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Oil sands and heavy oil | Frontier exploration and development | Natural gas liquids | Natural gas | United States | geography | geology | resources | settlement | petroleum | history of Canada | conventional oil and gas industry | Arctic | offshore petroleum resources | natural gas | Russia | natural gas liquids | extraction facilities | pipeline | bitumen | Athabasca oil sands | non-conventional oil | heavy crude oil | exporting nations | global resources | EIA | oil reserves | Saudi Arabia | proved reserves | oil experts | petroleum industry | oilpatch | petroleum production | national economy | world supply | early uses of petroleum | petroleum | Lake Erie | Ontario | Canada West | incorporation | oil company | Canada | Parliament | December 18 | 1854 | asphalt | naphtha | varnishes | Paris Universal Exhibition | swamp | James Miller Williams in 1873 (Library and Archives Canada). | | James Miller Williams | landman | kerosene | metres | feet | Oil Springs, Ontario | oil field | Pennsylvania | Drake well | August 28 | 1859 | Edwin Drake | reservoir | coal oil | gallons | integrated oil company | Exploration | gusher | February 19 | 1862 | metres | feet | Lake St. Clair | refiner | Petrolia, Ontario | Ohio | automobile | cable-tool method | Java | Peru | Turkey | Egypt | Russia | Venezuela | Persia | Romania | Austria | Germany | Galicia | Poland | First World War | drillers | Nova Scotia | Moncton | New Brunswick | hydrogen sulfide | Union Gas | hydrogen sulfide | Duke Energy | western Canada | Alberta | Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin | George M. Dawson in May 1885. (National Archives of Canada) | | CPR | Medicine Hat | Canadian Pacific Railway | George M. Dawson | Geological Survey of Canada | Medicine Hat | Rudyard Kipling | Athabasca | metres | feet | April 10 | 1910 | Pincher Creek | Okotoks | Waterton Lakes National Park | Lethbridge | Calgary | Turner Valley | Calgary Stock Exchange | condensate | naphtha | story of its development | Paleozoic | metres | feet | blowout | metres | feet | Oklahoma | metres | feet | British Commonwealth | Recoverable oil reserves | British Empire | Canadian Western Natural Gas Company | flaring | Strikers from unemployment relief camps climbing on boxcars to protest social conditions through the On-to-Ottawa Trek, 1935 | | On-to-Ottawa Trek | Depression | Capital investment | mineral rights | Canadian Pacific Railway | April 26 | 1922 | metres | feet | Privy Council | October 1 | Legislature | Ottawa | natural resources | Alberta Energy and Utilities Board | water flooding | sulfur | war effort | Western Canada | Rolla, British Columbia | Peace River Country | second world war | Leduc #1 well | | Imperial Oil | Edmonton | Norman Wells | Northwest Territories | Charles R. Stelck | Devonian | reefs | Norman Wells discovery | Leduc | November 20 | 1946 | metres | feet | drill stem test | metres | feet | February 13 | 1947 | February 12 | May 10 | metres | feet | November 1 | 1989 | Alberta overlies the most highly prolific petroleum-producing sediments of the Western Canada Basin, which stretches from southwestern Manitoba to northeastern BC. Nearly one and a half million square kilometres in area, the basin also covers the southern half of Saskatchewan, most of Alberta and the southwest corner of the Northwest Territories. | | Alberta | sediments | Western Canada Basin | Manitoba | BC | Saskatchewan | Northwest Territories | mud | reservoir | pressure | formations | Geysers | craters | acre | September 9 | 1948 | newsreels | Exploration | seismic activity | geological structures | sandstone | Swan Hills | carbonate rock | Saskatchewan | Norman Wells | Northwest Territories | Manitoba | Midale, Saskatchewan | petroleum traps | Québec | Trois-Rivières, Quebec | Sarnia, Ontario | Whitehorse | Fairbanks | Skagway, Alaska | Watson Lake, Yukon | Caribbean | Interprovincial Pipeline | Enbridge Inc. | Sarnia | security of supply | metres | feet | metres | feet | metres | feet | Zama | Enbridge | Buffalo, N.Y. | Welland, Ontario | Detroit | Toledo, Ohio | protectionist | space heating | continentalism | North American Free Trade Agreement | The route of the TransCanada Pipeline. The yellow lines in Western Canada reflect an acquisition by TransCanada of the gathering system developed by AGTL (later known as Nova Corporation). The red represents Westcoast Transmission's pipelines. Export pipelines stop at the US border, where they connect to US carriers. | | Alberta's Legislature | NOVA Chemicals | Westcoast Transmission | Vancouver | Pacific northwest | Federal Energy Regulatory Commission | Fort St. John | Peace River | TransCanada PipeLines Limited | C.D. Howe | Federal Power Commission | Canadian Shield | TransCanada pipeline | crown corporation | Louis St. Laurent | Regina, Saskatchewan | Winnipeg | Lakehead | Port Arthur, Ontario | Thunder Bay, Ontario | Dryden, Ontario | metres | feet | metres | feet | metres | feet | October 10 | 1958 | October 27 | Siberia | oil sands and heavy oil | northern and offshore frontiers | natural gas sector | natural gas liquids extraction facilities | Oil sands and heavy oil | Frontier exploration and development | Natural gas liquids | Natural gas | barrels | metric tonne | | Energy portal | Energy policy of Canada | Natural gas processing | Science and technology in Canada | Categories | History of the petroleum industry | Petroleum production in Canada | Economic history of Canada | Energy in Canada |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "History of the petroleum industry in Canada".