North Dakota Oil goes to refineries on the East Coast, West Coast, and Gulf Coast of the US.
There are large oil findings in the Bakken Oil Field in North Dakota, however, there is not much oil found in South Dakota.
Yes. North Dakota is now (2011) the 4th largest producer of petroleum in the US.
Yes, the oil reserves in Montana and North Dakota are real.
North Dakota has odd weather. North Dakota land is oily - there is a lot of oil development in North Dakota.
Oil, coal and natural gas are mined in North Dakota.
Minerals found in North Dakota include oil, coal and natural gas.
Texas and North Dakota contain most of the country's oil resources, with Texas being the largest oil-producing state in the U.S. and North Dakota having significant oil reserves in the Bakken formation.
Petroleum (oil) was first discovered in North Dakota in 1951 and greatly increased North Dakota's wealth.
Due north.
Minerals found in North Dakota include oil, coal and natural gas.
Barite (baryte, tiff) is not mined in North Dakota. Barite is used in oil drilling in North Dakota but must come from other states such as Nevada.
According to the North Dakota Industrial Commission, Department of Mineral Resources, Oil and Gas Division, as of January 2015, there are a total of 12,182 producing oil wells in North Dakota with a total of 13,657 wells capable of producing oil.