Hostname: page-component-788cddb947-nxk7g Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-10-15T17:13:46.493Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Extraction Not Creation: The History of Offshore Petroleum in the Gulf of Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2015

Abstract

Offshore development is one of the most important but least analyzed chapters in the history of the petroleum industry, and the Gulf of Mexico is the most explored, drilled, and developed offshore petroleum province in the world. This essay examines offshore oil and gas development in the Gulf of Mexico, highlighting the importance of access and how the unique geology and geography of the Gulf shaped both access and technology. Interactions between technology, capital, geology, and the political structure of access in the Gulf of Mexico generated a functionally and regionally complex extractive industry that repeatedly resolved the material and economic contradictions of expanding into deeper water. This was not achieved, however, simply through technological miracles or increased mastery over the environment, as industry experts and popular accounts often imply. The industry moved deeper only by more profoundly adapting to the environment, not by transcending its limits. This essay diverges from celebratory narratives about offshore development and from interpretations that emphasize the social construction of the environment. It challenges the storyline of market-driven technology and its miraculous ability to expand and create petroleum abundance in the Gulf.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2007. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography of Works Cited

Bartley, Ernest, R. The Tidelands Oil Controversy: A Legal and Historical Analysis. Austin, Tex., 1953.Google Scholar
Blair,John, M. The Control of Oil. New York, 1978.Google Scholar
Boué, Juan Carlos, and Luyando, Gerardo U.S. Gulf Offshore Oil: Petroleum Leasing and Taxation and Their Impact on Industry Structure, Competition, Production, and Fiscal Revenues. Oxford, 2002.Google Scholar
Bunker, Stephen G. Underdeveloping the Amazon: Extraction, Unequal Exchange, and the Failure of the Modern State. Urbana, 3, 1985.Google Scholar
Bunker, Stephen G., and Ciccantell, Paul S. Globalization and the Race for Resources. Baltimore, Md., 2005.Google Scholar
Burleson, Clyde W. Deep Challenge! The True Epic Story ofOur Quest for Energy Beneath the Sea. Houston, 1999.Google Scholar
Campbell, Colin J. The Coming Oil Crisis. Brentwood, U.K., 1997.Google Scholar
Ciccantell, Paul S., Smith, David A. and Seidman, Gay, eds. Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy. Oxford, 2005.Google Scholar
Cronon, William. Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. New York, 1991.Google Scholar
Deffeyes, Kenneth S. Hubbert’s Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage. Princeton, N.J., 2001.Google Scholar
Dodd, William J. Peapatch Politics: The Earl Long Era in Louisiana Politics. Baton Rouge, La., 1991.Google Scholar
Farrow, R. Scott. Managing the Outer Continental Shelf Lands: Oceans of Controversy. New York, 1990.Google Scholar
Freudenberg, William R. and Gramling, Robert Oil in Troubled Waters: Perceptions, Politics, and the Battle Over Offshore Drilling.Albany, N.Y., 1994.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Craufurd D. ed. Energy Policy in Perspective: Today’s Problems, Yesterday’s Solutions. Washington, D.C., 1981.Google Scholar
Gramling, Robert. Oil on the Edge: Offshore Development, Conflict, Gridlock. Albany, N.Y., 1996.Google Scholar
Hallowell, Christopher. Holding Back the Sea: The Struggle for America’s Natural Legacy on the Gulf Coast. New York, 2001.Google Scholar
Hallowell, Christopher. People of the Bayou: Cajun Life in Lost America. Gretna, La., 2003.Google Scholar
Harvey, David. The Limits to Capital. Chicago, 1982.Google Scholar
Hollick, Ann L.U.S. Foreign Policy and the Law ofthe Sea. Princeton, N.J., 1981.Google Scholar
Jeansonne, Glen. Leander Perez: Boss of the Delta. Baton Rouge, La., 1977.Google Scholar
Kallman, Robert E., and Wheeler, Eugene D. Coastal Crude: In a Sea of Conflict. San Luis Obispo, Calif., 1984.Google Scholar
Klare, Michael T. Resource Wars: The New Landscape of Global Conflict. New York, 2001.Google Scholar
Kurtz, Michael L. and Peoples, Morgan D. Long, Earl K. The Saga of Uncle Earl and Louisiana Politics. Baton Rouge, La., 1990.Google Scholar
Oil & Gas Journal.Bob Tippee, Ed. International Petroleum Encyclopedia. Tulsa, Okla., 2001.Google Scholar
Olien, Roger M., and Davids, Diana Olien. Oil and Ideology: The Cultural Creation of the American Petroleum Industry. Chapel Hill, N.C., 2000.Google Scholar
Owen, Edgar Wesley. Trek ofthe Oil Finders: A History of Exploration for Petroleum. Tulsa, Okla., 1975.Google Scholar
Pratt, Joseph A., Priest, Tyler, and Castaneda, Christopher Offshore Pioneers: Brown & Root and the History of Offshore Oil and Gas. Houston, 1997.Google Scholar
Priest, Tyler. The Offshore Imperative: Shell Oil’s Search for Petroleum in Postwar America. College Station, Tex., 2007.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, Nathan. Technology and American Economic Growth. New York, 1972.Google Scholar
Rozwadowski, Helen M. Fathoming the Ocean: The Discovery and Exploration ofthe Deep Sea. Cambridge, Mass., 2005.Google Scholar
Sabin, Paul. Crude Politics: The California Oil Market, 1900–1940. Berkeley, Calif., 2005.Google Scholar
Tidwell, Mike. Bayou Farewell: The Rich Life and Tragic Death of Louisiana’s Cajun Coast. New York, 2003.Google Scholar
Veldman, Hans E., and Lagers, George H.G.. 50 Years Offshore. Tulsa, Okla., 1997.Google Scholar
Worster, Donald, ed. The Ends of the Earth: Perspectives on Modern Environmental History. Cambridge, 1988.Google Scholar
Barber, William J. “The Eisenhower Energy Policy: Reluctant Intervention”. In Energy Policy in Perspective: Today’s Problems, Yesterday’s Solutions, ed. Goodwin, Craufurd D. Washington, D.C., 1981, pp. 205–86.Google Scholar
Baxter, Vern. “The Effects of Industry Governance on Offshore Oil Development in the Gulf of Mexico.International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 21, no. 2 (1997): 238–58.Google Scholar
Christiane, Bjornland, Hilde. “The Economic Effects of North Sea Oil on the Manufacturing Sector”. Scottish Journal ofPolitical Economy 45, no. 5 (1998): 553–85.Google Scholar
Black, Brian. “Oil Creek as Industrial Apparatus: Re-creating the Industrial Process Through the Landscape of Pennsylvania’s Oil Boom”. Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 210–29.Google Scholar
Bohi, R. Douglas. “Technological Improvement in Petroleum Exploration and Development.” In Productivity in Natural Resource Industries: Improvement through Innovation, ed. David Simpson, R. Washington, D.C., 1999, pp. 73108.Google Scholar
Bunker, Stephen G. “Staples, Links, and Poles in the Construction of Regional Development Theories”. Sociological Forum, no.4 4 (1989): 589610.Google Scholar
Cook, Mark. “North Sea Oil and Its Impact on the U.K. Economy”. Contemporary Review 248, no. 1442 (1986): 138–41.Google Scholar
Elkind, Sarah S. “Public Oil, Private Oil: The Tidelands Oil Controversy, World War II, and Control of the Environment” In The Way We ReallyWere: The Golden State in the Second World War, ed. Lotchin, Roger W. Urbana, 3. 2000, pp. 120–42.Google Scholar
Johnman, Lewis. and Murphy, Hugh. “Triumph of Failure. British Shipbuilding and the Offshore Structures Market, 1960-1990: A Case Study of Scott Lithgow Limited”. International Journal of Maritime History 14, no. 1 (2002): 6392.Google Scholar
Mcbride, G.I. “Drilling Barges”. Drilling and Production Practice. American Petroleum Institute, New York, 1935, pp. 4046.Google Scholar
Miller, Gregory Blaine. “Louisiana’s Tidelands Controversy: The United States of America V. State of Louisiana Maritime Boundary Cases”. Louisiana History 38 (Spring 1997): 203–21.Google Scholar
Nehring, Richard. “Oil and Gas Resources”. In The Gulf of Mexico Basin, ed. Salvador, Amos. Colo, Boulder 1991, pp. 445–94.Google Scholar
Nerheim, Gunnar. “The Condeep Concept: The Development and Breakthrough of Concrete Gravity Platforms”. History of Technology 16 (1994): 1534.Google Scholar
Parks, James M, “Unintended Consequences of Oil Company Research Laboratories.” Oil Industry History 4, no. 1 (2003): 3241.Google Scholar
Priest, Tyler. “A Perpetual Extractive Frontier? The History of Offshore Petroleum in the Gulf of Mexico.” In Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy, ed. Ciccantell, Paul S. Smith, David A. and Seidman, Gay. Oxford, 2005, pp.209–29.Google Scholar
Quam-Wickham, Nancy. “Cities Sacrificed on the Alter of Oil:’ Popular Opposition to Oil Development in 1920s Los Angeles.” Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 189209.Google Scholar
Reifel, M.D. “Offshore Blowouts and Fires.” The TechnologyofOffshore Drilling, Completion and Production, compiled by ETA Offshore Seiminars, Inc., Tulsa, Okla., 1976, pp.239–57.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine Meisner. “The Business-Environment Connection.” Environmental History 10 (Jan. 2005): 7779.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine Meisner, and Sellers, Christopher C. “The Nature of the Firm: Towards an Ecocultural History of Business.” Business History Review 73 (Winter 1999): 577600.Google Scholar
Sabin, Paul. “Searching for Middle Ground: Native Communities and Oil Extraction in the Northern and Central Ecuadoran Amazon, 1967–1993.” Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 144–68.Google Scholar
Santiago, Myrna. “Rejecting Progress in Paradise: Huastecas, the Environment, and the Oil Industry in Veracruz, Mexico, 1900-1935.” Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 16988.Google Scholar
Stine, Jeffrey K. and Tarr, Joel A. “At the Intersection of Histories: Technology and the Environment.” Technologyand Culture 39 (Oct. 1998): 160–40.Google Scholar
Worster, Donald. “Transformations of the Earth: Toward an Agroecological Perspective in History.” Journal ofAmerican History 76 (March 1990): 10871106.Google Scholar
Wright, Gavin. The Origins of American Industrial Success, 1879-1940. American Economic Review 80 (Sept. 1990):651–68.Google Scholar
Antosh, Nelson. “Foreign Drilling Stealing Gulf’s Thunder.” Houston Chronicle, 6May 2004, p. B1.Google Scholar
At Issue: Land Access.” Shell News 5 (1981): 1819.Google Scholar
Attanasi, E.D., and Drew, L. J.. “Offshore Exploration Performance and Industry Change.” Journal of Petroleum Technology (March 1984): 440.Google Scholar
Bourne, Joel K Jr. “Gone with the Water.” National Geographic (Oct. 2004): 88105.Google Scholar
Carroll, Chris. “In Hot Water.” National Geographic (Aug. 2005): 7285.Google Scholar
Disputed Louisiana Lease Looks Hot.” Oil & Gas Journal (5 May 1958): 7273.Google Scholar
Dykstra, Bouwe. “Costs, Allowable Rate Hinders Offshore Work.” Drilling (Aug. 1959): 65, 114.Google Scholar
“First Offering of Continental Shelf Leases Brings High Bonuses.” World Petroleum (Nov. 1954): 86.Google Scholar
First Well in Gulf of Mexico was Drilled Just 25 Years Ago.” Offshore (Oct. 1963): 1719.Google Scholar
Godec, Michael L., Vello, A.Kuuskraa. and Kuck, Brian T. “How U.S. Gulf of Mexico Development, Finding, Cost Trends Have Evolved.Oil & Gas Journal (6 May 2002): 5260.Google Scholar
Island on Stilts.” Shell News (Feb. 1952): 1113.Google Scholar
Kaiser, Mark J., and Pulsipher, Allan G. “Various Factors Affect Severance Selection.” Oil & Gas Journal (27 Sept. 2004): 4152.Google Scholar
Mcgee, Dean A. “Economics of Offshore Drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.” Offshore Drilling (Feb. 1955): 16.Google Scholar
Mouawad, Jad. “Oil Explorers Searching Ever More Remote Areas.” New York Times, 9 Sept. 2004, pp. B1, B4.Google Scholar
Na Kika Topsides on the Move in the Gulf of Mexico.” Go Gulf Magazine (May/June 2003): 2425.Google Scholar
No. 1 Gulf Field Growing Fast.” Oil & Gas Journal (18 June 1956): 139.Google Scholar
Offshore Drilling Gets Better Sea Legs.” Business Week (18 Aug. 1962): 101.Google Scholar
Offshore Louisiana: Fabulous Industry within an Industry.” Ocean Industry (June 1966): 3841.Google Scholar
Oil Firms Spend Record Amount for Gulf Leases.” Wall Street Journal 1 Oct. 1980,pp. 415.Google Scholar
Pioneers Mark Anniversary of First Commercial Offshore Well.” Ocean Industry (Dec. 1977): 4345.Google Scholar
Pittman, J. W. “It’s A Boom!Offshore (Oct. 1963): 9.Google Scholar
Rauch, Jonathan. “The New Old Economy: Oil, Computers, and the Reinvention of the Earth.” Atlantic Monthly (Jan. 2001): 3549.Google Scholar
Rist, Curtis. “Why We’ll Never Run Out of Oil.” Discover 20 (June 1999): 8087.Google Scholar
Ryser, Jeff. “Hot Play in the Gulf.” Texas Business (3 Aug. 1995): 35.Google Scholar
Sandrea, Ivan. “Deepwater Oil Discovery Rate May Have Peaked; Production Peak May Follow in 10 Years.” Oil & Gas Journal (26 July 2004): 1823.Google Scholar
Spector, Mike. “Oil Rigs Stage Exodus from Gulf of Mexico.” Wall Street Journal, 5 July 2006, p. C 1.Google Scholar
State Takes Long Road to Share in Oil Revenue.” Times-Picayune, 6 Dec. 2006, p. 1.Google Scholar
Taylor, Alex III. “Oil Forever.” Fortune (22 Nov. 1999): 193–94.Google Scholar
Thorpe, Helen. “Oil and Water.” Texas Monthly (Feb. 1996): 9093, 139–145.Google Scholar
Williams, Bob. “Debate Over Peak-Oil Issue Boiling Over, With Major Implications for Industry, Society.” Oil & Gas Journal (14 July 2003): 1829.Google Scholar
Wilson, Howard M. “Drillers Face Offshore Deadline with 40 Leases to Test.” Oil & Gas Journal (11 April 1996): 4851.Google Scholar
Zeppa, Joe. “What is the Outlook for Drilling in the Gulf of Mexico?Drilling (Dec. 1959): 59.Google Scholar
National Research Council, Marine Board, Assembly of Engineering, Committee on Assessment of Safety in OCS Activities. Safety and Offshore Oil. Washington, D.C., 1981.Google Scholar
Shell Oil Company. “Shell in the U.S.: 1999 Annual Review.” Houston, 1999.Google Scholar
Bankston, Gene, interview with author, 3 Dec. 1999.Google Scholar
Forrest, Mike, interview with author, 29 June 1999.Google Scholar
Foster, Joe, interview with author and Joseph A. Pratt, 22 April 2002.Google Scholar
Hirsch, Robert, interview with author, 26 Nov. 2003.Google Scholar
Hughson, B. B., interview with author, 24 June 2002.Google Scholar
Cohen, Dave. “Jack-2 and the Lower Tertiary of the Gulf of Mexico.” Oil Drum (11 Sept. 2006). Available at http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2006/9/8/11274/83638.Google Scholar
Davis, Don. “From the Marshes to Deepwater, Louisiana’s Hydrocarbon Infrastructure is At Risk.” Available at http://www.epa.gov/oilspill/pdfs/d_davis_04.pdf./ Google Scholar
Forrest, Mike. “Bright Idea Still Needed Persistence.” AAPG Explorer On Line (May 2000). Available at http://www.aapg.org/explorer/wildcat/2000/wildcat05.cfm./ Google Scholar
‘“Toast Was on the Breakfast Menu.”’ AAPG Explorer on Line (June 2000). Available at http://www.aapg.org/explorer/wildcat/2000/wildcat06.cfm./ Google Scholar
Michels, Thomas J. “Small Innovations Combine for Big Success in the Offshore Industry.” Sea Technology (Aug. 2000). Available online at http://www.seatechnology.com./ Google Scholar
Minerals Management Service. “Offshore Stats and Facts.” Available at http://www.mms.gov/stats/OCSproduction.htm./ Google Scholar
Sniekus, Darius. “Offshore Production Rocket on the Launchpad.” Offshore Engineer (1 April 2004). Available at www.oilonline.com/news/features/oe/20040401 Unpublished WorksGoogle Scholar
Banta, Brady Michael. “The Regulation and Conservation of Petroleum Resources in Louisiana, 1901–1940.” Ph.D. diss., Louisiana State University, 1981.Google Scholar
Corts, Kenneth S. The Offshore Drilling Industry, HBS Case Services, 387-020. Harvard Business School, Cambridge, Mass., 1999.Google Scholar
Dougherty, Elmer L., Lawrence, A. Bruckner, and Lohrenz, John. “Cumulative Bonus and Production Profiles with Time for Different Competitive Bidders: Federal Offshore Oil and Gas Leases.” Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) Preprint 7134, 1978.Google Scholar
Dunn, F. P. “Deepwater Production: 1950–2000.” OTC 7627, Proceedings of the Offshore Technology Conference, Houston, May 1994.Google Scholar
Holmes, D.A. “1970-1986 Lookback of Offshore Lease Sales Gulf of Mexico Cenozoic.” Interoffice Memorandum, Shell Offshore Inc. (24 Aug. 1987).Google Scholar
Kreidler, Tai Deckner. “The Offshore Petroleum Industry: The Formative Years, 1945–1962.” Ph.D. diss., Texas Tech University, 1997.Google Scholar
Lester, Charles Frederick. “The Search for Dialogue in the Administrative State: The Politics, Policy, and Law of Offshore Oil Development.” Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1992.Google Scholar
Nanz, R.H., Vice President, Exploration, Shell Oil Company. “The Offshore Imperative: The Need for and Potential of Offshore Exploration.” Paper presented to Colloquium on Conventional Energy Sources and the Environment, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, April 30, 1975.Google Scholar
Rankin, John. “History of Federal OCS Leasing.” 1996.Google Scholar
Toft, Anders. “Design of Drilling Contracts - Economic Incentives and Contractor’s Focus on HSE.” Society of Petroleum Engineers International Conference on Health, Safety, & Environment, Calgary, Alberta, 2004.Google Scholar
State Mineral Board of Louisiana. Biennial Reports. Baton Rouge, La., 1940–1946.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Interior. Central Classified Files, Box 134 (1969–72), Box 513 (1954–1959), Record Group 48, Records of the Secretary of the Interior, National Archives and Records Administration, II, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
United States v. Louisiana et al. 363 U.S. 1 (1960).Google Scholar
Bartley, Ernest, R. The Tidelands Oil Controversy: A Legal and Historical Analysis. Austin, Tex., 1953.Google Scholar
Blair,John, M. The Control of Oil. New York, 1978.Google Scholar
Boué, Juan Carlos, and Luyando, Gerardo U.S. Gulf Offshore Oil: Petroleum Leasing and Taxation and Their Impact on Industry Structure, Competition, Production, and Fiscal Revenues. Oxford, 2002.Google Scholar
Bunker, Stephen G. Underdeveloping the Amazon: Extraction, Unequal Exchange, and the Failure of the Modern State. Urbana, 3, 1985.Google Scholar
Bunker, Stephen G., and Ciccantell, Paul S. Globalization and the Race for Resources. Baltimore, Md., 2005.Google Scholar
Burleson, Clyde W. Deep Challenge! The True Epic Story ofOur Quest for Energy Beneath the Sea. Houston, 1999.Google Scholar
Campbell, Colin J. The Coming Oil Crisis. Brentwood, U.K., 1997.Google Scholar
Ciccantell, Paul S., Smith, David A. and Seidman, Gay, eds. Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy. Oxford, 2005.Google Scholar
Cronon, William. Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. New York, 1991.Google Scholar
Deffeyes, Kenneth S. Hubbert’s Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage. Princeton, N.J., 2001.Google Scholar
Dodd, William J. Peapatch Politics: The Earl Long Era in Louisiana Politics. Baton Rouge, La., 1991.Google Scholar
Farrow, R. Scott. Managing the Outer Continental Shelf Lands: Oceans of Controversy. New York, 1990.Google Scholar
Freudenberg, William R. and Gramling, Robert Oil in Troubled Waters: Perceptions, Politics, and the Battle Over Offshore Drilling.Albany, N.Y., 1994.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Craufurd D. ed. Energy Policy in Perspective: Today’s Problems, Yesterday’s Solutions. Washington, D.C., 1981.Google Scholar
Gramling, Robert. Oil on the Edge: Offshore Development, Conflict, Gridlock. Albany, N.Y., 1996.Google Scholar
Hallowell, Christopher. Holding Back the Sea: The Struggle for America’s Natural Legacy on the Gulf Coast. New York, 2001.Google Scholar
Hallowell, Christopher. People of the Bayou: Cajun Life in Lost America. Gretna, La., 2003.Google Scholar
Harvey, David. The Limits to Capital. Chicago, 1982.Google Scholar
Hollick, Ann L.U.S. Foreign Policy and the Law ofthe Sea. Princeton, N.J., 1981.Google Scholar
Jeansonne, Glen. Leander Perez: Boss of the Delta. Baton Rouge, La., 1977.Google Scholar
Kallman, Robert E., and Wheeler, Eugene D. Coastal Crude: In a Sea of Conflict. San Luis Obispo, Calif., 1984.Google Scholar
Klare, Michael T. Resource Wars: The New Landscape of Global Conflict. New York, 2001.Google Scholar
Kurtz, Michael L. and Peoples, Morgan D. Long, Earl K. The Saga of Uncle Earl and Louisiana Politics. Baton Rouge, La., 1990.Google Scholar
Oil & Gas Journal.Bob Tippee, Ed. International Petroleum Encyclopedia. Tulsa, Okla., 2001.Google Scholar
Olien, Roger M., and Davids, Diana Olien. Oil and Ideology: The Cultural Creation of the American Petroleum Industry. Chapel Hill, N.C., 2000.Google Scholar
Owen, Edgar Wesley. Trek ofthe Oil Finders: A History of Exploration for Petroleum. Tulsa, Okla., 1975.Google Scholar
Pratt, Joseph A., Priest, Tyler, and Castaneda, Christopher Offshore Pioneers: Brown & Root and the History of Offshore Oil and Gas. Houston, 1997.Google Scholar
Priest, Tyler. The Offshore Imperative: Shell Oil’s Search for Petroleum in Postwar America. College Station, Tex., 2007.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, Nathan. Technology and American Economic Growth. New York, 1972.Google Scholar
Rozwadowski, Helen M. Fathoming the Ocean: The Discovery and Exploration ofthe Deep Sea. Cambridge, Mass., 2005.Google Scholar
Sabin, Paul. Crude Politics: The California Oil Market, 1900–1940. Berkeley, Calif., 2005.Google Scholar
Tidwell, Mike. Bayou Farewell: The Rich Life and Tragic Death of Louisiana’s Cajun Coast. New York, 2003.Google Scholar
Veldman, Hans E., and Lagers, George H.G.. 50 Years Offshore. Tulsa, Okla., 1997.Google Scholar
Worster, Donald, ed. The Ends of the Earth: Perspectives on Modern Environmental History. Cambridge, 1988.Google Scholar
Barber, William J. “The Eisenhower Energy Policy: Reluctant Intervention”. In Energy Policy in Perspective: Today’s Problems, Yesterday’s Solutions, ed. Goodwin, Craufurd D. Washington, D.C., 1981, pp. 205–86.Google Scholar
Baxter, Vern. “The Effects of Industry Governance on Offshore Oil Development in the Gulf of Mexico.International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 21, no. 2 (1997): 238–58.Google Scholar
Christiane, Bjornland, Hilde. “The Economic Effects of North Sea Oil on the Manufacturing Sector”. Scottish Journal ofPolitical Economy 45, no. 5 (1998): 553–85.Google Scholar
Black, Brian. “Oil Creek as Industrial Apparatus: Re-creating the Industrial Process Through the Landscape of Pennsylvania’s Oil Boom”. Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 210–29.Google Scholar
Bohi, R. Douglas. “Technological Improvement in Petroleum Exploration and Development.” In Productivity in Natural Resource Industries: Improvement through Innovation, ed. David Simpson, R. Washington, D.C., 1999, pp. 73108.Google Scholar
Bunker, Stephen G. “Staples, Links, and Poles in the Construction of Regional Development Theories”. Sociological Forum, no.4 4 (1989): 589610.Google Scholar
Cook, Mark. “North Sea Oil and Its Impact on the U.K. Economy”. Contemporary Review 248, no. 1442 (1986): 138–41.Google Scholar
Elkind, Sarah S. “Public Oil, Private Oil: The Tidelands Oil Controversy, World War II, and Control of the Environment” In The Way We ReallyWere: The Golden State in the Second World War, ed. Lotchin, Roger W. Urbana, 3. 2000, pp. 120–42.Google Scholar
Johnman, Lewis. and Murphy, Hugh. “Triumph of Failure. British Shipbuilding and the Offshore Structures Market, 1960-1990: A Case Study of Scott Lithgow Limited”. International Journal of Maritime History 14, no. 1 (2002): 6392.Google Scholar
Mcbride, G.I. “Drilling Barges”. Drilling and Production Practice. American Petroleum Institute, New York, 1935, pp. 4046.Google Scholar
Miller, Gregory Blaine. “Louisiana’s Tidelands Controversy: The United States of America V. State of Louisiana Maritime Boundary Cases”. Louisiana History 38 (Spring 1997): 203–21.Google Scholar
Nehring, Richard. “Oil and Gas Resources”. In The Gulf of Mexico Basin, ed. Salvador, Amos. Colo, Boulder 1991, pp. 445–94.Google Scholar
Nerheim, Gunnar. “The Condeep Concept: The Development and Breakthrough of Concrete Gravity Platforms”. History of Technology 16 (1994): 1534.Google Scholar
Parks, James M, “Unintended Consequences of Oil Company Research Laboratories.” Oil Industry History 4, no. 1 (2003): 3241.Google Scholar
Priest, Tyler. “A Perpetual Extractive Frontier? The History of Offshore Petroleum in the Gulf of Mexico.” In Nature, Raw Materials, and Political Economy, ed. Ciccantell, Paul S. Smith, David A. and Seidman, Gay. Oxford, 2005, pp.209–29.Google Scholar
Quam-Wickham, Nancy. “Cities Sacrificed on the Alter of Oil:’ Popular Opposition to Oil Development in 1920s Los Angeles.” Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 189209.Google Scholar
Reifel, M.D. “Offshore Blowouts and Fires.” The TechnologyofOffshore Drilling, Completion and Production, compiled by ETA Offshore Seiminars, Inc., Tulsa, Okla., 1976, pp.239–57.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine Meisner. “The Business-Environment Connection.” Environmental History 10 (Jan. 2005): 7779.Google Scholar
Rosen, Christine Meisner, and Sellers, Christopher C. “The Nature of the Firm: Towards an Ecocultural History of Business.” Business History Review 73 (Winter 1999): 577600.Google Scholar
Sabin, Paul. “Searching for Middle Ground: Native Communities and Oil Extraction in the Northern and Central Ecuadoran Amazon, 1967–1993.” Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 144–68.Google Scholar
Santiago, Myrna. “Rejecting Progress in Paradise: Huastecas, the Environment, and the Oil Industry in Veracruz, Mexico, 1900-1935.” Environmental History 3 (April 1998): 16988.Google Scholar
Stine, Jeffrey K. and Tarr, Joel A. “At the Intersection of Histories: Technology and the Environment.” Technologyand Culture 39 (Oct. 1998): 160–40.Google Scholar
Worster, Donald. “Transformations of the Earth: Toward an Agroecological Perspective in History.” Journal ofAmerican History 76 (March 1990): 10871106.Google Scholar
Wright, Gavin. The Origins of American Industrial Success, 1879-1940. American Economic Review 80 (Sept. 1990):651–68.Google Scholar
Antosh, Nelson. “Foreign Drilling Stealing Gulf’s Thunder.” Houston Chronicle, 6May 2004, p. B1.Google Scholar
At Issue: Land Access.” Shell News 5 (1981): 1819.Google Scholar
Attanasi, E.D., and Drew, L. J.. “Offshore Exploration Performance and Industry Change.” Journal of Petroleum Technology (March 1984): 440.Google Scholar
Bourne, Joel K Jr. “Gone with the Water.” National Geographic (Oct. 2004): 88105.Google Scholar
Carroll, Chris. “In Hot Water.” National Geographic (Aug. 2005): 7285.Google Scholar
Disputed Louisiana Lease Looks Hot.” Oil & Gas Journal (5 May 1958): 7273.Google Scholar
Dykstra, Bouwe. “Costs, Allowable Rate Hinders Offshore Work.” Drilling (Aug. 1959): 65, 114.Google Scholar
“First Offering of Continental Shelf Leases Brings High Bonuses.” World Petroleum (Nov. 1954): 86.Google Scholar
First Well in Gulf of Mexico was Drilled Just 25 Years Ago.” Offshore (Oct. 1963): 1719.Google Scholar
Godec, Michael L., Vello, A.Kuuskraa. and Kuck, Brian T. “How U.S. Gulf of Mexico Development, Finding, Cost Trends Have Evolved.Oil & Gas Journal (6 May 2002): 5260.Google Scholar
Island on Stilts.” Shell News (Feb. 1952): 1113.Google Scholar
Kaiser, Mark J., and Pulsipher, Allan G. “Various Factors Affect Severance Selection.” Oil & Gas Journal (27 Sept. 2004): 4152.Google Scholar
Mcgee, Dean A. “Economics of Offshore Drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.” Offshore Drilling (Feb. 1955): 16.Google Scholar
Mouawad, Jad. “Oil Explorers Searching Ever More Remote Areas.” New York Times, 9 Sept. 2004, pp. B1, B4.Google Scholar
Na Kika Topsides on the Move in the Gulf of Mexico.” Go Gulf Magazine (May/June 2003): 2425.Google Scholar
No. 1 Gulf Field Growing Fast.” Oil & Gas Journal (18 June 1956): 139.Google Scholar
Offshore Drilling Gets Better Sea Legs.” Business Week (18 Aug. 1962): 101.Google Scholar
Offshore Louisiana: Fabulous Industry within an Industry.” Ocean Industry (June 1966): 3841.Google Scholar
Oil Firms Spend Record Amount for Gulf Leases.” Wall Street Journal 1 Oct. 1980,pp. 415.Google Scholar
Pioneers Mark Anniversary of First Commercial Offshore Well.” Ocean Industry (Dec. 1977): 4345.Google Scholar
Pittman, J. W. “It’s A Boom!Offshore (Oct. 1963): 9.Google Scholar
Rauch, Jonathan. “The New Old Economy: Oil, Computers, and the Reinvention of the Earth.” Atlantic Monthly (Jan. 2001): 3549.Google Scholar
Rist, Curtis. “Why We’ll Never Run Out of Oil.” Discover 20 (June 1999): 8087.Google Scholar
Ryser, Jeff. “Hot Play in the Gulf.” Texas Business (3 Aug. 1995): 35.Google Scholar
Sandrea, Ivan. “Deepwater Oil Discovery Rate May Have Peaked; Production Peak May Follow in 10 Years.” Oil & Gas Journal (26 July 2004): 1823.Google Scholar
Spector, Mike. “Oil Rigs Stage Exodus from Gulf of Mexico.” Wall Street Journal, 5 July 2006, p. C 1.Google Scholar
State Takes Long Road to Share in Oil Revenue.” Times-Picayune, 6 Dec. 2006, p. 1.Google Scholar
Taylor, Alex III. “Oil Forever.” Fortune (22 Nov. 1999): 193–94.Google Scholar
Thorpe, Helen. “Oil and Water.” Texas Monthly (Feb. 1996): 9093, 139–145.Google Scholar
Williams, Bob. “Debate Over Peak-Oil Issue Boiling Over, With Major Implications for Industry, Society.” Oil & Gas Journal (14 July 2003): 1829.Google Scholar
Wilson, Howard M. “Drillers Face Offshore Deadline with 40 Leases to Test.” Oil & Gas Journal (11 April 1996): 4851.Google Scholar
Zeppa, Joe. “What is the Outlook for Drilling in the Gulf of Mexico?Drilling (Dec. 1959): 59.Google Scholar
National Research Council, Marine Board, Assembly of Engineering, Committee on Assessment of Safety in OCS Activities. Safety and Offshore Oil. Washington, D.C., 1981.Google Scholar
Shell Oil Company. “Shell in the U.S.: 1999 Annual Review.” Houston, 1999.Google Scholar
Bankston, Gene, interview with author, 3 Dec. 1999.Google Scholar
Forrest, Mike, interview with author, 29 June 1999.Google Scholar
Foster, Joe, interview with author and Joseph A. Pratt, 22 April 2002.Google Scholar
Hirsch, Robert, interview with author, 26 Nov. 2003.Google Scholar
Hughson, B. B., interview with author, 24 June 2002.Google Scholar
Cohen, Dave. “Jack-2 and the Lower Tertiary of the Gulf of Mexico.” Oil Drum (11 Sept. 2006). Available at http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2006/9/8/11274/83638.Google Scholar
Davis, Don. “From the Marshes to Deepwater, Louisiana’s Hydrocarbon Infrastructure is At Risk.” Available at http://www.epa.gov/oilspill/pdfs/d_davis_04.pdf./ Google Scholar
Forrest, Mike. “Bright Idea Still Needed Persistence.” AAPG Explorer On Line (May 2000). Available at http://www.aapg.org/explorer/wildcat/2000/wildcat05.cfm./ Google Scholar
‘“Toast Was on the Breakfast Menu.”’ AAPG Explorer on Line (June 2000). Available at http://www.aapg.org/explorer/wildcat/2000/wildcat06.cfm./ Google Scholar
Michels, Thomas J. “Small Innovations Combine for Big Success in the Offshore Industry.” Sea Technology (Aug. 2000). Available online at http://www.seatechnology.com./ Google Scholar
Minerals Management Service. “Offshore Stats and Facts.” Available at http://www.mms.gov/stats/OCSproduction.htm./ Google Scholar
Sniekus, Darius. “Offshore Production Rocket on the Launchpad.” Offshore Engineer (1 April 2004). Available at www.oilonline.com/news/features/oe/20040401 Unpublished WorksGoogle Scholar
Banta, Brady Michael. “The Regulation and Conservation of Petroleum Resources in Louisiana, 1901–1940.” Ph.D. diss., Louisiana State University, 1981.Google Scholar
Corts, Kenneth S. The Offshore Drilling Industry, HBS Case Services, 387-020. Harvard Business School, Cambridge, Mass., 1999.Google Scholar
Dougherty, Elmer L., Lawrence, A. Bruckner, and Lohrenz, John. “Cumulative Bonus and Production Profiles with Time for Different Competitive Bidders: Federal Offshore Oil and Gas Leases.” Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) Preprint 7134, 1978.Google Scholar
Dunn, F. P. “Deepwater Production: 1950–2000.” OTC 7627, Proceedings of the Offshore Technology Conference, Houston, May 1994.Google Scholar
Holmes, D.A. “1970-1986 Lookback of Offshore Lease Sales Gulf of Mexico Cenozoic.” Interoffice Memorandum, Shell Offshore Inc. (24 Aug. 1987).Google Scholar
Kreidler, Tai Deckner. “The Offshore Petroleum Industry: The Formative Years, 1945–1962.” Ph.D. diss., Texas Tech University, 1997.Google Scholar
Lester, Charles Frederick. “The Search for Dialogue in the Administrative State: The Politics, Policy, and Law of Offshore Oil Development.” Ph.D. diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1992.Google Scholar
Nanz, R.H., Vice President, Exploration, Shell Oil Company. “The Offshore Imperative: The Need for and Potential of Offshore Exploration.” Paper presented to Colloquium on Conventional Energy Sources and the Environment, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware, April 30, 1975.Google Scholar
Rankin, John. “History of Federal OCS Leasing.” 1996.Google Scholar
Toft, Anders. “Design of Drilling Contracts - Economic Incentives and Contractor’s Focus on HSE.” Society of Petroleum Engineers International Conference on Health, Safety, & Environment, Calgary, Alberta, 2004.Google Scholar
State Mineral Board of Louisiana. Biennial Reports. Baton Rouge, La., 1940–1946.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Interior. Central Classified Files, Box 134 (1969–72), Box 513 (1954–1959), Record Group 48, Records of the Secretary of the Interior, National Archives and Records Administration, II, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
United States v. Louisiana et al. 363 U.S. 1 (1960).Google Scholar