73
Learning Goals • The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma.

Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Learning Goals

• The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma.

Page 2: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

BLACK GOLD !

Page 3: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

The first oil well in Oklahoma

was drilled many years

ago.

Page 4: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 5: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil wells were given names. The first oil well in Oklahoma was the “Nellie Johnstone No. 1”

Page 6: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

It was located in Bartlesville.

Page 7: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

The Oklahoma oil fields are part of big, underground pools called the “Mid-Continent Oil Region.”

Page 8: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Mid-Continent Oil Field (in red.)

Page 9: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Here, under the ground is “crude” oil - some of the

biggest pools in the world!

Page 10: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Crude oil is a thick,

black liquid.

Page 11: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil is also called

“petroleum.”

Petroleum can be turned into

useful products, like

gasoline to run our cars.

Page 12: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Factories burn petroleum to make electricity, too.

Page 13: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

These are called “oil derricks”.

Page 14: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil derricks hold up many pipes, used to drill deep into the earth.

Page 15: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Older derricks looked like this and were made

out of wood.

Page 16: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Newer derricks were made out of metal,

like this one.

Page 17: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

At the end of the drill pipe

is a drill “bit” with strong metal

“teeth.” They dig through

the earth.

Page 18: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Because of the oil found there, Tulsa became known as the

"Oil Capital of the World."

The Oklahoma City oil field also became one of the biggest

producers of oil.

Page 19: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 20: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

More than 30 BILLION barrels of crude oil have been pumped from the Mid-Continent Region!

Page 21: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 22: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Two years before Oklahoma gained statehood,

an oil gusher sprung up outside of Tulsa.

Page 23: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 24: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Wooden oil derricks soon

dotted the land.

Page 25: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 26: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

This pool of oil was called the Glenn Pool.

Page 27: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 28: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Glenn Pool brought many workers to Tulsa.

Page 29: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil made some people millionaires, such as Frank Phillips, J. Paul Getty, William Skelly, H. H. Champlin, Erle Halliburton and E. W. Marland.

Page 30: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 31: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 32: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

William Skelly, who founded Skelly Oil,turned it into one of the

world's largest oil companies.

He came to be known as

"Mr. Tulsa".

Page 33: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 34: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

But other oil discoveries, like Cushing,

helped make Oklahoma the No. 1 producing state

in the country!

Page 35: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 36: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 37: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil was then found in Oklahoma City!

<>

Page 38: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

The “gusher” erupted,blowing 5,000 barrels of oil into the airduring the first day!

Page 39: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 40: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

The most famous well in oil history

was the “No. 1 Mary Sudik” drilled in Oklahoma City!

Page 41: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

It was drilled in1930 and was nicknamed the

“Wild Mary Sudik!”

Page 42: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 43: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

“Wild Mary” coated houses and businesses in black oil…Guards kept crowds away and turned back traffic.

For 11 days, the oil continued to blow out of the ground! l

Page 44: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 45: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Finally, workers could shut off the oil.

People spent weeks cleaning oil out of the streets, ditches, and creeks around town!

Page 46: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil discoveries created oil “boom” towns.

Page 47: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 48: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 49: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

With the beginning of drilling activity, oil field workers would flock to the area.

Page 50: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 51: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

The town would grow so fast!

People wanted to share in the wealth of the “black gold” flowing from the earth!

Page 52: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 53: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Sometimes, the boom towns

were so crowded that workers were

forced to sleep in tents,

or on rooftops.

Page 54: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil’s importance grew after a new discovery, called the “West Edmond” field in the 1940s.

Page 55: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 56: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 57: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

And by the 1970s,

oil had been discovered in 72 of our 77 counties.

Page 58: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

New equipment made is possible

to pull even more oil out of

older wells!

Page 59: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

This is called a “pumper.”

Page 60: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

It is placed where a well was drilled and pumps oil out of the ground.

Page 61: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

The big, round storage buildings hold the crude oil being pumped

out of the ground.

Page 62: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Today, Oklahoma is

5th place in oil production

among all of the United

States.

Page 63: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oklahoma ranks second only to Texas in the number of drilling rigs!

Page 64: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Some of the biggest oil companies

began in Oklahoma!

Page 65: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 66: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Almost one million oil wells have been drilled in Oklahoma..

Page 67: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

…including oil wells at our state capitol!

Page 68: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Petroleum is our top industry,

Page 69: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

…where over 50,000 people work.

Page 70: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma
Page 71: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Oil helped to make Oklahoma what it is today…

Page 72: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Chapter 17 Section 3 Quiz• 1.) What was the name of the most famous Oil Well?• A.) Wild Mary Sudik• B.) The Glenn Pool• C.) The Nellie Johnstone

• 2.) What was the name of the First Oil well drilled in Oklahoma?

• A.) Wild Mary Sudik• B.) The Glenn Pool• C.) The Nellie Johnstone

• 3.) What is the name of the underground pool that provides the oil for the oil wells in Oklahoma?

• A.) The Glenn Pool• B.) The Mid Continent Oil Region• C.) The Phillips 66 Oil Field

• 4.) What is oil called when it is first taken out of the ground?

• A.) Refined Oil• B.) Crude Oil• C.) Refined petroleum

• 5.) What happens to the oil after it is taken out of the ground?

• A.) Its sent to refineries• B.) It is ready to use as a fuel• C.) It is ready to be used for electricity

• 6.) What is built to hold up the pipes, • used to drill deep into the earth?• A.) Storage Tank• B.) Pumper• C.) Oil Derricks

• 7.) What large oil field helped make Tulsa the “Oil Capital of the World”?

• A.) The Glenn Pool• B.) The Mid Continent Oil Region• C.) The Phillips 66 Oil Field

• 8.) What type of machinery pumps the oil out of the ground?

• A.) Storage Tank• B.) Pumper• C.) Oil Derricks

• 9.) About how many oil wells have been drilled in Oklahoma?

• A.) 1,000,000• B.) 1000• C.) 100

• 10.) About how many people does the petroleum industry employ in Oklahoma?

• A.) About 5000• B.) About 50,000• C.) about 500,000

Page 73: Learning Goals The students will understand the oil boom in Oklahoma

Chapter 17 Section 3 Quiz• 1.) What was the name of the most

famous Oil Well?

• 2.) What was the name of the First Oil well drilled in Oklahoma and where was it located?

• 3.) What is the name of the underground pool that provides the oil for the oil wells in Oklahoma?

• 4.) What is oil called when it is first taken out of the ground?

• 5.) What happens to the oil after it is taken out of the ground?

• 6.) What is built to hold up the pipes, • used to drill deep into the earth?

• 7.) What large oil field helped make Tulsa the “Oil Capital of the World”?

• 8.) What type of machinery pumps the oil out of the ground?

• 9.) About how many oil wells have been drilled in Oklahoma?

• 10.) About how many people does the petroleum industry employ in Oklahoma?