The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service
  Label Dataset Type Subdivision Identifier
1. Harris & Ewing YEOMAN (F). NAVY DEPARTMENT: DRILLING OF THE ELLIPSE 1919

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Instance 20246198
2. Harris & Ewing JUNIOR AMERICAN GUARD. DRILLING 1917

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Instance 20244204
3. Harris & Ewing DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC SCHOOLS. HIGH SCHOOL CADETS; DRILLING 1911

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Instance 20239616
4. Harris & Ewing PLATTSBURG RESERVE OFFICERS TRAINING CAMP. DRILLING 1916

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Instance 20242692
5. Harris & Ewing JUNIOR AMERICAN GUARD DRILLING 1917

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20244198
6. Harris & Ewing ELLIOTT, R.T. JR. AMERICAN GUARD. DRILLING 1917

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20244203
7. Harris & Ewing DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC SCHOOLS. HIGH SCHOOL CADETS; DRILLING 1911

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20239615
8. Harris & Ewing DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PUBLIC SCHOOLS. HIGH SCHOOL CADETS; DRILLING 1911

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Instance 20239619
9. Drilling

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Serial
11149710
10. Drilling

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
2581669
11. America's petroleum industries pour out fuel and lubricants for the United Nations. A geologist employed by a U.S. oil company sets up his microscopes in the field to examine a "core" of rock or earth taken from a test boring far below the earth's surface to determine the presence of absence of oil on the site. Years ago, when the oil industry was in its infancy, the "hit or miss" method of drilling for oil was the rule and thousands of drilling operations were unsuccessful. Today few wells are drilled without a preliminary survey by geologists who specialize in reading the surface of the ground and examining rock and mud samples, such as those shown in the picture, to determine how great the chances of striking oil in that particular district. The efficiency of modern U.S. methods of finding oil makes possible the enormous amounts of crude oil products being supplied to the armies and navies of the United Nations 1944?

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20084522
12. America's petroleum industries pour out fuel and lubricants for the United Nations. At an oil well in the U.S. Southwest state of Oklahoma, oil drillers are using tools called "tongs" which are clamped on the drill stem to screw on a new section of stem or to unscrew the stem, section by section, after the drilling far below the earth's surface is finished. This procedure is common in modern rotary drilling for oil . The well pictured here is being drilled by a "wildcat" organization of drillers, which means they are formed in a group independent of any of the great oil companies. The well, if successful, will contribute to the vast quantity of oil being poured overseas to the U.S. armed forces and the United Nations for the successful waging of the war. The predictable total of U.S. oil production in 1944, according to a U.S. oil company official, is 1,601,2500,000 barrels produced by thousands of wells such as this one. Some U.S. oilwells today are drilled to a depth of three miles (4.8 kilometers) underground 1944?

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20084508
13. Directional drilling

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
TN871.23
Technology--Mining engineering. Metallurgy--Nonmetallic minerals--Other natural carbons and hydrocarbons--Petroleum. Petroleum engineering--Well drilling--Directional drilling ; Directional drilling
14. Horizontal well drilling

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
TN871.25
Technology--Mining engineering. Metallurgy--Nonmetallic minerals--Other natural carbons and hydrocarbons--Petroleum. Petroleum engineering--Well drilling--Horizontal well drilling ; Horizontal well drilling--Petroleum engineering
15. Underbalanced drilling

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
TN871.33
Technology--Mining engineering. Metallurgy--Nonmetallic minerals--Other natural carbons and hydrocarbons--Petroleum. Petroleum engineering--Well drilling--Underbalanced drilling ; Underbalanced drilling--Petroleum engineering
16. Submarine drilling

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
TC193
Technology--Hydraulic engineering--General preliminary operations--Submarine drilling ; Submarine drilling--Hydraulic engineering
17. Offshore well drilling

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
TN871.3
Technology--Mining engineering. Metallurgy--Nonmetallic minerals--Other natural carbons and hydrocarbons--Petroleum. Petroleum engineering--Well drilling--Offshore well drilling ; Offshore well drilling--Petroleum engineering
18. Drilling muds

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
QH545.D74
Science--Biology (General)--Ecology--Influence of special factors of the environment--Special, A-Z--Drilling muds ; Drilling muds--Effect on plants and animals ; Muds, Drilling--Effect on plants and animals
19. Oil well drilling, Submarine

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
Z695.1.O54
Bibliography. Library Science. Information Resources--Libraries--Library science. Information science--The collections. The books--Cataloging--By subject, A-Z--Oil well drilling, Submarine ; Oil well drilling, Submarine--Libraries--Cataloging ; Submarine oil well drilling--Libraries--Cataloging
20. Drilling and blasting

LC Classification (LCC)
ClassNumber
Topic
TN279
Technology--Mining engineering. Metallurgy--Practical mining operations--Drilling and blasting ; Drilling--Mining ; Blasting--Mining


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