Despite growing attention to the subject, a dearth of information exists regarding college students' perceptions and process of meaning-making related to the act of oral sex. Such perspectives and allied social sexual scripts can have considerable consequences on the sexuality and sexual health of older teens and college-aged populations. The present research serves to elucidate such perspectives and presents a profile of college students' degree of agreeing that oral sex is not sex. Over half (62.1%) of a sample of college students (N = 781) at a large southeastern university agreed that oral sex is not sex. Response rates across demographic groups are presented and factors that influence such perspectives are examined. Sexual script theory serves as the theoretical framework. Implications and limitations are explored.
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AbstractThe Belanak A platform is situated in the Natuna Sea region of Indonesia. The reservoir sections are high temperature (315°F BHST), and the openhole sections were planned to be between 3500 and 4500 ft horizontal, some with tortuous well paths required to meet the target. In order to ensure excellent drilling performance and optimum protection of the producing formation, a formate-based, low-solids reservoir drilling fluid was selected -the first time such a system had been used in Indonesia.In this paper, the authors detail the design and successful application of the unique reservoir drill-in fluid in the demanding and remote well.
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AbstractHistorically, wells drilled in East Africa and mainly in Sudan have experienced drilling related problems due to the highly reactive and dispersive shales of the Aradeiba formation. Hole instability problems have included washed out hole sections combined with tight hole and poor coring efficiency. Frequent wiper trips were required and logging of the wells was not always successful.Over time, several conventional inhibitive water-based drilling fluid types have been used, such as KCl/polymer, KCl/lime/polymer, KCl/PHPA, and KCl/glycol, but with only marginal improvements in hole stability and drilling performance. A sodium silicate/KCl system was designed to provide the necessary inhibitive qualities. The first field trial well in East Africa was drilled with a sodium silicate/KCl system and the following benefits were observed:• 24% reduction in drilling days • Shale drill cuttings with exhibited excellent integrity • No evidence of cuttings hydration or dispersion • Reduced wiper trips • Caliper logs indicated in-gauge wellbore • Logging program completed as per program • Excellent coring efficiency • Low filtrate invasion This paper describes the extensive technical teamwork between the service company and the operator that led to the development and successful application of a sodium silicate drilling fluid for use in the Aradeiba stressed shale sections.The paper includes a description of the formulated silicate fluid and test data from the extensive laboratory testing.Enhancements in drilling and coring performance over other inhibitive water-based drilling fluid systems are documented and reviewed, in particular coring efficiency (hole stability in the shale zones, elimination of core jamming) and improved core data acquisition (obtaining fresh-state core samples with minimal mud filtrate invasion).As a result of this fluid design and application, an additional thirty wells have been drilled with the sodium silicate system in the area, including the highest temperature well ever drilled in the world with a silicate drilling fluid.
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