 93-440) allows oil and gas Florida extends three miles into the Atlantic exploration as long as it is not detrimental to the Ocean and about 10.5 miles (three marine purpose of the preserve, which is to: "... ensure leagues) into the Gulf of Mexico. The federal the preservation, conservation and protection of government controls resources beyond these the natural, scenic, hydrologic, floral, faunal and state boundaries out to 200 miles. The Outer recreational values of the Big Cypress Continental Shelf (OCS) is a jurisdictional term watershed, and to provide the enhancement and that describes the offshore area that is under the public enjoyment thereof." control of the federal government. The federal The rule revisions of 1981 through 1986 government divides the OCS into planning areas. incorporated additional environmental concerns. Three federal OCS planning areas surround These rules and the interagency cooperation of Florida: the Eastern Planning Area, the Straits of the Big Cypress Swamp Advisory Committee Florida Planning Area, and the South Atlantic allow oil production and exploration to take place Planning area (Figure 3) (Johnson and Tucker, while minimizing damage to the environment. 1987). Current Regulation of OFFSHORE -STATE WATERS Geophysical Exploration There has been no leasing of tracts within An amendment in 1980 gave the Florida Florida state waters since the early 1980's. At Geological Survey the statutory authority to this time, the only known active leases within regulate geophysical activity, both onshore and Florida state waters are held by Coastal offshore in state waters (Chapter 377, Part 1, Petroleum Company. Three leases were Florida Statutes). Rules were adopted in 1984 obtained by Coastal Petroleum in the late 1940's. (Chapter 16C-26.07, F.A.C.) to implement this Two of these leases cover state land in the Gulf authority and legitimate permitting began in July of Mexico, from the coastline to about 10 miles 1984. The rules state: offshore, between Apalachicola and Naples, "It is the intent of the department to permit Florida and the submerged land of rivers and geophysical operations ...in Florida lakes that feed this area. A third lease covers provided that this activity is conducted in a Lake Okeechobee. manner which minimizes or prevents the Between 1947 and 1983, a total of 19 wells destruction of or injury to the environment were drilled in Florida state waters (Figure 4). and the natural resources of the State of 73

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Florida Geological Survey I I I I I 880 86° 840 82 80 30 SOUTH ATLANTIC • :'.PLANNING AREA -28 EASTERN GULF OF MEXICO PLANNINGPLANNING AREAAREA 26 ..... .. * , , 1 ECIAL CCE APLANNING AREAREA EXISTING LEASESNATION I IJP[CI AKA IICvIfUL• ROOVCD rROM LgASING Figure 3. Florida portion of the 1987-1992 federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing program after the year 2SN M 100 10. LL ACRES) November 1988 lease sale. President Bush later canceled Sale 116+ Part II in this area until 74

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Information Circular 107 Detailed information on these wells is tabulated Gas Journal (1989) discusses the Chevron-6406 in Part I, Appendix 6, of this publication. One of well and quotes Chevron USA Inc. as stating that these wells, .drilled in 1959 in the Marquesas "the well was not tested due to safety and cost Keys area (Florida permit 275, Figure 4), had a considerations. However, analysis of cores and significant oil show in the Lake Trafford (?) wireline logs indicates the presence of gas in the Formation (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985; also Part Norphlet sandstone." These two discoveries I, Appendix 6 of this publication), extend the offshore Norphlet gas trend seaward Recognition of environmental sensitivity, as and eastward from the Mobile map area of the well as dependence of many commercial Central Gulf of Mexico Planning Area, offshore enterprises on the vitality of these areas, has led Alabama, into the Eastern Gulf of Mexico state government to place all state waters under Planning Area, offshore Florida. a no-lease protection policy. This policy was In addition to the potential indicated by these enacted by the legislature in two steps: effective Destin Dome discoveries, an offshore south July 1, 1989, drilling was prohibited in Florida Florida well (Florida permit 284, Figure 5), drilled state waters south of 260 north latitude off the in the Marquesas Keys area in 1960, had west coast and south of 270 north latitude off the potential for low volume oil production from the east coast; effective July 31, 1990, drilling was Lake Trafford and Sunniland Formations prohibited in the remainder of Florida's territorial (Applegate and Lloyd, 1985). seas, i.e., north of 260 north latitude off Florida's west coast to the western boundary of the state bordering Alabama and north of 270 north Policy latitude off Florida's east coast to the northern boundary of the state bordering Georgia (Section Former Florida Governor Bob Martinez 377.242, Florida Statutes). negotiated with the federal government concerning the current five-year (1987-1992) federal OCS Oil and Gas Leasing program OFFSHORE -FEDERAL WATERS (Figure 3). His negotiations reflected his belief Activity that "oil and gas activities must not be allowed at the expense of our unique and sensitive A total of 53 wells have been drilled in federal resources" (Governor Martinez, March 3,1987 waters offshore Florida; 43 wells in the Eastern letter to Secretary of the Interior, Donald Hodel). waters offshore Florida; 43 wells in the Eastern Planning Area, 3 in the Straits of Florida Planning whe the Sve-year oil and gas leasing plan Aa nr te M a , ad 7 was first proposed by the Secretary of the Area near the Marquesas Keys, and 7 in the Ir , Hd, Mr South Atlantic Planning Area off northern Florida Interior, Donald Hodel, Governor Martinez and southern Georgia (through February, 1989) expressed his concerns to both Secretary Hodel and to President Reagan. He requested that (Figure 5). This relatively small number of .q offshore wells has not resulted in any sensitive areas off Apalachicola Bay in northwest development in Florida's offshore to date. Florida, Florida Bay and the Florida Keys be development in Florida's offshore to date. ro f th plan. I Ags19, the removed from the plan. In August 1987, the However, two Destin Dome area wells (Amocoremoved. .. .p I A However, two Destin Dome area wells (AmocoGovernor filed a petition for judicial review in 8338 and Chevron-6406, Figure 5) off Florida are federal court of the Department of the Interior's Sdiscoverie and a desfederal court of the Department of the Interior's Norphlet discoveries and are described as f producible fields by Gould (1989). five-year leasing plan because these areas were producible fields by Gould (1989). y g a The Amoco-8338 well, completed in Destin not removed (Press Release, Office of the S. Governor, August 14, 1987). Dome block 111 in 1987, was the first Governor, August 14,1987). commercial discovery in the Eastern Gulf of In January 1988, Secretary Hodel Mexico Planning Area (Gould, 1989). The Oil and accompanied Governor Martinez on a snorkeling 75

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Florida Geological Survey P31 17,9t1 7,479 1983 1956 P-881 10526 % P y43 7,004 1961 7.009 14,338 1959 1947 1968 P-383 4,710 1967 9 N -P-38a 1967 P-304 • 10563 1963 LEGEND S APPROXIMATE WELL LOCATION P -80 FLORIDA PERMIT NUMBER TOTAL DEPTH OF WELL, P-375 ---.0 FEET BELOW MSL oV-91o 1967 __ 19.59 WELL COMPLETION DATE Pe97 1 1606009 1961 P2e69 1 13,961 5"3 1960 SCALE 0 50 100 150 MILES 0 80 160 240 KILOMETERS P-eM 1. P-275 1599 . 1t422 1955 , FOS020491 P-M P 1 1909 1961 1M,793 1947 P-22 1962 15,432 1947 Figure 4. Oil exploration wells, Florida state waters. 76

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Information Circular 107 trip to the Florida Keys. The Governor was able task forces to assess the environmental impact to show Secretary Hodel "exactly what it is that of proposed drilling in previously leased areas. we in Florida are fighting to protect." The One task force assessed the risk posed by oil following March, the Secretary of the Interior spills and the directions spilled oil would be agreed to remove 11 million acres of sensitive carried by winds and currents. The second task habitat around Florida Bay and the Keys from force assessed the impact of drilling on marine further consideration for leasing under the fiveand coastal resources (Press Release, Office of year plan (Figure 3). The Secretary further the Governor, June 16, 1988). President George agreed to require a one-year study before any Bush established an additional federal task force drilling could take place in an area of "special to review drilling and leasing in this area. As a concern" off northwest Florida (Figure 3). The result of this task force, President Bush study would verify that the exploration would be canceled, until after the year 2000, Gulf of for gas and not oil. The Department of the Mexico Sale 116, Part II, which covered this Interior would also establish an emergency area. He also ordered the Minerals Management response team to deal with possible accidents. Service to begin procedures to cancel the leases As a result of this agreement, the petition for that oil companies hold in this sale area and judicial review of the five-year plan was dropped begin discussions with Florida on a joint federal(Press Release, Office of the Governor, March state repurchase of the leases costing $10024, 1988). $200 million (Oil and Gas Journal, 1990). In May, 1988, the Governor requested that the The House Appropriations Committee voted in federal government delay exploratory drilling for June 1990 to delay lease sale 137 (scheduled for oil and gas off southwest Florida. The request November 1991), which includes the area from specifically referred to leases which were sold off Naples to Pensacola. Also in June 1990, southwest Florida during 1984 and 1985. The President Bush proposed a 12-year moratorium leases are in an area south of Naples to just on drilling off the southwest coast near the north of the Dry Tortugas, Marquesas Islands, Florida Keys, but this was not supported by the and the Florida Keys (south of 260 north latitude, same House panel that delayed lease sale 137. Figure 3). Congress had required a three-year The panel said they did not want to lock up the environmental study before exploratory drilling area for that long a time. would be permitted in this area. A panel of Florida's current Governor Lawton Chiles has scientists was assembled by Governor Martinez begun discussion with President George Bush to review the federal environmental study. The concerning the draft proposed 5-year OCS oil panel concluded that the federal study was not and gas leasing program for mid-1992 through extensive enough to ensure protection of mid-1997. The 5-year program includes oil and sensitive environmental resources. Specifically, gas lease sales off Florida's panhandle in 1994 there was not enough information to determine and 1997. In a letter to the president dated the potential effects of an oil spill. Subsequently, February 18, 1991, the governor stated that: the Governor supported and Congress imposed "The west Florida coast contains many a one-year drilling moratorium on the area south sensitive marine and coastal resources of 260 north latitude (Press Releases, Office of which are vital to our State's well-being. The the Governor, May 26, 1988, and June 16, economy of Florida is directly tied to these 1988). resources through such industries as In June 1988, Hodel agreed to remove 14 tourism and recreational and commercial million acres in the same area (south of 260 north fishing. We cannot afford to place these latitude) from the November 1988 lease sale marine and coastal resources at (Figure 3). Martinez and Hodel appointed two unnecessary risk, simply because this 77

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Florida Geological Survey S PENSACOLA 6i S -NSOUTH ATLANTIC SCAE PLANNING AREA o e S eFN DOtE APA----LACHICOLA GAINESVILLE 38 Of itOD CANYON FLORIDA MIDODL GROUND TARPON SPRINGS * 10 tLOYD RIDGE ._ .. THI E.LB._ OW_ *1 SAINT PETERSBURG EASTERN GULF OF MEXICO , 211 21 PLANNING AREA -VERNON BASIN CHARLOTTE HARBOR EXPLANATIONHO LL HOOK " PULLEY RIDGE 1tMY ,5 -XP-ANATION ------2 * OIL. XPLORATION WILL LOCAItONS ), MAP LOCATION CODEOt RANKIN * , . HISTORic LEASIS \ -DISTICT ARIAS 11111115 0"RKIG WASI TORTUGAS FS08040491 0 29 sO MUl \ 4o io Kmomuns STRAITS OF FLORIDA SCALE PLANNING AREA Figure 5. Oil exploration wells, federal waters, offshore Florida. Well locations are plotted at the center of their three-square mile lease block. If two or more wells have been drilled in the same lease block, they are represented by the same location point and code on the map and In the map location code and well data table. 78

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Information Circular 107 MAP LOCATION CODES AND WELL DATA LEASE NO. MAP OR FLORIDA PLUGGED & TOTAL PLANNING LOCATION MAP BLOCK PERMIT WELL ABANDONED DEPTH AREA CODE AREA NUMBER NO. (P-) OPERATOR NO. (1) DATE (FT.) EASTERN 1 Destin Dome 162 2486 Exxon 1 1974 10,930 GULF OF 2 Destin Dome 118 2492 Exxon 1 1974 7,075 MEXICO 3 Florida Middle Ground 252 2516 Texaco 1 1975 15,663 PLANNING 4 Destin Dome 166 2490 Fina 1 1975 17,608 AREA (2) 5 St. Petersburg 7 2527 SheLl 1 1975 18,443 1 Destin Dome 162 2486 Exxon 2 1975 10,418 2 Destin Dome 118 2492 Exxon 2 1975 7,507 6 St. Petersburg 100 2523 Texaco 1 1975 17,388 7 Destin Dome 250 2472 Exxon 1 1975 6,634 8 Destin Dome 207 2480 Exxon 1 1975 4,800 1 Destin Dome 162 2486 Exxon 3 1975 17,938 9 Destin Dome 360 2468 Gulf 1 1975 20,988 10 The ELbow 566 3344 Mobil 1 1977 15,865 11 Destin Dome 617 2463 Chevron 1 1977 10,513 12 Destin Dome 31 2502 Amoco 1 1977 18,338 13 Destin Dome 529 3888 SheLl 1 1980 20,450. 14 Charlotte Harbor 144 3906 Gulf 1 1981 11,362 15 Charlotte Harbor 672 3917 Tenneco 1 1981 11,302 16 Charlotte Harbor 265 3912 Shell 1 1981 12,362 17 The Elbow 915 3341 Mobil 1 1981 18,128 18 Vernon Basin 654 3903 Moblt 1 1981 10,768 19 Charlotte Harbor 628 3915 Mobil 1 1981 1,270 20 Pensacola 973 3886 Mobil 1 1981 23,264 21 Charlotte Harbor 188 3909 Odeco 1 1981 11,360 22 Destin Dome 563 3890 Sohio 1 1982 21,068 23 Destin Dome 160 6417 Shell 1 TA 1985 7,764 24 Pensacola 948 6391 Sohio 1 1985 18,958 23 Destin Dome 160 6417 Shell 2 1985 16,953 25 Gainseville 707 6456 Sohio 1 1985 15,941 26 Deatin Dome 284 6428 Exxon 1 1985 17,500 27 Destin Dome 422 6438 Chevron 1 1985 22,222 28 DeSoto Canyon 512 6472 SheLl 1 1986 12,300 29 Charlotte Harbor 622 4950 Shell 1 1986 10,550 30 Florida Middle Ground 455 8363 Tenneco 1 1986 12,401 24 Pensacola 948 6391 Tenneco 2 ST 1987 19,200 31 Destin Dome 111 8338 Amoco 1 1987 19,240 32 Destin Dome 56 6406 Chevron I TA 1988 22,572 24 Pensacola 948 6391 Tenneco 2 TA 1988 19,200 33 Pensacola 996 6396 Texaco 1 1988 17,910 34 Destin Dome 1 6397 Gulfstar 1 TA 1989 2,000 35 Destin Dome 2 6398 Gulfstar 2 TA 1989 1,800 36 Pensacola 881 6390 Gulfstar I TA 1989 2,700 37 Destin Dome 167 6420 Chevron I Drilling 17,259 SOUTH I NH 17-5 208 3686 Tenneco 1 1979 7,754 ATLANTIC 2 NH 17-5 427 3695 Tenneco 1 1979 7,472 PLANNING 3 NH 17-2 913 3664 Getty 1 1979 7,000 AREA (3) 4 NH 17-2 1005 3671 Transco 1 1979 11,635 5 NH 17-5 472 3699 Exxon 1 1979 7,578 6 NH 17-5 564 3705 Exxon 1 1980 12,863 7 NH 17-5 387 Ocean GE-1 1977 13,254 Production STRAITS OF 1 NG 17-10 44 P-296 Gulf 1 1961 4,686 FLORIDA 2 NG 17-10 46 P-290 Gulf 1 1961 7,871 PLANNING 3 NG 17-10 28 P-284 Gulf 1 1960 15,294 AREA (3) 1. TA = Temporarily Abandoned; ST = Sidetrack Well. 2. Data from Gould, 1989. 3. Data from Karpas and Gould, 1990. 79

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Florida Geological Survey Nation continues its strong dependence on the only living coral reef in the conterminous fossil fuels and fails to implement a United States. This juxtaposition of potential comprehensive energy policy. Therefore, it petroleum resources and existing natural is in the national, as well as the State's best resources has yielded strong state environmental interest to ban all oil and gas activities within policies. Florida's concerns influenced the federal 100 miles of Florida's coast." 1987-1992 OCS oil and gas leasing program. The governor feels that a comprehensive, Florida's Governor Chiles has begun discussion national energy policy is essential. Only within with the President which may influence the next such a policy can the risks associated with 5-year OCS oil and gas leasing program as well. coastal oil and gas development be wisely assessed. He concluded his letter to the president with: "This Nation, with your leadership, should develop a strong national energy program which includes the development of alternative energy sources, fuel efficiency, conservation and the rapid decrease in the dependency on fossil fuels. Without such a program, interest in oil and gas drilling offshore Florida and the associated risks to the resources of our State will remain; and I will continue to oppose short-sighted approaches to such monumental and longterm problems." SUMMARY Florida petroleum regulations have evolved from simple to the complex, from encouragement for exploration to concern for economic and then aesthetic value of Florida's other natural resources. There were no laws regulating oil and gas activities before 1945. Early legislation responded to the need for petroleum resource conservation and to the need to protect the economic value of other resources. Later legislation responded to environmental concerns, especially due to development within the wetland environments of south Florida. Petroleum exploration eventually extended into areas offshore from the panhandle and southwest Florida. Other natural and economic resources in these areas include commercial and recreational fisheries, coastal and barrier island environments, Florida Bay, the Florida Keys, and 80

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Information Circular 107 REFERENCES Applegate, A.V., and Lloyd, J. M., 1985, Summary of Florida petroleum production and exploration, onshore and offshore, through 1984, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 101, 69 p. Babcock, C., 1964, Summary of Florida petroleum production and exploration in 1962, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 45, 63 p. , 1966, Florida petroleum exploration, production, and prospects, 1964, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 49, 117 p. , 1968, Oil and gas activities in Florida, 1966, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 55, 35 p. ____ 1972, Oil and gas activities in Florida, 1970, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 80, 82 p. Big Cypress Area Management Task Force, 1984, Sensitive natural resources of the Big Cypress Area of Critical State Concern, a report to the governor and members of the cabinet, February 21, 1984, 69 p. Elliot, F. C., 1945, Minutes of the Trustees of the Internal Improvement Fund, State of Florida, July 11, 1944, vol. 24, p. 732-733. Fields, D. W., 1959, A legal history of conservation of oil and gas in Florida, unpublished report, Florida Geological Survey Petroleum PAM file, 34 p. Gould, G. J., 1989, Gulf of Mexico update: May 1988 -July 1989, Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas activities, U.S. Department of the Interior Minerals Management Service: OCS Information Report, MMS 89-0079, 51 p. Gunter, H., 1949, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, Information Circular no. 1, 106 p. _, 1950, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1949 Supplement to Information Circular no. 1, 38 p. , 1955, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1954 Supplement to Information Circular no. 1, 35 p. , 1956, Exploration for oil and gas in Florida, Florida Geological Survey, 1955 Supplement to Information Circular no. 1, 31 p. Johnson, P. G., and Tucker, D. L., 1987, The federal Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas leasing program; a Florida perspective: February, 1987: Office of the Governor, Office of Planning and Budgeting, Intergovernmental Coordination Unit, 16 p. 81

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Florida Geological Survey Karpas, R. M., and Gould, G. J., 1990, Atlantic update: July 1986-June 1990, Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas activities, U.S. Department of the Interior Minerals Management Service: OCS Information Report, MMS 90-0060, 57 p. Oil and Gas Journal, 1972, Jay field development tied to ecology, Oil and Gas Journal, February 14, 1972, p. 58-59. , 1989, Norphlet gas find indicated off Pensacola, Oil and Gas Journal, February 6, 1989, p. 18. , 1990, Bush orders cancellation of eight controversial offshore lease sales, Oil and Gas Journal, July 2, 1990, p. 26-27. 82

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Information Circular 107 PART III PETROLOGY AND PROVENANCE OF THE NORPHLET FORMATION PANHANDLE, FLORIDA By Greg W. Scott 83

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Florida Geological Survey 84

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CONTENTS Page Abstract.................................................................................................................................................. 87 Acknowledgm ents.................................................................................................................................. 87 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 89 Norphlet Form ation of Panhandle Florida .......................................................................................... 89 Denkm an M em ber ............................................................................................................................. 97 Fram ework G rains......................................................................................................................... 97 M atrix and Cem ents...................................................................................................................... 103 Red Bed Lithofacies .......................................................................................................................... 103 Fram ework Grains......................................................................................................................... 107 Cem ents...........................................................:............................................................................ 109 Conglom eratic Lithofacies ........................................................................................................... 109 Provenance of Norphlet Sedim ents .................................................................................................... 113 Conclusions ........................................................................................................................................... 118 References ............................................................................................................................................. 119 ILLUSTRATIONS Figure Page 1. Area of study and location of core, chip,and log data ................................................................ 90 2. Stratigraphic column, of Mesozoic and older units of the North Central Gulf Coast .................. 95 3. Tectonic m ap of South Central G ulf Coast................................................................................. 96 4. Isopach m ap, Norphlet Form ation, panhandle Florida ............................................................... 98 5. Monocrystalline quartz grain, exhibiting subrounded shape and hematite coating.................... 100 6. Potassium feldspar overgrowth on m icrocline............................................................................ 101 7. Dissolution of feldspars .............................................................................................................. 102 8. Low-rank m etam orphic rock fragm ent........................................................................................ 104 9. Volcanic rock fragm ent ............................................................................................................ 105 10. High-rank m etam orphic rock fragm ent ....................................................................................... 106 11. Induction log and spontaneous potential curve illustrating serrate pattern associated with red beds............................................................................................................ 108 85

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Florida Geological Survey 12. Volcanic rock fragment............................................................................................................ 110 13. Scanning electron micrograph of secondary quartz overgrowths and clay coatings.................. 111 14. Scanning electron micrograph of chloritic clay coatings............................................................. 112 15. Norphlet Formation-Werner Anhydrite ....................................................................................... 114 16. North-south stratigraphic cross section, Panhandle, Florida...................................................... 116 17. West-east stratigraphic cross section, Panhandle, Florida ........................................................ 117 TABLES Table Page 1. Well names, locations, and permit numbers for all wells used in this study ............................... 91 86

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ABSTRACT The Norphlet Formation of the Florida Panhandle is primarily a sandstone that underlies the Smackover Formation and overlies the Louann and Werner Formations. Three lithofacies of Norphlet strata have been identified in the Florida Panhandle: an updip conglomerate, red beds, and an upper quartzose sandstone (Denkman Member). The Denkman Member consists of an upper gray and a lower brown to reddish-brown quartzose sandstone. Generally, these sandstones are fineto medium-grained and well sorted with rounded to subrounded grains. The upper Denkman is massively bedded to faintly horizontally or wavy laminated; the lower Denkman is either horizontally laminated or has low to high-angle crossstratification. The average composition of the member is 62 percent quartz, 26 percent feldspar, and 12 percent rock fragments. The red bed lithofacies has fineto coarse-grained, moderately sorted sandstones with subrounded to rounded grains. The most distinctive feature of the lithofacies is its closely spaced horizontal to slightly inclined (10 -50) laminae. The average composition of the facies is 35 percent quartz, 16 percent feldspar, and 49 percent rock fragments. The conglomeratic lithofacies is a multilayered section of gray conglomerates and red, coarse-grained sandstones. The conglomerate consists of poorly sorted, subangular to subrounded, cobbleto pebblesize plutonic and metamorphic rock fragments. Principal source areas for Norphlet sediments in the Florida Panhandle were the basement rock of the Conecuh Ridge (Talledega Slate Belt) to the north and the Pensacola Arch (Piedmont Belt) to the south and east. Additionally, contributions from the Eagle Mills, Werner, and Louann Formations probably were significant. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was originally completed in 1986 as part of the author's master's degree requirements at Northeast Louisiana University. Thanks to Jacqueline M. Lloyd and the Florida Geological Survey for encouragement and editing of the manuscript. Financial support for the project was provided by the Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists and Geraghty & Miller, Inc. I express my sincere gratitude to Leonard M. Young, Professor, Department of Geosciences, Northeast Louisiana University, for his professional guidance, constructive criticism, and encouragement in pursuing this project. Thanks to Frank H. Guinn for his editing expertise. Finally, thanks to Sally Easterwood and Geeta Modha, for drafting support and Alice Wingerter, Carol Ratcliff, Ileana Kiefer, and Shelly Hargrave of Geraghty & Miller for word processing and document preparation. 87

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Florida Geological Survey 88

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Information Circular 107 PETROLOGY AND PROVENANCE OF THE NORPHLET FORMATION, PANHANDLE, FLORIDA By Greg W. Scott INTRODUCTION sandstones (Tyrrell, 1973). Core material available for this study is concentrated within this Several authors have published data on the quartzose lithofacies because the member lies petrologic character of the Upper Jurassic just below the more productive Smackover Norphlet Formation in Mississippi and Alabama Formation and therefore is more frequently cored (Hartman, 1968; Badon, 1975; McBride, 1981; than other lithofacies. Mancini et al, 1984). This study is primarily The Pensacola Arch trends southwest through confined to areas of Norphlet deposition Okaloosa County and across southern Santa previously undocumented, namely Escambia, Rosa and Escambia Counties (Figure 3). Santa Rosa, and Okaloosa Counties, Florida Placement of the arch this far west is based upon (Figure 1, Table 1). Throughout panhandle the overall subsurface trend of structural features Florida, the Norphlet Formation is encountered at and stratigraphic sequences and geophysical depths usually greater than 13,000 feet below well logs interpreted for this project. It is against mean sea level. The formation underlies most of this arch that the relatively clean sandstones of the study area except eastern-most Okaloosa the Denkman Member thin and grade into County, where it wedges out. The Norphlet mediumto coarse-grained and gravelly unconformably overlies the Louann, Werner, or sandstones. Eagle Mills Formations (Oxley et al, 1967; In southern Santa Rosa County, the formation Mancini et al, 1984). Lying above the Norphlet is represented by a 14.6-foot section of Formation sandstones and making an abrupt conglomerates and coarse grained sandstones lithologic break are carbonates of the Smackover (Getty Oil Company, Florida permit 1097), Formation (Sigsby, 1976) (Figure 2). interpreted to lie on top of or adjacent to the Most of panhandle Florida is located within the Pensacola Arch. The conglomeratic sands Conecuh Embayment which, in turn, is situated contain granuleto cobble-sized igneous and within the Alabama Interior Salt Basin. The metamorphic clasts. Mancini et al, (1985) Conecuh Embayment, as defined by Sigsby identified chert, granite, rhyolite, quartzite, and (1976), lies between the pre-Jurassic Conecuh shale pebbles within this conglomerate Ridge to the north and the Pensacola Arch to the lithofacies in southern Alabama. southeast, both of which probably served as In western Okaloosa County (Champlin source areas for Norphlet sediments (Figure 3). Petroleum Company well, Florida permit 518), the Norphlet Formation is characterized by coarse, red, lithic sandstones (red beds), which NORPHLET FORMATION OF probably represent a transition from the PANHANDLE FLORIDA conglomerate deposits over the Pensacola Arch. The formation thins dramatically east of this well and wedges out completely within approximately The Norphlet Formation varies considerably in 16 miles. In southern Santa Rosa County, the lithologic character across pananndle Florida. In Norphlet Formation represented within the Belco central Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, the Petroleum Corporation well core (Florida permit upper Norphlet Denkman Member (informally 692) exhibits a red bed lithofacies at its base. subdivided into upper and lower units) is A discontinuous basal shale sequence has characterized by relatively clean, light-colored been identified within Norphlet cored sections in 89

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31 33 Eacambla County ALABAMA Covington County Escambla County 6.A FLORIDA Okaloosa County Walton m 9 * E9 *13 0 e 101 .. 16 22 S11 4 3 24 27 Santa Rosa County &G17 26 21 a0 w18 a23 Baldwin County CL / ". ^A .. a EXPLANATION 0 A Miles * *f'. .** 0.: E' Mie WELL LOCATION WITH 0 10 ..*p .g -LOG DATA Kilomet*r -. ...WELL LOCATION WITH ,E. ..-. COE CHIP SWE -L " W LOCATION WITH ..". G ul f of Me x ic o SOLID CORE Figure 1. Area of study and location of core, chip, and log data.

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Information Circular 107 Table 1. Well Names, Locations, and Permit Numbers for all Wells Used in this Study(1) Florida Core State Interval(2) Well/Name/Location Permit Data ft blkb Escambia County, Florida A. 1. Shell Oil Company 647 Core Chip, 17132 -17331 No. 1 Schneider Log Section 18, T4N, R32W 2. Stone Petroleum Corporation 1125 Log None No. 1 St. Regis Paper Co. 29-4 3. Stone Petroleum Corporation 1136 Log None St. Regis Paper Co. 29-3 Section 29, T3N, R33W 4. Chevron USA, Inc. 1027 Log None No. 1 Lafloresta 2-1 Section 2, T3N, R33W Santa Rosa County, Florida B. Smackco Ltd. 1096 Solid Core, 15220 -15257 No. 13-4 L.W. Roberts] Log Section 13, T5N, R29W 5. Miami Oil Products, Inc., 497 Log None Pennzoil United Inc., and Signal Oil & Gas Company No. 1 Ethel Shivers, et al Section 7, T4N, R29N C. 6. Exxon Corporation 1004 Solid Core, 15766 -15787 Martha Murphy, 10-6 Log Section 10, T5N, R29W 7. Southeastern Exploration, Ltd., 476 Log None Rudman Resources and Co., No. 1 St. Regis Paper Company Section 28, T5N, R29W D. 8. Exxon Corporation 1080 Solid Core, 16100 -16153.5 St. Regis Paper Company 13-S Log Section 13, T4N, R29W 91

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Florida Geological Survey Table 1. (Continued) Florida Core State Interval(2) Well/Name/Location Permit Data ft blkb 8. 9. Exxon Corporation 1110 Solid Core, 16098 -16125 St. Regis Paper Company 24-5 Log Section 24, T4N, R29W 10. Conoco, Inc. 1123 Log None No. 1 Charlie Windhorst 12-3 Section 12, T3N, R29W 11. C & K Petroleum and 657 Log None Florida Gas Exploration Co. No. I I.L. Ward 6-2 Section 6, T3N, R28W 12. Pranks Petroleum, Inc. 1045 Log None No. I Donald Boutwell Section 7, T4N, R28W 11. Samedan Oil Corporation 929 Log None No. I W.S. Rosasco Section 24, T4N, R28W r. 14. Jenkins Oil & Gas, Inc. 1128 Solid Core, 16596 -16619 No. I Haynes 8-1 Log Section 8, T3N, R28W 15. Jenkins Oil & Gas, Inc. 1148 Log None No. 1 Jenkins-Lee 8-2 Section 8, T3N, R28W 16. Spooner Petroleum Co. 1178 Log None No. I Champion International 5-4 Section 5, T3N, R28W G. 17 Mesa Petroleum Company 551 Solid Core, 16806 -16879 Rolin D. Davis Log T.R. Miller Mill 33-1 Section 33, T3N, R28W 18. Belco Petroleum Corporation 692 Log None No. 1 W.S. Mitchum Unit 23-4 Section 23, T2N, R28W H. 19 Getty Oil Company 1097 Solid Core, 17657 -17749 Florida State Lease 2338 Log East Bay Location 92

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Information Circular 107 Table 1. (Continued) Florida Core State Interval(2) Well/Name/Location Permit Data ft blkb 20. Tenneco Oil Company 1114 Log None 16-4 USA-FL State Lease 3128-F Section 16, T4N, R27W 21. Conoco, Inc. 610 Log None No. 1 Estes Timber Company Unit 11-2 Section 11, T2N R27W 22. Pennzoil Production Company 911 Log None No. 1 USA State Forest, No 5-2 Section 5, T3N, R26W 23. Phillips Petroleum Company 534 Log None No. 1 St. Regis Paper Company "B" Section 21, T2N, R26W Okaloosa County, Florida 24. Cabot Corporation 731 Log None No. 1-9 USA Section 9, T3N, R25W I. 25 Champlin Petroleum Company 518 Core Chip, 14549 No. 1 USA & State of Florida Log Section 28, T5N, R25W 26. Tenneco Oil Company 1105 Log None USA-FL State Lease 3229 Unit 31-3 Section 31, T3N, R25W 27. Sonat Exploration Company 590 Log None No. 1 James G. Moore Unit 3-11 Section 3, T3N, R24W 28. Coastal Production Company 519 Log None No. 1 Brady Belcher Section 9, T3N, R21W 93

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Florida Geological Survey Table 1. (Continued) Florida Core State Interval(2) Well/Name/Location Permit Data ft blkb Alabama State Escambia County, Alabama Permit 29. Hughes Eastern Petroleum, Ltd. 4299 Log None No. I A.T.I.C. 33-2 Section 33, T2N, R7E JO. Inexco Oil Company 3895 Log None No. I Cogel 1-8 Section 1, TIN, R8E 31. Inexco Oil Company 4060 Log None No. I Tocumen et al Unit 1-3 Section 1, TIN, R8B 32. Pruet & Hughes Company 1902 Log None St. Regis Paper Co. Unit 6-3 No. I Section 6, TIN, R9E 33. Inexco Oil Company 4347 Log None No. I Steward Estates 6-5 Section 6, TIN, R9E Notes: (1) -Refer to Figure 1. (2) -To convert feet to meters: ft x 0.3048 * meters A-I -Refers to wells whether either solid core or core chips were analyzed. 1-33 -Refers to wells of which geophysical well logs were analyzed. None -No core or chip material was analyzed. ft blkb -Feet below kelly bushing. Log -Geophysical well log. Solid Core -Solid core material. Core Chip -Solid core chip material. 94

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Information Circular 107 GROUP GENERALIZED ERA SYSTEM SERIES STAGE FORMATION LITHOLOGY MEMBER Tithonian Cotton Valley Gp ...' Haynesvllle Fm o Upper Kimmeridgan ---ei lnBuckner Mbr Smackover Fm I O <0 Denkman Mbr N Oxfordian -----N Norphleit Fm ]:M l CO Pine Hill Mbr Louann Fm .: fl Middle Callovian Werner Fm Rhaetian acl Upper Norlan Eagle Mills Fm ' Karn an so I-+ + + +++ + .++ +, 0o + O -Underlying Basement Rock + + + Figure 2. Stratigraphic column, of Mesozoic and older units of the North Central Gulf Coast. 95

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Florida Geological Survey Louann Inland Depositiona Limit Valley ft Ridge Blue Ridge Werner Inland 0 Province ..Provinoe * ODepositional Limit * * ,* /* .• *** " .' G uf' .'M Manila 0' x ; Embayment * * s is i pPeriphera* .* " ..* .* * * Sl Conecuh Embayment " "0.*". .. S 20 40 KILOMETER Gulf of Mexico 0 32 84 MILES 0 20 40 KILOMETER Figure 3. Tectonic map of South Central Gulf Coast. 96

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Information Circular 107 southern Escambia County, Alabama (Hughes overlying quartzose sandstone of the upper Eastern, Alabama permit 4299). Portions of the Denkman member. The upper and lower shale sequence most likely occur in parts of Denkman cannot be distinguished from one Florida as well. However, due to the limited another by geophysical log characteristics, due scope of this project, a thorough study of the to gross lithologic and sedimentary similarities shale lithofacies was not undertaken. (Wilkerson, 1981). However, the two units can The most complete section of Norphlet readily be distinguished in hand specimens examined for this study is found in the core from where color and sedimentary characteristics the Mesa Petroleum well (Florida permit 551) differ. Generally, the Denkman Member is lightwhere 73 feet of continuous Norphlet strata were to medium-gray in color at the top and becomes examined. The core contains the entire Denkman brown at depth. Member and a portion of the underlying red bed Overall, the upper Denkman is slightly coarsersequence. With the exception of a slight grained than the lower Denkman. However, the increase in volcanic rock fragments with depth, average grain size (0.21 mm) of the Denkman the core does not show much vertical variation in Member is finer than the red bed lithofacies. composition. The core consists of interbedded Framework packing densities average 79.0 fineto medium-grained sandstones in which the percent. This value indicates a relatively high bedding dips range from horizontal to 5°, with 10 framework packing density for panhandle Florida. to 40 dips common. Honda (1981) reported an average packing At the top of the Mesa core (-16806.5 feet density of 81.3 percent from the Hatters Pond below kelly bushing (ft blkb)) is an interval of 7.8 Area, Alabama, an abnormally high value. feet of light-gray, massively bedded, and wellExtensive pressure solution and grain cemented sandstone (upper Denkman). Below rearrangement characterize this high packing the upper Denkman, the unit changes to a lightdensity in Alabama (Honda, 1981), but are not brown sandstone (lower Denkman) with widely found extensively in Florida sediments. spaced, wavy to slightly inclined (10 to 50) The Denkman Member of panhandle Florida is laminae. At approximately -16837 ft bikb, the a lithic arkose (Folk, 1980). The average Denkman grades into red beds. composition of framework grains is 61.5 percent An isopach map across panhandle Florida quartz, 26.3 percent feldspar, and 12.2 percent shows the variable thicknesses of the formation rock fragments. This average composition differs (Figure 4). The average thickness of the unit in slightly from that cited in other studies of the panhandle Florida is 122.9 feet. However, this region, presumably because all samples used in figure may be misleading since most completely this study are closer to their source areas and penetrated Norphlet sections are believed to lie thus richer in feldspars and lithic grains. on structural highs (J. Files, Inexco Oil Company, 1986, personal communication). The Champlin Petroleum well (Florida permit 518) exhibits a FRAMEWORK GRAINS thick section of Norphlet of 410 feet, as determined by geophysical log data, whereas the Quartz is the most abundant detrital mineral in Getty Petroleum Company well (Florida permit the Denkman Member. Quartz content 1097) exhibits an abnormally thin section of only throughout the Denkman Member ranges from 14.6 feet. 50.5 percent to 75.2 percent, averaging 61.7 percent of framework grains. The most common quartz type present, making up 47.5 percent of Denkman Memberthe total quartz population, is monocrystalline In all cores examined, the Smackover-Norphlet quartz with little to no undulatory extinction contact is relatively sharp, with dense dolomite (Figure 5). Some of these grains have mineral 97

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a ( I • 29 30 Escambba ount ovAngon county Escambia County OtSn Walton FL' IDA OkLoos 'ounty Walton aCounty %9 3 4 FER TO TABLE 1 FOR WEL SSanta NUMBER AND LOCATINounty Baldwin County : WELL LOCATION WITH REFER TO TABLE I FOR WELL NUMBER AND LOCATION INFORMATION .. ..""" "" G u I f of Me x ic o CONTOUR INTERVAL= 50 FT. Figure 4. Isopach map, Norphiet Formation, panhandle Florida.

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Information Circular 107 Inclusions and small vacuole trains which Overgrowths are common on both potassium suggest a plutonic origin, whereas others exhibit and plagloclase feldspars. abundant vacuoles and have vermicular Feldspar grains have been subjected to a inclusions of chlorite suggesting a hydrothermal variety of weathering processes, with many origin (Folk, 1980). showing signs of multiple processes. Most The second most abundant quartz type appear to be related to dissolution and present is monocrystalline, undulose quartz, replacement of grains (Figure 7). The most making up 42.8 percent of the total, followed by common form of weathering is vacuolization, of semi-composite, 5.6 percent, and fully-composite which the magnitude ranges from slight to grains, 3.6 percent. Semi-composite grains are extreme. About 45.0 percent of all feldspars composed of two or more suborystals having show some sign of vacuolization. The author very close optical orientation with a distinct break makes a distinction between degrees of between subcrystals; however, the extinction weathering. In the case of "slight" vacuolization, shadow is not observed to sweep smoothly weathered grains appear cloudy due to pin-point across the grain during petrographic analysis. dissolution. Severely weathered grains on the Fully-composite grains have two or more other hand, are seen as partially or totally subcrystals with strongly undulose extinction and dissolved grains and make up about 8.0 percent distinct crenulate boundaries (Young, 1976; Folk, of the total feldspar population. A few grains, 1980). Semi-composite grains are more generally less than 2.0 percent of the total numerous than fully-composite grains in all core feldspar population, appear unaltered. material examined, except the Shell Oil Other forms of feldspar alteration were Company core (Florida permit 647) where a observed, but all were secondary to vacuolization slight reversal in frequency occurs. Small, in frequency of occurrence. Limonitization was needle-like inclusions of rutile are seen in all the next most abundant form observed in all types of quartz. samples followed by phyllosilicate replacement. Most of the quartz grains examined in this The dominant form of phyllosilicate replacement study are subrounded to rounded. Additionally, is chloritization, but kaolinitization and illitization many grains have overgrowths, some being also occur. In the Smackco Ltd. well (Florida abraded Indicating recycling, permit 1096), considerable chloritization of The second most abundant detrital mineral of feldspars is present of which the magnitude the Denkman Member is feldspar, which ranges appears to increase with depth. Dolomitization of from 15.9 percent to 46.5 percent and averages feldspars was the next most often observed form 26.3 percent throughout the study area. of feldspar weathering followed by calcitization, Potassium feldspars (orthoclase and minor anhydritization, and pyritization. amounts of microcline) are the most abundant, Rock fragments within the Denkman range ranging from 55.0 percent to 100 percent and from 3.0 percent to 26.0 percent, averaging 12.2 averaging 87 percent of the feldspar fraction percent. Metamorphic rock fragments (MRFs) (Figure 6). Plagioclase feldspar ranges from 0 are the most abundant averaging 80.0 percent of percent to 32.0 percent, averaging 13.0 percent the total rock fragment population. The next of the total feldspar population. In order of abundant fragments are volcanic rock fragments decreasing abundance, the feldspars are (VRFs), 15.0 percent, followed by sedimentary orthoclase, plagioclase, and microcline, with rock fragments (SRFs) at 5.0 percent. untwinned orthoclase making up the largest An aphanitic grain type of varying composition fraction. Most grains appear similar to quartz in and texture is the most abundant rock fragment size and rounding. Many feldspars are present (Figure 8). Initially, some difficulty sericitized, possess mineral inclusions, and have developed in identifying these grains because of quartz intergrowths in graphic patterns, their resemblance to chert. The grains were 99

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 5. The most abundant detrital grains present within both the Denkman Member and red bed lithofacies are monocrystalline quartz grains (Q), which can exhibit a rounded to subrounded shape, hematite coatings (H) and secondary overgrowths (0). Crossed-nicols; upper Denkman Member; 16617.0 feet; Jenkins Oil & Gas Inc., No. 1 Haynes 8-1; Florida permit 1128; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 100

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Information Circular 107 Figure 6. Potassium feldspar grain (microcline) (M) exhibiting authigenic overgrowth (0). Crossednicols; upper Denkman Member; 17297.0 feet; Shell Oil Company, Schneider No. 1; Florida permit 647; Bar scale = 0.05 mm. 101

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 7. Dissolution of feldspars. (A) advanced stage of dissolution, all that remains is probable residual clay skeleton and (B) central part remaining of grain dissolved from margin to center. Plane-polarized light; upper Denkman Member; 16121.0 feet; Exxon Corporation, St. Regis Paper Company, No. 13-S; Florida permit 1080; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 102

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Information Circular 107 grouped together as low-rank MRFs on the basis phyllosilicate cements follow in abundance of their unifying characteristics. The grains consisting of pore-lining chlorite, illite, and usually appear dark-colored, resistant to kaolinite. Clay content increases with depth and deformation, and silicified. A possible clue to is most abundant in the Smackco Ltd. well their origin is suggested by some of these grains (Florida permit 1096). possessing small, highly birefringent, phyllosiCarbonate cement occurs most often at the top licate inclusions and microlayers, which may of the section, just below the Smackoversuggest an originally argillaceous texture. Norphlet contact. Calcite occurs 15.0 percent of Another possible source is indicated by several the time as opposed to dolomite occurring 11.0 grains examined from the Mesa Petroleum percent of the time. Locally, dolomite may be Company core (Florida permit 551). Within the more abundant than calcite. Calcite is usually Mesa core, many silicified VRFs closely seen as a pore-filling cement surrounding resemble some of the low-rank metamorphic framework grains. Calcite also occurs as grains. This resemblance is increased where no poikilotopic patches where framework grains phenocrysts appear within the VRFs (Figure 9). appear to float within the cement crystal. However, because of the pervasive alteration of Dolomite is usually seen as isolated or original grain fabrics, the author prefers to group interlocked mosaics of euhedral rhombs. these aphanitic grains as low-rank MRFs. Anhydrite cement is minor throughout the The second most abundant type of rock section and usually seen as poikilotopic masses fragment present is high-rank metamorphic which may form visible spots in the sandstone. grains with a fabric of stretched and sutured In at least one sample from the Smackco Ltd. quartz subcrystals separated by thin mica plates well, doubly terminated quartz crystals occur [Folk's (1980) schistose metamorphic] (Figure within an anhydrite nodule. Hematite and 10). The remaining rock fragments (in pyrite are both minor constituents of the cement decreasing order of abundance) are: VRFs, fraction, with hematite occurring as coatings on slate/phyllite, another type of high-rank some grains (Figure 10). Pyrite occurs as blebs, metamorphic rock fragment [Folk's (1980) euhedral crystals, and rosettas of probable stretched metamorphic], and traces of chert, replacement origin within many framework dolomite, and shale. grains. The presence of pyrite within tightly cemented quartz sandstones suggests that sour MATRIX AND CEMENTS gas (H2S-saturated gas) invaded the capillary pores of the sandstone, converting the hematite As a whole, the Denkman Member of grain coatings to pyrite (McBride, 1981). panhandle Florida is virtually matrix-free except as observed in the Smackco Ltd. well core Red Bed Lithofacies (Florida permit 1096). X-ray diffraction data from samples of this core indicates that chlorite and The relatively clean sandstones of the illite comprise the majority of the matrix. Minor Denkman Member become reddish-brown with amounts of euhedral dolomite are also present depth and grade into underlying red beds. These within the matrix. red beds which include sandstones, siltstones, Quartz overgrowths are the most abundant and shales, become the dominant Norphlet cement type present within the Denkman. The lithology in parts of Alabama (Mancini et al, overgrowths can be subhedral to euhedral, 1985). multiple in occurrence, with some being abraded Two wells containing red bed lithofacies were and recycled (Figure 5). examined for this study: the Champlin Petroleum The second most abundant cement present is well (Florida permit 518) and the Mesa feldspar, occurring as overgrowths. Authigenic Petroleum Company well (Florida permit 551). 103

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 8. The most abundant rock fragments present within both the Denkman Member and red bed lithofacies are low-rank metamorphic grains (LR) possibly having several different origins. Crossed-nicols; upper Denkman Member; 16617.0 feet; Jenkins Oil & Gas Inc., Haynes 8-1; Florida permit 1128; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 104

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Information Circular 107 lithofacies; 15549.0 feet; Champlin Petroleum Company, USA & State of Florida, No. 1; Florida permit 518; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 105 105

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 10. High-rank metamorphic rock fragment (MRF) with a fabric of stretched and sutured quartz subcrystals separated by thin mica plates. A euhedral pyrite crystal (P) appears in the center of the grain. Crossed-nicols; lower Denkman Member; 16145.5 feet; Exxon Corporation, Martha Murphy 10-6; Florida permit 1004; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 106

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Information Circular 107 The Champlin Petroleum well (Florida permit sizes. The coarse layers contain more rounded 518) is located in extreme northwest Okaloosa grains and more feldspars and rock fragments County. This well lies adjacent to the Pensacola than the finer-sized layers. Arch, which accounts for the coarser and more Framework packing densities of the red bed lithic nature of its red beds. Fourteen and onelithofacies average 81.4 percent. Packing half feet of Norphlet material were cored within densities within the red bed lithofacies were this well (-14403.6 to -14481.3 ft blkb), of which found to be higher than those within the only the upper three feet were recovered. From quartzose lithofacies (79.0 percent average). this three-foot interval, a single chip of red, Red bed packing densities are very similar to coarse-grained sandstone was analyzed for this Norphlet packing densities reported from the project. This would place the sample Hatters Pond Area, Alabama (81.4 percent approximately 4.9 feet below the Smackoveraverage (Honda, 1981)). However, grain Norphlet contact as determined by geophysical rearrangement and extensive pressure solution logs. This stratigraphic relationship would reported by Honda (1981) for the Hatters Pond effectively limit the Denkman Member to the Area do not occur extensively within the red bed overlying 4.9 feet interval, if present at all. A lithofacies in panhandle Florida. geophysical well log from Champlin Petroleum The red bed lithofacies is a feldspathic Corporation well (Florida permit 518) shows a litharenite (Folk, 1980). The average serrated spontaneous potential (SP) pattern composition of framework grains is 61.3 percent (Figure 11) believed to be representative of the quartz, 23.1 percent rock fragments, and 15.6 red bed lithofacies (Wilkerson, 1981). In the percent feldspars. author's opinion, the Norphlet section within this well is comprised almost entirely of red beds perhaps formed by stacking of wadi-type FRAMEWORK GRAINS deposits on the flanks of the Pensacola Arch (Mancini et al, 1985). If the sequence in this well The most abundant detrital grain found in the is typical of the Norphlet, a conglomeratic red bed lithofacies is quartz. Quartz content lithofacies may be expected in the lower part of averages 61.3 percent of framework grains. This this well. However, at the present time, the value is similar to those from Denkman samples, author is not able to recognize a conglomeratic thus reflecting the consistent lithology of the lithofacies from the geophysical log data. formation. In a sample from the Champlin well The Mesa Petroleum Company well is located (Florida permit 518), rock fragments are more in south-central Santa Rosa County, farther out abundant than quartz, possibly due to the relative in the Conecuh Embayment than the Champlin closeness of the sample to its source areas. The well. Within this well, the transition from most common quartz type present, making up to Denkman to red beds is subtle and cannot be 48.0 percent of the total quartz population, is identified on geophysical logs. The lower portion monocrystalline quartz with little to no undulatory of the core from this well exhibits a red bed extinction. Approximately 16.0 percent of all section approximately 33-feet thick. The red bed quartz grains contain mineral inclusions and/or portion of the core consists of a red, poorlyto small vacuole trains, suggesting a plutonic origin moderately well-sorted, fineto medium-grained (Folk, 1980). sandstone with subrounded to subangular grains. The second most abundant quartz type is The most distinctive feature of this lithofacies is monocrystalline, undulose quartz, making up the closely spaced horizontal to slightly inclined 44.5 percent of the total quartz fraction. Semi(1° to 5°) laminae. These laminae are composed composite quartz grains average 5.6 percent, of alternating fine and mediumto coarsegrain while fully-composite quartz grains average 2.0 107

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Florida Geological Survey 4400 W*1k% Induction Log, Deep Spontaneoue Potential Curve Ia (Serrate Trace) • 14800 M Ft Champlin Petroleum Company, No. 1 .-0 Seao 28 TSN R28W .2 Santa Ross County, Florida 10 20 76 0100 Figure 11. Induction log and spontaneous potential curve illustrating serrate pattern associated with red beds. 108

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Information Circular 107 percent of all quartz examined. The quartz pyritization. Approximately 18.0 percent of all grains of the red bed lithofacies are very similar feldspars show no signs of alteration. However, to those seen in the Denkman Member. numerous grains show seritization, mineral The second most abundant detrital framework inclusions, and quartz intergrowths. grainr of the red bed lithofacies are rock fragments. Their abundance is the major difference between red bed and quartzose CEMENTS lithofacies. Rock fragments average 23.1 percent of all framework grains within this The most abundant type of cement present is lithofacies. Metamorphic rock fragments are the quartz overgrowths (Figures 4 and 13). most abundant of these, averaging 74.2 percent Phyllosilicate grain coatings are the second most of the total rock fragment population. Like those common cement type seen in the red bed in Denkman Member samples, these MRFs lithology (Figure 14). Chlorite, illite, and kaolinite mostly consist of the same low-rank were all identified by x-ray diffraction. Scanning metamorphic grains of various compositions and electron microscopy shows that an irregular, microtextures. Similarities do exist between platy, chlorite rim cement dominates. In some silicified VRFs and SRFs and these decreasing order of abundance, feldspar, calcite, abundant low-rank MRFs; however, their anhydrite, and dolomite cements also occur alteration prevents any clear determination of an throughout the lithofacies. original volcanic or sedimentary texture for these grains. Volcanic rock fragments are second only to Conglomeratic Lithofacies MRFs in abundance within the red bed lithofacies and average 24.9 percent of all rock fragments. Wilkerson (1981) and Pepper (1982) identified These VRFs show two types of texture: a dark, a conglomeratic lithofacies in several wells along fine-grained matrix enclosing feldspar laths and a a conglomeratic litofacies in several wells alon mostly silicified grain with relict phenocrysts the updp lt of the Norphle Formation in Figures 9 andsouthern Alabama. Geophysical logs from the Other than being coarser, feldspars of the red Getty Oil Company well (Florida permit 1097) bed lithofacies are very similar in appearance, located in East (southern S ta Rosa composition, and roundness to the feldspars of County) indicatea Norphlet section up to 14.6the Denkman Member. Feldspars within the red feet thick probably lying on top of Werner and bed lithofacies average 15.6 percent of all Eagle Mills sediments (Figure 15). framework grains. Potassium feldspars Approximately 7.9 feet of cored conglomeratic (untwinned orthoclase and minor amounts of (Norphlet Formation conglomeratic lithofacies) microcline) are more abundant than plagioclase and anhydritic material (Werner Formation) from feldspars, averaging 85.4 percent compared with theGetty well were examned or this project. The examined core consists of three feet of 15 percent of all feldspars in the red bed 15 percent of all feldspars in the red bed conglomeratic material lying above a 4.9-feet lithofacies. Several lath clusters and individual cnglomerval of "dirty," whiterial lying above a 4.9-feet feldspar laths were observed within the samples. thick inte. T he ontact between ted Such clusterings probably are deformed and anhydriite. The contact between the deteriorated VRFs. conglomerate and the anhydrite is gradational Vacuolization is the dominant diagenetic over a one to twinch section The upper alteration affecting red bed feldspars. Norphlet part of the core, along with the Chloritization, kaolinitization, and illitization are Norphlet-Smackover contact, is missing. the second most abundant diagenetic alterations, Geopetal infilling of cavities wthin the Werner followed by hematization, anhydritization, and Formaton anhydrite by coarse-grained Norphlet sediments can be seen in the Getty well core 109

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 12. Volcanic rock fragment (VRF) in the red bed lithofacies exhibiting a dark, fine-grained matrix (M) enclosing probable plagioclase phenocrysts (P). Plane-polarized light; red bed lithofacies; 15549.0 feet; Champlin Petroleum Company, USA & State of Florida, No. 1; Florida permit 518; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 110

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Information Circular 107 Figure 13. Scanning electron micrograph of red bed lithofacies pore, exhibiting euhedral quartz overgrowths (Q) and chloritic clay coatings (C). Red bed lithofacies; 16847.5 feet; Mesa Petroleum Company, T.R. Miller Mill Company, No. 1; Florida permit 551; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 111

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 14. Scanning electron micrograph of red bed lithofacies exhibiting porosity reducing chloritic clay coats (C). Red bed lithofacies; 16847.5 feet; Mesa Petroleum Company, T.R. Miller Mill Company, No. 1; Florida permit 551; Bar scale = 0.1 mm. 112

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Information Circular 107 (Figure 15). Geopetal infilling by Norphlet the same constituents are present throughout all sediments probably occurred after meteoric cores, including quartz, feldspars, and leaching of the then-exposed anhydrite. Finally, sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic rock calcite-saturated waters infiltrated the cavities fragments. The similarity in mineralogy in all and precipitated the calcite caps. lithofacies of the formation indicates that the The preserved lower Norphlet portion of the source areas remained constant throughout core is an interlayered section of conglomeratic Norphlet deposition (Wilkerson, 1981). and coarse-grained sandstones. At the top of Walls (1985) used locations of samples which the core is a two-inch zone of coarse-grained had the highest amount of labile grains to sandstone overlying approximately three feet of indicate source areas of the Norphlet Formation conglomerate. The sandstones are red and the of southern Alabama. He noted that MRFs grains are moderately sorted and subangular to dominate updip Alabama Norphlet sediments, subrounded. The conglomeratic material is dark but diminish to the south. The labile nature of gray in color, poorly sorted, with angular to the fragments suggests that the nearby southern rounded grain shapes. Large rock fragments Appalachian uplands served as a source area for within the conglomerate consist of pebbleto these MRFs. Compositional variation maps, cobble-sized grains, some up to three inches constructed by Walls (1985), indicate a across. These large rock fragments are dark southwesterly dispersal pattern for these green, white, and dark gray, subangular to sediments. This direction would imply significant subrounded, and appear to be plutonic and deposition of MRFs in the Manila Embayment, metamorphic in origin. Mancini et al, (1984) separated from panhandle Florida by the identified pebbles of shale, chert, quartzite, Conecuh Ridge (Figure 3). Both the Manila granite, and rhyolite in conglomerates from Embayment and the Conecuh Ridge probably Escambia County, Alabama, farther to the north restricted much of this debris from panhandle than these Florida conglomerates. Differences in Florida. Additionally, Walls (1985) noted a composition between these Pensacola Arch significant compositional difference between conglomerates and their northern counterparts samples from northern counties and samples are believed to be due to the proximity and type from Mobile, Escambia, and Conecuh Counties, of source materials available to each. Lying Alabama. Samples from the southern counties directly below the three-foot zone of gray have a higher lithic content, higher feldspar conglomerate is another interval of coarse, red concentration, and appear to have accumulated sandstone about oneto two-inches thick. Below from several directions, indicating at the very this sand the lithology again changes to a 2.0to least a southern source (Walls, 1985). 2.5-inch thick conglomerate lying on a "dirty" Ottman et al, (1973) and Sigsby (1976) white, crystalline, coarse-grained, wavysuggested that the Conecuh Ridge and laminated anhydrite. Pensacola Arch were topographic highs during much of Norphlet deposition, outlining the Conecuh Embayment. All Norphlet sediments of PROVENANCE OF NORPHLET SEDIMENTS panhandle Florida are located within this basin, which is bordered to the north by the Conecuh Interpretation of petrographic and stratigraphic Ridge, to the east and south by the Pensacola data can give a general indication of source Arch, and to the southwest by the Wiggins Arch. areas for Norphlet sediments. Mineral The Conecuh Ridge and Pensacola Arch composition of Norphlet sediments varies probably served as source areas for Florida moderately across panhandle Florida. Although Norphlet sediments (Sigsby, 1976). It is the compositional differences do exist, essentially author's opinion that sediments derived from the 113

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Florida Geological Survey Figure 15. Norphlet Formation-Werner Formation contact exhibiting Norphlet conglomeratic lithofacies, red, coarse-grained sandstone (S), conglomerate (C), Werner anhydrite (A), and geopetal sediment infilling of cavities within the upper Werner Formation (G). 17739.9 feet; Getty Oil Company; Florida permit 1097, East Bay location. 114

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Information Circular 107 Wiggins Arch probably did not contribute deposited in deep, relatively narrow troughs, significantly to deposits in Florida, primarily due bounded by steep faults and cut by volcanic to the downdip location of the arch. intrusives. The Conecuh Embayment apparently Neathery and Thomas (1975; Figure 1) lies within one of these troughs (Woods and suggested that basement rocks of panhandle Addington, 1973; Figure 3). Florida probably are southern extensions of the After initial deposition of continental-derived Southern Appalachian Piedmont Belt. Dominant Eagle Mills sediments within the trough, the rock types of the Piedmont are mica schist, formation was subjected to an extended period of granite gneiss, and granite. Evidence for a subaerial weathering (Anderson, 1979). Pensacola Arch (Piedmont Belt) source for Following this weathering and subsequent Norphlet sediments in panhandle Florida is erosion of some of the Eagle Mills, deposition of provided by the presence of conglomeratic and Werner Formation sediments began with these red bed lithofacies. Pebbleto cobble-size, beds eventually onlapping the paleo-Gulf Coast matrix-supported conglomerates are similar to (Imlay, 1980). The Werner Formation covered all updip Norphlet conglomerates observed in of the embayment and apparently much of the southern Alabama wells (Wilkerson, 1981; southern end of the Pensacola Arch. The author Pepper, 1982; Walls, 1985). The restricted updip believes that the Getty Oil Company well (Florida distribution of these conglomerates apparently permit 1097) lies near the crest of the arch. reflects proximity to, as well as the composition Whether the Conecuh Ridge was completely of, the Pensacola Arch. These conglomerates buried or not by the Werner Formation is unclear. are composed dominantly of plutonic and However, during Werner deposition, updip Eagle metamorphic rock fragments. Mills sediments were probably still being shed Southwestern Alabama red bed lithofacies and deposited from surrounding highlands. This probably represent distal portions of can be interpreted from the cross-sections which conglomeratic sequences (Mancini et al, 1984). shows Eagle Mills sediments capped by lower The locations of Florida red beds, which all lie Haynesville sediments, indicating exposure of further out into the basin than the conglomerates, the Eagle Mills during much of the Jurassic. suggest a Pensacola Arch source for Norphlet Consequently, Eagle Mills sediments were sediments of panhandle Florida. Supporting probably incorporated into lower Werner evidence for this claim is a pronounced fining of sediments (Figures 16 and 17). grain sizes within the quartzose and red bed Following Werner Formation deposition, lithofacies toward the center of the Conecuh deposition of the Louann Formation began within Embayment. the Conecuh Embayment. The Louann Evidence for a Conecuh Ridge (Talledega Formation does not now lie as far inland as the Slate Belt) source is less dramatic (Neathery and Werner Formation, apparently due to postThomas, 1975; Figure 1). However, higher depositional dissolution and erosion of the salt feldspar and sedimentary rock fragment during Norphlet deposition. Perhaps the Louann concentrations in samples from wells located in originally did overlap the Werner, but it has since northern Santa Rosa County may indicate that been eroded back to a more basinward position the Conecuh Ridge was a supplier of sediments (Anderson, 1979). to panhandle Florida. Following the retreat of the Louann Sea from Sediments that originated from the Eagle Mills, the Conecuh Embayment, stream gradients were Werner, and Louann Formations also are again increased to the point where continental indicated by stratigraphic location and erosion could take place (Pepper, 1982). It was composition (Figures 16 and 17). Scott et al, during this time that Norphlet deposition began. (1961) believed the Eagle Mills was initially Norphlet sediments thus began burying Louann 115

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NORTH -SOUTH STRATIGRAPHIC CROSS-SECTION PANHANDLE. FLORIDA A A' NORTHr_ý SOUTH HAVNESVILLE FORMATION R1 *F A 4 ' 16d SMACKOVER FORMATION .:,,,m.LOUANN FORNATION 1 ' EAGLE MILLS FORMATION WERNER FORMATION t, -e SM .--ALABAMA __ I S*-, e,,6, FLORIDA J7mm0 sam r_ M *« SINTERVAl.: LOWER MAYNESVU&. -EAOLE M.LS S"0PLAMTO 7 S/" ~* ALL WELL LOG CURVES ARE SPOTANBOUS POTENTIAL AND DEEP INDUCTION UNLESS NOTED. -0 00 FEET * NUMSERS AND LETTERS AT TOP OF BOREHOLE. oe 0 1 METERS REFER TO NAME AND LOCATION. TABLE 1. VERTICAL SCALE S* ALL DEPTNS ARE DRILLERS DEPTH 2 MILES S/0 32. KILOMETERS INTEV.L as HEHORIZONTAL SCALE Figure 16. North-south stratigraphic cross section, panhandle, Florida.

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WEST -EAST STRATIGRAPHIC CROSS-SECTION PANHANDLE, FLORIDA B B' WEST EAST G'.. .r Gamms 6 .r;HAYNESVILLE FORMATION. .IO 701 1 1 EAGLE MILLS FORMATION "DIABASE INTRUSIVE LOUANN FORMATION " 1600 k / .---"-'" WERNER FORMATION ,,... ' ---'-'" '"^' ^, -^ «.< -^>" -* ALL WELL LOG CURVES ARE SPOTANEOUS POTENTIAL 1AND DEEP INDUCTION UNLESS NOTED. O 200 FEET * NUMBERS AND LETTERS AT TOP OF BOREHOLE. e,ce, o et1 METERS REFER TO NAME AND LOCATION. TABLE 1. VERTICAL SCALE * ALL DEPTHS ARE DRILLERS DEPTH r 32 KILOMETERS SSITE' HORIZONTAL SCALE Figure 17. West-east stratigraphic cross section, panhandle, Florida.

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Florida Geological Survey sediments, overstepping both the Louann and most abundant in central Santa Rosa County, Werner Formations. Examination of the crossnearest the Conecuh Arch. section shows that outside the embayment, the 3. Panhandle Florida Norphlet sediments were Eagle Mills Formation was never completely derived from the basement rock of the buried by Norphlet sediments (Figure 17). Since Conecuh Ridge (Talledega Slate Belt) to the the Eagle Mills apparently was exposed north and the Pensacola Arch (Piedmont Belt) throughout Norphlet deposition in panhandle to the south and east. Additionally, sediment Florida, the author assumes it was a source for contribution from the Eagle Mills, Werner, and Norphlet sediments. The Eagle Mills in Louann Formations probably was significant. panhandle Florida was not completely covered until middle Kimmeridgian time, when anhydrite of the lower Haynesville Formation completely covered the embayment. Diabase dikes and sills are known to cut Eagle Mills sediments throughout the Gulf Coast and are believed to be present in the bottom of the Sonat Exploration well (Florida permit 590) Scott et al, 1961; A. Applegate, Florida Geological Survey, 1986, personal communication). Some VRFs in the quartzose and red bed Norphlet facies appear to be diabase. Thus, a contribution to Norphlet sediments from erosion of the Eagle Mills appears very likely. CONCLUSIONS 1. Three distinct lithofacies of the Norphlet Formation have been identified in panhandle Florida: an updip conglomerate, red beds, and an uppermost quartzose lithofacies (Denkman Sandstone Member). 2. This study demonstrates that panhandle Florida Norphlet sediments are more lithic in composition than are Norphlet sediments from southern Alabama. Metamorphic rock fragments are the most abundant rock fragments present within the lithic suite. A partially silicified low-rank type of metamorphic rock fragment of possible argillaceous and/or volcanic origin dominates the suite. Volcanic rock fragments are present in all samples and are most abundant in the south and east, nearest the Pensacola Arch. Sedimentary rock fragments account for only 4.7 percent of the lithic fraction and are 118

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Information Circular 107 REFERENCES Anderson, E. G., 1979, Basic Mesozoic study in Louisiana, the northern coastal region, and the Gulf Basin Province: Baton Rouge, Department of Natural Resources, Louisiana Geological Survey, Folio series, 58 p. Badon, C. L., 1975, Stratigraphy and petrology of Jurassic Norphlet Formation, Clark County, Mississippi: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, v. 59, p. 377-392. Folk, R. L., 1980, Petrology of sedimentary rocks: Austin, Hemphill Publishing Company, 184 p. Hartman, J. A., 1968, The Norphlet sandstone, Pelahatchie Field, Rankin County, Mississippi: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 18, p. 2-11. Honda, H., 1981, Diagenesis and reservoir quality of the Norphlet sandstone (Upper Jurassic), the Hatters Pond area, Mobile County, Alabama [M.S. thesis]: The University of Texas at Austin, 213 p. Imlay, R. W., 1980, Jurassic paleobiogeography of the conterminous United States in its continental setting: Government Printing Office, United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey, Professional Paper 1062, 130 p. Mancini, E. A., Mink, R. M., and Bearden, B. L., 1984, Paleo-environments and hydrocarbon potential of the Upper Jurassic Norphlet Formation of southwestern and offshore Alabama: Gulf Cost Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 34, p. 131-135. Mancini, E. A., Mink, R. M., Bearden, B. L., and Wilkerson, R. P., 1985, Norphlet Formation (Upper Jurassic) of southwestern and offshore Alabama: Environments of Deposition and Petroleum Geology: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, v. 69, p. 881-898. McBride, E. F., 1981, Diagenetic history of Norphlet Formation (Upper Jurassic), Rankin County, Mississippi: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 31, p. 347-351. Neathery, T. L. and Thomas, W. A., 1975, Pre-Mesozoic basement rocks of the Alabama coastal plain: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 25, p. 86-99. Ottman, R. D., Keyes, P. L. and Ziegler, M. A., 1973, Jay Field-a Jurassic stratigraphic trap: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 23, p.146-157. Oxley, M. L., Minihan, E., and Ridgeway, J. M., 1967, A study of the Jurassic sediments in portions of Mississippi and Alabama: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 17, p. 24-48. Pepper, C. F., 1982, Depositional environments of the upper Jurassic Norphlet Formation of southwestern Alabama [M.S. thesis]: Northeast Louisiana University, 102 p. Scott, K. R., Hayes, W. E. and Fietz, R. P., 1961, Geology of the Eagle Mills Formation: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 11, p. 1-14. 119

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Florida Geological Survey Sigsby, R. J., 1976, Paleoenvironmental analysis of the Big Escambia Creek-Jay-Blackjack Creek Field area: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 26, p. 258-278. Tyrrell, W. W., 1973, Denkman Sandstone Member-an important Jurassic reservoir in Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida [abs.]: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 23, p. 32. Walls, I. A., 1985, Provenance of the Jurassic Norphlet Formation in southwest Alabama [M.S. thesis]: University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, 193 p. Wilkerson, R. P., 1981, Environments of deposition of the Norphlet Formation (Jurassic) in south Alabama [M.S. thesis]: University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, 141 p. Woods, R. D. and Addington, J. W., 1973, Pre-Jurassic geological framework northern Gulf Basin: Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 23, p. 92-107. Young, S. W., 1976, Petrographic textures of detrital polycrystalline quartz as an aid to interpreting crystalline source rocks: Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, v. 46, p. 595-603. 120

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