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  • Abiotic Oil



    Oil is not solely of organic origin, but that there may be another mode of origin as well from deeper in the crust, involving magma.

    Fletcher Prouty Commentary - June

    The Origin Of Oil - Leroy Fletcher Prouty Jr. Colonel, United States Air Force - YouTube

    An international conference was convened in Geneva in 1892

    Chemical nomenclature - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Abiogenic petroleum origin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    More by L. Fletcher Prouty:

    Part I: The Secret Team-L.Fletcher Prouty (pt 1 of 2) - YouTube

    Part II: The Secret Team-L.Fletcher Prouty (pt 2 of 2) - YouTube

    See Hydrocarbons in the Deep Earth?
    Last edited by vidbid; 01-23-2012, 05:05 PM. Reason: html edit
    Regards,

    VIDBID

  • #2
    Oil reservoirs that were pumped dry decades ago are being refilled from below.

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    • #3
      What a surprise, the natural process of the earth producing oil is ongoing who would have thought it?

      Yes the oil scarcity is false without a doubt but I do believe there is still a problem. we use this oil to produce chemicals which are much better produced naturally such as fertilizers, drugs and wasteful packaging.

      The best solution is to get rid of the people that dominate these and the oil industry, open up the market, educate and allow people to have the choice. Lets face it I would prefer to sit on my locally produced wooden chair eating organically produced local food (good nutritious food would negate the need for most drugs) with the locally produced, renewable, organic packaging being recycled or combusted to produce energy. Don't you prefer to use a glass to drink out of instead of plastic cups? and what about that BPA in the containers of your mercury filled high fructose corn syrup drinks?

      Doing this would reduce the need for oil dramatically. Ok you would have to give up your government jobs and find something productive to do but wouldn't it be nice to get out of that office?

      There is a place for the oil industry but it should not dominate as it does now.

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      • #4
        While I still think it is prudent to develop new technologies, there is no doubt in my mind that the organic theory of oil is so much hooey. In fact, I thought that way back when they first taught it to me as a kid in science class. Yup, same with that whole "the Grand Canyon was cut by the Colorado River" nonsense. But, I digress. My first exposure to the idea was through Jerome Corsi's book "Black Gold, Strangle Hold". The book is mostly about the oil markets and how they operate, but he gives some background on the Deep Abiotic theory. There are now many resources available to anyone who wants to research the subject further. My son did a whole research paper on the abiotic theory back in high school, and found plenty of material. That was about 6 years ago! I have spoken to a couple of oil company geologists that I have met in the last several years and asked them if they had heard of the abiotic theory. They said they had not. The scarce oil paradigm, complete with it's catechism called "Peak Oil" has made peculiar bed fellows of the oil companies and environmentalists. Both benefit from the idea that oil is limited and will run out at some point. That does explain some things, does it not?

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