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October 24th, 2002, 04:40 AM
#21
HB Forum Moderator
The earth, really deep, the surface of the earth...really thin.
The question is how deep are we drilling for our oil, and how deep can we drill?
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October 24th, 2002, 08:28 AM
#22
HB Forum Owner
the earth's crust varies in thickness.
as such... there are only certain places we dig
for oil... as well as certain areas oil is
available.
do the math...
then do the readings:
CLICK HERE
CLICK HERE
CLICK HERE
let me know if you need more tidbits
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October 24th, 2002, 08:31 AM
#23
Inactive Member
Except for,
1. Oil burns, that is why it is usefull to us.
2. The inside of the earth is very hot.
So, unless my logic is screwed up somewhere any oil that is anywhere other than the thin crust would have been burned a long time ago.
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October 24th, 2002, 08:39 AM
#24
HB Forum Owner
beta gets a star
[img]graemlins/star.gif[/img]
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October 24th, 2002, 09:13 AM
#25
Inactive Member
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October 24th, 2002, 09:19 AM
#26
HB Forum Owner
surely! [img]smile.gif[/img]
*note-- gay smiley used*
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October 24th, 2002, 09:20 AM
#27
HB Forum Owner
to answer the first post....
water
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October 28th, 2002, 03:07 AM
#28
Inactive Member
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October 29th, 2002, 11:30 PM
#29
HB Forum Moderator
Imagine a pool filled with water. What happens to that pool of water over time? It forms algae and mold. Perhaps there is the same amount of water as there was 100 million years ago, but other "indgredients" such as oil, have increased.
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October 30th, 2002, 11:59 PM
#30
HB Forum Owner
alex... what do you not understand???
the components of the algae is still 3:1
in favor of water!!!
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