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History of Petroleum AbstractsThe late 1950s was not a good time for the petroleum industry. Following the resolution of the Suez crisis of 1956, a surplus of crude developed. Declining oil prices and price wars at the gasoline pumps eroded the economics of the industry. In this economic framework, information managers at several major oil companies saw the need for a cost-saving, centralized information service. They envisioned a periodical containing abstracts of technical articles and patents in the area of petroleum exploration and production.
Walker appointed Dr. E. T. Guerrero, then Chair of Petroleum
Engineering, to organize and direct the new service. Guerrero
began the tasks of recruiting staff to build an organization,
working with subscribers to design the service, and solving
countless problems associated with starting a new publication.
Volume 1, Number 1 of the weekly
Petroleum Abstracts bulletin was published on January 7, 1961.
From 1961 through 1964, subscribers to Petroleum Abstracts
received the weekly bulletin and abstract card sets derived from
that publication. During 1964, a
retrospective retrieval system was designed that would make use of the best of
available technology. The result was a new
retrieval service, available for an additional subscription fee.
The foundation of this service was the Exploration and Production
Thesaurus, created to define the terminology of the petroleum E&P
industry.
In the mid-1970s, the information industry began to adopt a
new paradigm -- online searching. Previously, most retrospective
searching had been done locally, utilizing the sequential search
programs of the era. Online searching made use of two new
technologies: direct access computer data storage and long-haul,
value-added telecommunication networks.
Initially, Petroleum Abstracts subscribers were skeptical of
the economics of online searching. In early 1975, intense
discussions were held with the service's industry advisory
council about making the material contained on PA's Master Record
Tapes available through one of the online services. The result of
these discussions was the establishment of the TULSA file on the
ORBIT search service in October 1975. TULSA initially contained
only citations for the abstracts published from 1965
(the first entry number was 50,001) and was updated monthly.
In 1981, PA made a major improvement to the TULSA file by
adding abstract text from abstracts published in the Petroleum
Abstracts bulletin since 1978, plus some 20,000 abstracts in the
technical area of enhanced recovery that were published from 1965
through 1977. In addition, a weekly updating frequency was
initiated. Recently, the full complement of abstracts from 1965 through
1977 was added to the file.
Petroleum Abstracts entered the 1990s well-established as
the leading abstracting and indexing service for the exploration
and production sector of the petroleum industry. Most of
the world's largest E&P companies and national oil companies, and
a significant number of Service and Supply companies, are today
subscribers.
Petroleum Abstracts has also continued to keep
abreast of developments in information technology.
In a major break from the past, all of PA's products are now electonically
distributed. The weekly bulletion is sent by electronic mail, either in full or with selective sections. The two thesauri and their supplements
have been replaced by the web-based search aids product, Bricks.
These developments have provided a major improvement in usability and
economy to PA's subscribers.
This brief history has, of necessity, failed to mention
dozens of people who made significant contributions to the
service. Their efforts have made Petroleum Abstracts what it is
today: a vigorous service, adapting technology to achieve its
mission of providing the best in information services and
products for the petroleum exploration and production industry.
For a more detailed history, download John A. Bailey's "It Has to be Good: A History of the Petroleum Abstracts Service at The University of Tulsa" (pdf format). |
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