Allen                                 
Atlantic                               
Bowlegs                               
Burbank                              
Camrick                               
Cement. -.Cumberland                           Cushing                  
           Dover-Hennessey                       Edmond, West           
            Enid, Northeast                       Eola-Robberson        
              Garber                              Glenn Pool            
              Golden Trend                         Healdton             
              Hewitt                              Knox                  
            Loco                                Moore, West             
           Muskogee                            Naval Reserve -Oklahoma City
                       Payne                               Postle       
                       Putnam                             Ringwood      
                     Seminole                             Sho-Vel-Tum   
                     Slick                                Sooner Trend  
                      St. Louis                            Stroud       
                      Other fields                           
1,445 
1,450 
1,110 
13,685 
2,322 
3,340 
1,133 
2,828 
9,010 
1,150 
1,460 
3,384 
751 
3,303 
13,427 
2,506 
2,461 
1,838 
1,848 
685 
1,101 
2,170 
2,300 
2,274 
470 
912 
1,340 
785 
24,995 
1,129 
 
1,535 
702 
93,113 
2,150 
1,363 
1,208 
13,417 
2,225 
3,040 
1,141 
3,075 
8,667 
1,052 
2,148 
3,433 
730 
3,851 
14,292 
2,600 
2,895 
1,887 
1,734 
1,129 
1,047 
1,702 
2,112 
1,969 
1,752 
2,076 
1,314 
968 
26,660 
1,114 
  
1,470 
1,161 
87,142 
2,192 
1,190 
1,048 
12,017 
2,166 
2,831 
1,039 
3,110 
(2) 
1,605 
2,43 
3,473 
1,096 
4,092 
13,544 
2,677 
2,974 
1,687 
1,788 
1,014 
1,089 
1,686 
1,978 
1,722 
2,105 
3,081 
1,074 
1,122 
28,769 
1,180 
9,680 
1,454 
1,151 
85,664 
2,636 
998 
952 
10,655 
1,881 
2,671 
990 
3,499 
 
1,961 
2,196 
3,632 
1,258 
4,153 
13,440 
3,036 
3,764 
1.612 
2,138 
921 
1,454 
1,587 
1,922 
2,076 
3,307 
4,879 
5,533 
1.115 
30,712 
1,147 
11,496 
1,406 
1,220 
94,592 
2,773 
 
847 
8,795 
1,597 
2,609 
 
3,978 
 
1,417 
2,170 
4,492 
1.144 
3,838 
12,952 
3,386 
4,072 
1,525 
1,874 
 
 -. 
1,214 
1,941 
2,338 
4,502 
6,130 
4,969 
1,025 
32,232 
 
16,753 
1,467 
1,239 
99,470 
Total                           
201,962 
202,524 
203,441 
224,839 
230,749 
 THE M!NERAL INDUSTRY OF OKLAHOMA 655 
 
Table 12.—Production of crude petroleum, by fields 
(Thousand 42-gallon barrels) 
 
Field 1 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 
1 Based on Oil and Gas Journal data adjusted to Bureau of Mines total. Consolidated
into Sooner Trend in April 1965. 
 
 Thirteen operating refineries had a total daily operating capacity of 425,500
barrels of crude oil and 218,610 barrels of cracked gasoline on January 1,
1967, up from 421,830 barrels and 158,790 barrels, respectively, a year earlier.
Trumbull Asphalt Co., Oklahoma City, shut down its 900barrel-per-day crude
oil refinery. Crude oil runs to stills, total receipts, intrastate receipts,
and yearend stocks for 1966 and 1967, in thousand barrels are shown in the
following tabulation: 
 
Runs 
Total 
Intra- 
Stocks 
Year  to stills 
receipts 
state 
receipts 
Dec. 
31 
 1966 149,817 149,588 109,850 1,352 
 1967 154,526 155,056 115,427 1,819 
 
 
 
 Apco Oil Corp., completed installation of a 1,645-barrel-per-day hydrofluoric
acid alkylation unit at its Cyril refinery. Sunray DX Oil Co. increased catalytic
reforming capacity to 41,500 barrels per stream day 
at its Tulsa refinery. The company reportedly was revamping and replacing
existing alkylation, crude vacuum tower, and merox units as its Duncan refinery.

 
NONMETALS 
 
 Nine nonmetals produced in 1967 were valued at $48.6 million, about 4.8
percent of the State's total mineral production value, representing a decline
of 4 percent in value from 1966. 
 
 Cement.—Oklahoma construction activity in 1967 was about 13 percent
below that of 1966 and accounted for much of the reduced output of cement
in 1967. Cement was processed from the Pitkin Limestone of the Mississippian
System in Mayes County, the Viola Limestone of the Ordovician System in Pontotoc
County, and the Oologah Limestone of the Pennsylvanian System in Rogers County.

 
 Clays.—Clay and shale were mined from sources near the surface primarily
for use