deep treasure cache.... what could this grayish-white subtance be?

Diggin-N-Dumps

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Sep 9, 2009
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It makes sense now that Cache Cow is digging an oil well up. Now I feel like a real Dweeb thinking he was hot on the trail of King Rooten Tooten's Tomb. By The way Cache Cow did you figure out how to upload them pictures yet.

..No reception at the bottom of the pit
 

San Antone

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Jun 1, 2014
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I hope that I am 100% wrong on cache being on top of an old abandoned gas well. I am merely basing this assumption on the color of the soil, the deep depth he has dug and still getting detector readings and of course the fact that he is in south Louisiana which is riddled with plugged and abandoned gas wells. My hope is that he is on top of a large full treasure chest that has settled over time.
 

Diggin-N-Dumps

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Sep 9, 2009
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I hope that I am 100% wrong on cache being on top of an old abandoned gas well. I am merely basing this assumption on the color of the soil, the deep depth he has dug and still getting detector readings and of course the fact that he is in south Louisiana which is riddled with plugged and abandoned gas wells. My hope is that he is on top of a large full treasure chest that has settled over time.

..I think he is for sure "On" something
 

Higgy

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Jul 21, 2014
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Higgs, in south Louisiana, the rig is set up over the area where the well is to be drilled. Before the well is drilled they set a string of drive pipe. It is usually 24" OD. They pick it up in 40 foot joints with a hydraulic hammer above it. It is then run thru the floor down to the to the ground and hammered down into the soil. They will continue to pick up joints of drive pipe and weld them together and drive them into the ground until it takes between 20 to 25 hits in order to drive it one foot. In some areas you may be able to drive to pipe as much as 300 feet deep. This drive pipe is very heavy about 125 lb/ft and about 1 to 1 1/2 inches thick. The well is then drilled and several other casings are run at different depths and cemented in the hole. If the well is abandoned sometimes the operator (oil company) will try to recover the casing that has been cemented to use on another well. The casings are then cut off above the cement tops and laid down. The drive pipe stays in the hole. The rig sets several plugs as per the Louisiana oil and gas commission. The plug they do not set is the top or last plug. The rig is then moved off. A lease crew along with a track hoe come in and they usually dig down 15' below ground level and cut off the drive pipe. The drive pipe and the 10' or so are filled with cement. Dirt is then used to finish covering up the hole. Sometimes the operator decides not to recover the casing and plugs are set in the last casing that was set and the rig moves off. The lease crew and track hoe comes in and digs down cuts off all the casings and the drive pipe level with each other below the surface. Then the cement is placed in the last string of casing and the hole is covered the same way. There has been instances where the drive pipe will start to settle and slowly drop deeper in the ground, especially after time. If the other casings were cut out and laid down then their tops would not be up at that 15' level. If the other casings were still in place then only the drive pipe would settle and the casing would be viewable.
Cache, if you continue to dig make sure that whoever goes into that hole is tied off. Just in case someone is in the hole and standing over what could possibly be 24" OD drive pipe there may not be much of a cement cap inside that drive pipe and it would be a bad day if someone was to fall in. I hope I am wrong and you find some burried treasure. I also have a Gemini 3 and I have located 3" pipes at 10' deep. Good luck.

Thank you very much for explaining that, SA. I spent some time down in Del Rio, but didnt get very close to oil rigs or anyone in that line of work. Thanks so much for the detailed explanation! :headbang:
 

hvacker

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Aug 18, 2012
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In another state whenever I saw a rig dig a water well this grey/white material was always brought up and was the most prevalent material drilled.
My guess was caliche. (sp) A hard pan deposit.
Those that said a well head, me too.
 

Higgy

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Jul 21, 2014
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Cache Cow, you find that hatch yet?
 

Limitool

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Jun 9, 2013
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Cache Cow, you find that hatch yet?

Cache... whatever you've found either good or bad let us know.... please. If I was in your place I've been doing exactly what you've done. And if it turns out to be a bust... SO BE IT!!! Please just be safe and let us know buddy.... Brad
 

Doodle Bug

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Feb 4, 2013
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I wonder if there are any chemical companies in the area. Soda ash (sp.) is a biproduct of chemical production used largely before the 50's and is grayish-white material. It might be a storage area. (Just speculating).
 

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