Springer and
Sycamore
Two stacked SCOOP targets above the Woodford in the Anadarko Basin, developed across Grady, Stephens, and Garvin counties in Oklahoma.
The Springer and Sycamore are two stacked targets of the SCOOP play in the Anadarko Basin of south-central Oklahoma, both sitting above the Woodford and developed across Grady, Stephens, and Garvin counties. Mineral owners in the SCOOP fairway often see both names on their wells alongside the Woodford beneath them.
Therocks beneath your minerals.
The Sycamore is a Lower Mississippian limestone and marl, while the Springer is a latest-Mississippian to earliest-Pennsylvanian sequence of shale and sandstone. They occupy different levels of the stack, but both rest above the Woodford, which acted as the source rock that charged the area.
Across the SCOOP the two intervals commonly fall between roughly 10,000 and 13,500 feet, deepening toward the basin axis. The Springer is known for relatively oily production in parts of the play, while the Sycamore varies between oil and liquids-rich gas depending on depth and maturity.
Because the Springer, Sycamore, and Woodford are stacked vertically, a single tract can host wells in more than one of them, developed across different phases of the play.
Where theproduction lives.
Continental Resources developed an early Springer oil program in the SCOOP, and Devon Energy and other Anadarko operators carry the Springer and Sycamore in their inventory alongside the deeper Woodford. Activity tracks the broader SCOOP development cycle.
Wells in these intervals produce a mix of oil and natural gas that shifts by location and depth. Development across south-central Oklahoma is governed by the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, which sets spacing and handles the pooling process that assembles a drilling unit.
The current operator and completed formation on any specific well can be confirmed through the Commission’s public well records.
Mineral rights in theSpringer and Sycamore.
Mineral owners in the SCOOP commonly see Springer or Sycamore wells on their tracts, frequently alongside Woodford wells in the same drilling unit. A single tract can generate staged royalty income as the different stacked layers are developed.
For inheritors with south-central Oklahoma minerals, knowing which of these formations your wells are completed in helps explain what you are receiving and why one tract can carry several producing interests.
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.
Send us what you have, and we will take a look.
Who is drilling the Springer and Sycamore 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.
Often co-developed on the same pad.
Formations frequently drilled alongside the Springer and Sycamore in the same drilling spacing unit. Combined development across stacked targets can produce multiple wells per tract over the life of development.
Stacked-pay tracts often produce from several wells. We can walk through what you have.
What peopleactually ask about the Springer and Sycamore.
Honest answers to the things people most often want to know.
Find out what your
Springer and Sycamore
minerals are worth.
Send us what you have, or what you think you have. If your interest is in the Springer and Sycamore, 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.
Geological and operator information about the Springer and Sycamore 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.