Olympic Resources readies for Coalinga No. 1 drilling Olympic Resources Ltd ORL Shares issued 12,214,378 Oct 10 close $0.58 Thu 11 Oct 2001 News Release Mr. Daryl Pollock reports The Paul Graham drill rig is being mobilized onto the Olympic Coalinga No. 1 gas well located in Fresno county, California, A series of steps will be undertaken to include the following: the 5-1/2" cased hole which has been cemented to current depth of 10,106 feet will be cleaned to effective depth; a cased hole evaluation log (TMD-L); and a cased hole cement bond log will be run over the Martinet sand and Moreno shale formations. The well will then be deepened to the main objective, the Brown Mountain sand, beginning with a mud weight of 13.5 ppg. Upon reaching total depth, an open hole e-log of the Brown Mountain sand will be run. The casing is 21 feet below the lowest potential productive interval from Olympic's first secondary target, the Paleocene Martinet sand. The Cretaceous Moreno shales lie below this formation which extend to 10,800 feet in the original hole and also holds several potential secondary targets. Upon review of the mud logs from the sidetrack operation, there is a total of 97 feet of sand from three distinct zones, each having very sharp and high gas shows and a high content of live oil. These sand sections also correlate to the very distinguishable drilling breaks indicating a high-quality sand. Only two wells, drilled in the 1940s, have penetrated the Martinet sand within the prospect area located 3,500 feet northwest and 5,200 feet southeast of the Olympic Coalinga gas well. Both penetrated these same gas and oil sands and combined with data from the 3-D seismic data, it is expected that these sands are pervasive throughout the property. Initial results from this secondary target alone could possibly justify completion of this field. Initial e-logs of the Brown Mountain sands indicated potential net pay of between 50 to 100 feet, Equipment difficulties caused some delays in testing the extent of the secondary target, the Moreno sands and during these logging delays, the well deteriorated below the 9,000-foot level requiring a sidetrack operation below this level to redrill down to total depth. At this point it is still preliminary. However, based on the data received to date, the Olympic Coalinga No. 1 well has the potential of being placed in the category of a discovery well. To date, $5-million (U.S.) has been spent on the land, including a 3-D seismic survey shot in 1997 covering 16 square miles including the prospect area. According to consulting engineer Mark Anderson, the 3-D seismic data "clearly corroborates existing production from known stratigraphic and structural features" from the Cretaceous Brown Mountain formation which is largely untested in this area. Only one well has penetrated the Cretaceous Brown Mountain. sand within the seismic shoot area in 1942 which had significant untested gas shows in the Brown Mountain sand, Originally drilled for oil, the off-scale gas shows at the bottom of the well were not tested and the well was abandoned due to a lack of natural gas market during World War II. |