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Developing an exploration model by investigating the geological controls on reservoir production within the Fort Scott limestone, Ness county, KansasFlenthrope, Christopher January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Geology / Matthew W. Totten / Ness County, Kansas is situated along the western flank of the Central Kansas uplift, and
has been an active center of oil exploration since the 1920’s. It currently ranks fourth among
Kansas counties in oil production, largely from Mississippian-age carbonate reservoirs. Some
production has been realized from lower Pennsylvanian-age carbonate formations, although the
distribution of these reservoirs appears sporadic. The goals of this study were to develop an
exploration model that predicts the development of reservoir conditions within the Marmatonage
Fort Scott Limestone.
A two-township area was studied to examine relationships between production rates and
subsurface variations. No core was available through the Fort Scott, hence drill cuttings were
thin-sectioned and examined under a petrographic microscope to see details of porosity type not
easily visible under a binocular microscope. Production appears to be defined by stratigraphic
variations in porosity controlled by original depositional environment. The best wells are within
an oolitic limestone, with subsequent development of secondary, vuggy porosity. These
conditions occur in bands along the Mississippian paleo-topographic highs. I interpret these
bands to be ancient ooid shoals, with geometries and scales analogous to those previously
reported from Lansing/Kansas City reservoirs in Russell County, Kansas. This study provides
insights into production trends within the Fort Scott Limestone, and should be included during
exploration in Ness County, Kansas.
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Poetry on the plains: J.S. Penny and the environmental history of Fort ScottBlake, Daron January 1900 (has links)
Master of Arts / Department of History / Bonnie Lynn-Sherow / This thesis recreates the relationship between humans and their physical environment in Fort Scott, Kansas between 1850 and 1920 and uses the poetry of J.S. Penny, a contemporary amateur poet living and writing in Fort Scott, as an essential primary resource. Settlers came to this area in southeastern Kansas in the 19th century for its timber-lined streams, high precipitation, and rich soil. The Missouri River, Fort Scott, and Gulf Railroad was extended through Fort Scott in December of 1869. The arrival of the railroad transformed the town. The natural resources which had been a mark of identity for the people of Fort Scott became commodities to be sold in national markets. Manufacturing and industry boomed, but population would eventually plateau in the early 20th century, creating a small industrial city that had maintained a strongly rural sense of community.
Penny’s poetry provides a personal, emotional response to the rapid changes to the landscape around him. Some of his poems on the local landscape directly note specific changes in the local ecology, while some demonstrate Penny’s religious connection the natural world—a common perspective during his time. Other pieces show us Penny’s observations of how his neighbors reacted to the weather and environment in Fort Scott. Penny, like many Americans in the early 20th century, saw the history of his home as one of agrarian development and westward expansion over an empty landscape; the Jeffersonian and Turnerian roots of his perspective are evident in his poetry. With Penny’s poetry, we can create a more complete environmental history of Fort Scott by understanding how Fort Scott residents related to the land around them.
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The permanent Indian frontier: the reason for the construction and abandonment of Fort Scott, Kansas during the dragoon eraShoemaker, Earl Arthur. January 1985 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1985 S56 / Master of Arts
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