Anadarko · Late Devonian to Early Mississippian (~360 Ma) · Oklahoma's foundational shale

Woodford
Shale

A Devonian to Mississippian black shale across Oklahoma, and the foundational horizontal target of the SCOOP play in the deep Anadarko Basin.

Anadarko
Primary Basin
SCOOP and STACK
Devonian–Mississippian
Geologic Age
~360 million years
11,000–14,500 ft
Typical Depth
Deepens basinward
Oil and gas
Primary Product
Liquids-rich
SCOOP
Foundational Play
Also a STACK target

The Woodford Shale is a Late Devonian to Early Mississippian black shale that serves as both a source rock and a reservoir across much of Oklahoma. In the deep Anadarko Basin of western Oklahoma, it is the foundational horizontal target of the SCOOP play and a deeper companion to the STACK, developed across Grady, Kingfisher, and Canadian counties among others. It is one of the most-named formations on Oklahoma mineral owners’ wells, which is why understanding it matters when you are trying to read what you have.

01The Rock

Therocks beneath your minerals.

The Woodford was deposited in a deep, oxygen-poor marine setting, which preserved the organic material that later generated oil and gas. That same organic richness makes it both the kitchen that charged many shallower Oklahoma reservoirs and a productive reservoir in its own right once horizontal drilling and modern completions reached it.

Across the Anadarko Basin the Woodford deepens toward the basin axis, commonly falling between roughly 11,000 and 14,500 feet in the SCOOP fairway and shallower on the basin margins. Its thickness and thermal maturity vary across the basin, which is part of why the same formation yields oil and condensate in some areas and a higher proportion of natural gas in others.

Because the Woodford sits beneath younger Mississippian and Pennsylvanian rocks, it is frequently the lowest target in a stack that also includes the Sycamore, the Springer, and the Meramec. Local geology, depth, and maturity drive which of those layers an operator develops first on any given tract.

02Where It Produces

Where theproduction lives.

The Woodford anchored the SCOOP play when horizontal development moved into the deep Anadarko Basin, and it remains a core part of the inventory there. Continental Resources was an early and prominent operator in the SCOOP Woodford, and Devon Energy and other Anadarko operators carry the formation in their development plans alongside the shallower stacked targets.

Woodford wells in the SCOOP tend to produce a liquids-rich mix of oil, condensate, and natural gas, with the balance shifting toward gas in the deeper, more thermally mature parts of the basin. In the STACK area to the northwest, the Woodford is generally a deeper objective beneath the Meramec and Osage.

Development across western Oklahoma is governed by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which sets spacing and handles the pooling process that brings a drilling unit together. The current operator and completed formation on any specific well can be confirmed through the Commission’s public well records.

03For Mineral Owners

Mineral rights in theWoodford.

Mineral owners across the SCOOP and STACK commonly see Woodford wells on their tracts, sometimes alongside Sycamore, Springer, or Meramec wells in the same area. The Woodford is often the deepest producing layer, and a single unit can generate staged royalty income as different formations are developed over the life of the play.

For inheritors with western Oklahoma minerals, the Woodford position is frequently a meaningful part of what a tract represents, because it underlies so much of the basin. Knowing whether your wells are completed in the Woodford or in a shallower formation helps explain what you are receiving and why.

Lease terms and pooling elections across Oklahoma vary by vintage and by tract, and that language can affect net royalty income beyond what the well data alone would suggest. We are happy to walk through what your specific situation looks like alongside the public well records, on a call or by email.

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04 Active Operators

Who is drilling the Woodford today.

Public and private operators currently active in the Anadarko Basin. The current operator on a specific well can be confirmed via the relevant state regulator's public well database.

Have minerals across multiple formations?

Stacked-pay tracts often produce from several wells. We can walk through what you have.

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06Questions Mineral Owners Ask

What peopleactually ask about the Woodford.

Honest answers to the things people most often want to know.

01
Where does the Woodford produce?
The Woodford Shale produces across much of Oklahoma. In the deep Anadarko Basin of western Oklahoma it is the foundational target of the SCOOP play (South Central Oklahoma Oil Province), centered on Grady, Stephens, Garvin, and McClain counties, and it is also developed as a deeper target beneath the STACK play in Kingfisher and Canadian counties. Separate Woodford development occurs in the Arkoma Basin of southeastern Oklahoma. The Oklahoma Corporation Commission well database confirms which formation a specific well is completed in.
02
What is the difference between SCOOP and STACK, and where does the Woodford fit?
SCOOP and STACK are two stacked-pay plays in the Anadarko Basin. SCOOP, in the deeper southern part of the basin, is built on the Woodford alongside the Sycamore and Springer. STACK, to the northwest in Kingfisher and Canadian counties, is led by the Mississippian Meramec and Osage, with the Woodford present as a deeper bench. The Woodford is the common thread underneath both, which is why mineral owners across western Oklahoma so often see it named on their wells.
03
Why is the Woodford co-developed with other formations?
In the SCOOP fairway the Woodford is stacked beneath the Sycamore and Springer, and in the STACK area it sits below the Meramec and Osage. Operators develop these layers together by drilling multiple horizontal wells from the same surface location into different formations. For a mineral owner, that means a single tract can produce royalty income from several wells across more than one formation, each with its own decimal interest.
04
Who operates Woodford wells?
The Anadarko Basin operator base includes Continental Resources, Devon Energy, ConocoPhillips (which acquired Marathon Oil), Camino Natural Resources, Citizen Energy, Ovintiv, Mewbourne Oil, and Mach Natural Resources, among others. Continental was an early mover in the SCOOP Woodford. The Oklahoma Corporation Commission well database confirms the current operator on any specific well.
05
Can I sell mineral rights with Woodford production?
Yes. Mineral rights with Woodford royalty income are bought and sold the same way as any other producing interest. Many Anadarko Basin tracts produce from Woodford wells alongside Sycamore, Springer, or Meramec wells, and the combined production stream is what gets valued. We are happy to look at what you have and walk through what it might be worth.

Find out what your
Woodford
minerals are worth.

Send us what you have, or what you think you have. If your interest is in the Woodford, we can pull operator data, check decimal interest math, and put together a plain-English summary with our reasoning. If it makes sense to go further, we move on your timeline. If not, you have a free breakdown you can take anywhere.

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Geological and operator information about the Woodford Shale on this page is drawn from publicly available sources, including company press releases, SEC filings where applicable, state regulator data, geological surveys, and mainstream news reporting. Reservoir characteristics, depths, and active operator lists can change as development continues. Verify current well status with the relevant state regulator before making any decisions about a lease, division order, or sale.