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46

another lie

submitted by boekanier to whatever 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 02:08:46 ago (+47/-1)     (files.catbox.moe)

https://files.catbox.moe/tqrbwy.jpg



25 comments block


[ - ] 3Whuurs 2 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 02:29:05 ago (+3/-1)

I don’t doubt this, but how much proof is there of the regeneration?
Every well dries up eventually.

To say it regenerates faster then it depletes would have to mean at the very least, most well sites never run dry.

[ - ] Shotinthedark 2 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 03:33:19 ago (+2/-0)

Any sort of proof of this?

[ - ] giantprick 2 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 05:07:57 ago (+5/-3)

Lol of course not it’s bullshit

[ - ] Name 1 point 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 05:41:59 ago (+1/-0)

Yeah. People just need to use their common sense. If all of the fossils hadn’t been turned ito oil we would have a lot more fossils, now wouldn’t we?

[ - ] x0x7 1 point 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 09:06:58 ago (+1/-0)*

I don't have proof and I don't know if I 100% believe it but I had a huh moment recently.

I saw a chart recently comparing the depth of different things. The deep water horizon project (the one that exploded and leaked oil) was the second deepest hole humanity has ever dug, second only to the Russians trying to dig into the mantle, and its close. It is so much further down than any sea floor including the Marianas trench. If it is from plant matter how the hell did it get down there?

The movement of land over and under itself isn't that violent. And it just so happens that one of the most plentiful sources such that its worth digging to is nearly to the mantle? You would think that there would be an exponential decay in commonality as it becomes more distant from it's source and we'd be targeting more plentiful easier to get to oil near the surface.

Like if one techtonic plate went over another, first there would be a mountain range there instead of an ocean, and two, perhaps oil would form at the life layer of the lower plate, but that would only put it half way to the mantle, not 7/8ths.

[ - ] Shotinthedark 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 19:52:38 ago (+0/-0)

Mariana trench is about 7 miles,deepest hole in 7.5 miles. Deepest oil drilled 9.2 miles.

[ - ] Name 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 21:35:06 ago (+0/-0)

“If it is from plant matter how the hell did it get down there?

The movement of land over and under itself isn't that violent.”

But there have been great times of turbulence in the past. It is said that if you climb Mount Everest your boots crunch seashells the whole way?

Now that I think about it we’re probably pretty capable of tectonic manipulation let’s see where this goes! And this is very interesting because there’s a possibility that the entire planet resembles a pressure cooker. Who the fuck knows what’s brewing down there? Every now and then we go to Volcano to remind us that something is cooking….

[ - ] Leveraction 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 09:21:00 ago (+0/-0)

Look it up lazy ass. We have more oil than almost anything else on earth.

[ - ] UncleDoug 3 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 04:37:42 ago (+3/-0)

Practical, affordable and naturally renewable hydrocarbons.

[ - ] NoRefunds 3 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 06:15:31 ago (+3/-0)

[ - ] Name 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 21:15:02 ago (+0/-0)*

Thanks for the link. I’m gonna have to read that a second and third time.

[ - ] aboutime 3 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 07:19:37 ago (+3/-0)

Its true- the satellites can see more underground reserves and they are VAST. That is why the price plummets every time they DON'T interfere with it. The price has to be held up or no one will drill and refine. If they shut down it takes years to rebuild. And then we'd be fucked.

[ - ] x0x7 4 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 14:05:52 ago (+4/-0)

How can the satellites see it?

[ - ] Name 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 21:46:28 ago (+0/-0)

I think we have satellites that can bounce all types of energy off terra, like a depth sounder in a boat. Some beams bounce off bed rock, some beams bounce off liquid and some beams bounce off my ego ; )

[ - ] deleted 8 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 07:30:44 ago (+8/-0)

deleted

[ - ] BulletStopper 1 point 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 09:21:11 ago (+1/-0)

True. The creation of oil is an ongoing geological process.

two questions for any doubters:
1) If the only source of oil is boiled fermented dead dinosaur ass, then how come we keep finding new deposits in places where dinosaurs never existed or even could have existed?

2) If the only source of oil is boiled fermented dead dinosaur ass, then how come we've also discovered it in the atmospheres of other planets that have never supported any kind of life?

[ - ] GlowNiggerDick 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 12:11:35 ago (+0/-0)

No one really claims its dinosaurs. The meme is its decayed algea from buried swamps and rivers.

But yea they are called hydrocarbons which is basically just hydrogen combined with carbon.

There is a shit load of carbon in the mantel and a lot of hydrogen locked up in the crust. Its not hard to imagine processes where its created deep in the earth and floats up near the surface.

[ - ] MichaelStewart 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 15:16:56 ago (+0/-0)

Abiogenic oil theory is how I was first introduced to this topic

[ - ] Steelerfish -1 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 08:25:17 ago (+0/-1)

Considering many geologists believe the majority of the layer between the crust and the core is made up of liquid lava (being a mixture of molten rock, water, and various minerals/elements), I would think that lava is the second most prevalent liquid, assuming you don’t count the atmosphere as a liquid (of which it has basically all of the properties- as well as those of a gaseous state).

I would assume oil and natural gas is formed from carbon and other elements reacting to the pressure to combine into new forms…. Not dead dinosaurs and algae that’s now somehow 5 miles under the surface ( yet we find fossils on the surface)…
If decaying organic matter forms hydrocarbons, you would think the entirety of the ocean floor would have a layer of it due to hundreds of millions of years of life settling down yonder.

Their logic is- as usual- quite flawed.

[ - ] x0x7 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 12:11:46 ago (+0/-0)

If we are considering magma to be a liquid, which it is, then it is definitely the most prevalent. So it goes magma, water, oil.

[ - ] HeyJames 1 point 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 08:27:16 ago (+1/-0)

Lol

[ - ] Leveraction 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 09:17:12 ago (+0/-0)

True statement!!

[ - ] TheNoticing 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 10:42:49 ago (+0/-0)

He also bought out the medical field, which is why it's called the medical industry now, and why doctors (quacks really) just push petroleum bullshit "medication" on everyone. I really really hope that history is not kind to that bastard.

[ - ] o0shad0o 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 13:15:22 ago (+0/-0)

The coal seams that are/were being mined are definitely fossils, and you can find fossil impressions inside the coal. They were laid down during the carboniferous era.

[ - ] Doglegwarrior 0 points 2.1 yearsMar 25, 2023 17:52:49 ago (+0/-0)

When you learn how deep they are getting the oil and you still believe the fucking lie you are officially an (((educated person)))

Now let's talk about nukes and flag earth and the moon landing.