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Difference between revisions of "34-133-60042"

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Line 11: Line 11:
 
| County: [[Portage_County,_Ohio|Portage]]
 
| County: [[Portage_County,_Ohio|Portage]]
 
|-
 
|-
| Municipality: [[Franklin_Township,_Portage_County,_Ohio|Franklin Township]]
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| Municipality: [[Kent City,_Portage_County,_Ohio|Kent City]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
| Operator Name: [[HISTORIC OWNER]]
 
| Operator Name: [[HISTORIC OWNER]]

Revision as of 18:26, 15 August 2019

Well Details

Well ID: 34-133-60042
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Country: United States
State: Ohio
County: Portage
Municipality: Kent City
Operator Name: HISTORIC OWNER
Well Pad ID:
Farm/Lease Name:
License Status: Final Restoration
License Date:
Spud Date:
Spud Drilling Contractor:
Final Drill Date:
Well Total Depth:
Configuration: Vertical
Latitude: 41.153137033
Longitude: -81.35974050

For data sources see[1]

Well History

Well Status Well Status Date Comment
Record Last Modified 2019-06-05

For data sources see[2]

Inspection Data

Inspections Performed

Inspection ID Inspection Date Inspection Type Inspection Result Inspection Comments
1443722583 2015-08-31 Administrative Inspection No Violations I received a call from Captain Bill Myers (Kent Fire Department) about a citizen smelling natural gas in the vicinity of the Cuyahoga River Boardwalk and the State Route 59 overpass. The citizen brought them a map showing this historic well as a possible source. I met with Captain Myers on location and he explained to me that they have not been able to detect any methane readings in their investigation. There are no records in RBDMS for this well and the latitude and longitude coordinates place the location of the wellbore in the bed of the Cuyahoga River. I investigated the boardwalk area north and south of the overpass with my gas detector. After 90 minutes of surveying, I did not register any methane levels on my gas meter. For a brief second, I thought I detected the smell of hydrocarbons at the landing beside the overflow wall, but I was unable to pick up the scent again. I e-mailed Captain Myers my findings and told him I would check the area once more on a cool, damp morning that might help concentrate the methane if it was leaking from an unknown source.

For data sources see[3]

References