『Massive Natural Gas and Oil Reserves Discovered in Texas, New Mexico, and Rocky Mountains as US Energy Demand Surges』のカバーアート

Massive Natural Gas and Oil Reserves Discovered in Texas, New Mexico, and Rocky Mountains as US Energy Demand Surges

Massive Natural Gas and Oil Reserves Discovered in Texas, New Mexico, and Rocky Mountains as US Energy Demand Surges

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概要

The United States Geological Survey recently released an assessment estimating 28.3 trillion cubic feet of undiscovered natural gas and 1.6 billion barrels of oil in the Woodford and Barnett shale formations spanning Texas and New Mexico. According to the United States Geological Survey, these vast resources lie in unconventional shale deposits, assessed using advanced methodologies for continuous oil and gas, highlighting untapped potential in key energy-producing states amid ongoing demands for domestic fuels.

In southwestern Wyoming and northwestern Colorado, the United States Geological Survey also assessed the Phosphoria Total Petroleum System, projecting 666 billion cubic feet of gas and 3 million barrels of oil. This evaluation underscores emerging patterns of substantial hydrocarbon reserves in the Rocky Mountain region, supporting long-term energy security as exploration technologies improve.

Record natural gas withdrawals gripped the Lower 48 states during the week ending January 30, 2026, amid Winter Storm Fern, with working stocks dropping 360 billion cubic feet, the largest weekly net withdrawal in the history of the Energy Information Administration's Weekly Natural Gas Storage Report. Energy Information Administration data reveals this exceeded the five-year average by 89 percent, driven by surging heating demands and production halts from severe winter weather, revealing geology's intersection with climate extremes in stressing underground reservoirs.

Extreme fire activity scorched Nebraska grasslands in March 2026, fueled by dry, warm, and windy conditions across the Great Plains, as reported by NASA Earth science updates. These blazes exposed geological vulnerabilities in sediment layers and soils, accelerating erosion patterns in fire-prone regions.

Paleontologists unearthed roughly 20 feet of a long-necked dinosaur skeleton in a yet-to-be-specified U.S. site, with the National Park Service noting removal of 3,000 pounds of rocks and fossils between mid-September and mid-October 2025, suspecting more bones remain buried. This discovery points to ongoing revelations in American fossil records.

Meanwhile, the United States Geological Survey warns that a solar superstorm akin to the 1859 Carrington Event could disrupt telecommunications and power grids nationwide, particularly in the Midwest and East Coast, due to geomagnetic impacts on transmission systems. Such events highlight emerging insights into space weather's influence on Earth's geological infrastructure.

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