I read about 10 years ago, that there was a Russian theory from the 1950 that claimed, that oil was not from organic material, but instead from the inner earth.
Adding to that, that the control of prices is favorable for the producers, it makes sense, that they might have come up with this dinosaur-pressure-oil-myth.
Looking at Fischer Tropsch processes it does make sense that oil or hydrocarbons could be formed in the earth under heat and pressure formed from CO2 and water inputs.
There has never been any evidence that oil is a fossil fuel. It is a naturally occurring ore of carbon. It is obviously too light of a material to seep into the earth to the depths at which it is found. It seeps up towards the surface. That's how it was found.
When the Russian geologists realized the whole fossil fuel thing was bs that's when Russia became an oil exporter. They started finding the stuff everywhere when they started looking deeper.
I read about 10 years ago, that there was a Russian theory from the 1950 that claimed, that oil was not from organic material, but instead from the inner earth. Adding to that, that the control of prices is favorable for the producers, it makes sense, that they might have come up with this dinosaur-pressure-oil-myth.
Like de Beers cornering the diamond market.
The idea that oil and coal were all former organic matter never fully jived in my mind...
Oil is not a bunch of ground up 'dinosaurs'.
Looking at Fischer Tropsch processes it does make sense that oil or hydrocarbons could be formed in the earth under heat and pressure formed from CO2 and water inputs.
There has never been any evidence that oil is a fossil fuel. It is a naturally occurring ore of carbon. It is obviously too light of a material to seep into the earth to the depths at which it is found. It seeps up towards the surface. That's how it was found.
When the Russian geologists realized the whole fossil fuel thing was bs that's when Russia became an oil exporter. They started finding the stuff everywhere when they started looking deeper.
Any doubters need only check Brazil's ethanol economy. Not only are plant sources viable, but it won't get depleted that for generations.