Jim and Norma Stenslie moved to the quiet town of Napoleon, leaving their friends back in oil country. Jim preached for decades in Western North Dakota, while Norma taught piano and organ in Lutheran churches near Ross. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Watford City is congested much of the day, as traffic from all aspects of the oil fields converge at the cross roads. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / September 26, 2013, Watford City, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIRST PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: Dozens of drilling rigs dot the North Dakota landscape in the Williston Basin and the Bakken Oil Formation. Once the rigs drill holes, several miles deep and then several miles horizontally, hydraulic fracturing technology (“fracking”) is then employed to extract oil and natural gas from the underlying shale formation. Flaring of natural gas is a practice that costs drillers and mineral rights holders hundreds of millions of dollars a year. While pipelines are being built, the cost to build pipelines needed to ship gas to refineries, especially in remote areas, still exceeds the cost of burning the resource off. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Williams County sheriff’s deputy Bruce Coonfield stood in a control room overlooking an open area at the Williams County Jail in Williston. The jail used to house an average of about 20 inmates a night before the oil boom took off in 2008. The jail now accommodates more than 115 prisoners a night on average.] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Floor hand Ray Gerrish worked to make repairs on a drilling rig as the sun rose near the site outside Watford City.] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Watford City, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Sonya Adams enjoyed an evening out at a Williston tavern between work shifts. Adams, 40, left a divorce and 9-year-old son back in southern Idaho to drive an asphalt truck in the Bakken. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Traffic related to servicing the oil boom has increased dramatically, taxing roads that were not designed to carry such a heavy load. These trucks were lined up along a road near Watford City. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Kim Roth taught second grade at Round Prairie Elementary School neat the North Dakota-Montana Border near Williston, but has since moved out of the area to her in-laws’ family farm northeast of Minot. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. Neighbors, family and ranch hands gathered on the Doug Olson ranch near Keene for the annual cattle roundup and branding that is a tradition handed down through generations of North Dakotans in the spring each year. Families take turns helping one another carry out the arduous rite all over the state. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Norma Stenslie and her husband, Jim, left their home in the oil region for a small, quiet town. The couple owned a cabin on the banks of Lake Sakakawea near New Town: “It was heaven. Now all we see is oil derricks and flares.” ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Abby Hepper rounded up a loose calf under the watchful eye of her dad, Jeff Hepper. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / October 23, 2013, Keene, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN SECOND PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: Rounding up of cattle and branding calves is a tradition handed down through generations of North Dakotans in the spring each year. Families take turns helping one another carry out the arduous, annual rite all over the state, including in the tiny town of Keene in oil-rich McKenzie County. The scene provides a backdrop for the new wave of workers who have come to the region seeking employment in the Bakken oil fields. Among those living in the area are Paul and Sandi Wisness, whose ancestors came to North Dakota around the turn of the century. Paul and his brother, Milo, own nearly 10,000 acres of land, which includes more than 120 wells (although they do not own all of the mineral rights). (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Norma Stenslie and her husband, Jim, left their home in the oil region for a small, quiet town. The couple owned a cabin on the banks of Lake Sakakawea near New Town: “It was heaven. Now all we see is oil derricks and flares.” ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Sheriff’s deputy Bruce Coonfield, who patrols 2,000 square miles of Williams County, N.D., answered a call at the Wanzek man camp where a man living in one of the trailers was found to be in possession of two guns, a violation of the camp’s rules. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT: While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
While many have migrated to the Bakken oil fields in search of fortune and adventure, others have chosen to leave the region as traffic and change in the landscape have taken their toll. ] (JIM GEHRZ/STAR TRIBUNE) / December 10, 2013, Williston/Napoleon, ND – BACKGROUND INFORMATION- PHOTOS FOR USE IN FIFTH PART OF NORTH DAKOTA OIL BOOM PROJECT (The Minnesota Star Tribune)