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  2. Thorla-McKee Well - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorla-McKee_Well

    The oil was wrung from the blankets, bottled as "Seneca Oil," and sold as a "cure all." The remaining brine was boiled down to extract the salt." After the Thorla-McKee well, other wells drilled for salt brine in Kentucky and West Virginia also produced oil and gas as byproducts. The Drake Well, drilled in Pennsylvania in 1859, is generally ...

  3. Bromine production in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromine_production_in_the...

    The result of thousands of years of evaporation are the sediments below the present lake bed, which include two salt layers, and brine with high concentrations of bromine, along with potassium, sodium and boron. Brine associated with the Upper Salt and Lower Salt intervals contains 500 to 900 ppm bromine.

  4. History of the petroleum industry in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_petroleum...

    Salt was a valuable commodity, and an industry developed near salt springs in the Ohio River Valley, producing salt by evaporating brine from the springs. Salt wells were sunk at the salt springs to increase the supply of brine for evaporation. Some of the wells were hand-dug, but salt producers also learned to drill wells by percussion (cable ...

  5. Salt well - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_well

    Brine Wells near Preesall, England Brine wellhead near Preesall, England. A salt well (or brine well) is used to mine salt from caverns or deposits. Water is used as a solution to dissolve the salt or halite deposits so that they can be extracted by pipe to an evaporation process, which results in either a brine or a dry product for sale or local use. [1]

  6. Burning Springs, West Virginia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning_Springs,_West_Virginia

    The wells at Burning Springs produced and sold petroleum many years before the Drake Oil Well at Titusville, Pennsylvania. John V. Rathbone bought 100 acres in 1842 and a decade later drilled a new well, only to discover it produced more oil than salt. However, by 1859 it was producing seven 40-gallon barrels of oil per day, more effectively ...

  7. Brine mining - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brine_mining

    Today, salt from groundwater brines is generally a byproduct of the process of extracting other dissolved substances from brines and constitutes only a small part of world salt production. In the United States, salt is recovered from surface brine at the Great Salt Lake, Utah, and from a shallow subsurface brine at Searles Lake, California.

  8. American Petroleum Institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Petroleum_Institute

    Although some oil was produced commercially before 1859 as a byproduct from salt brine wells, the American oil industry started on a major scale with the discovery of oil at the Drake Well in western Pennsylvania in 1859. The American Petroleum Institute was founded on 20 March 1919 and based in New York City. [1]

  9. Texas Gulf Sulphur Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Gulf_Sulphur_Company

    [5]: 118–124 In the 1950s, Texas Gulf Sulphur Company used the Spindletop Hill site for salt-brine extraction. [7] The company entered the Mexican market in 1949, with its subsidiary Cia. Exploradora del Istmo, S.A. Headquarters were established in Coatzacoalcos in 1950, and production from their Nopalapa plant commenced in 1957.