Riverside wrote:Did I miss anything?
sureshbansal342 wrote:earth is a living thing like a tree and meteorite having amino acids and biological chemistry are seeds of planets. as one tree is a result of one seed same one planet is a result of one meteor (seed) only. oil is being produced in earth by metabolism of earth only not by fossil oil theory. fossil oil theory is just manipulation according to requirement. crude oil is linked with living organism because earth itself is a living thing and producing oil like a bark oil.please see following video for more clarification. crude oil is being produced in the crust (bark of earth) like this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CC7i5CY6XNo&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3lG3FX9D68
suresh
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rockdoc123 wrote:someone please point this gentleman to the abiotic oil thread.
I can't possibly go through this once again!
rockdoc123 wrote:someone please point this gentleman to the abiotic oil thread.
I can't possibly go through this once again!
‘Parallel Universe’ of Life Described Far Beneath the Bottom of the Sea
Deep beneath the ocean floor off the Pacific Northwest coast, scientists have described the existence of a potentially vast realm of life, one almost completely disconnected from the world above.
Persisting in microscopic cracks in the basalt rocks of Earth’s oceanic crust is a complex microbial ecosystem fueled entirely by chemical reactions with rocks and seawater, rather than sunlight or the organic byproducts of light-harvesting terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems.
Such modes of life, technically known as chemosynthetic, are not unprecedented, having also been found deep in mine shafts and around seafloor hydrothermal vents. Never before, though, have they been found on so vast a scale. In pure geographical area, these oceanic crust systems may contain the largest ecosystem on Earth...
Econ101 wrote:There is also a growing body of evidence it is these microbes that are creating oil and oil is not finite at all, even though the vast supplies available to us now seem infinite they are not. They may only last a few hundred years more if its not being continually replenished by the earth.
davep wrote:Whether oil comes from vegetation or subterranean life forms (or both), the basic biotic principle doesn't change, just the biological source of the carbon-based molecules that will constitute the oil. This doesn't make the supply any more or less finite over human timescales. It may or may not alter where we should look for oil.
Plantagenet wrote:Where does the oil come into it? The article talks about these microbes releasing METHANE---it never mentions oil
We've got similar things in permafrost up here in Alaska--- microbes there also generate METHANE
Plantagenet wrote:Where does the oil come into it? The article talks about these microbes releasing METHANE---it never mentions oil
We've got similar things in permafrost up here in Alaska--- microbes there also generate METHANE
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