Oil
A letter to the author of an article
about oil.
Dear
Oilman,
I was
interested to read your article in the latest Canterbury Farming newspaper,
about how people used to gather and use oil in the past. I would have liked to
have seen a larger diagram of the fractionating tower with more information
about the types of oil which are drawn off, but what you put into the article
was worth a read.
I
also noticed how carefully you introduced the article, by saying that
"scientists believe that oil came originally from . . ." Did you word
it that way because you know about other explanations for the origin of oil -
or was it just good luck? You may or may not know that there are many
scientists who believe in other processes involved in the formation of oil, who's views differ greatly to their colleagues.
One
view of the origin of oil is the millions-of-years scenario, as you described.
It sounds logical and reasonable, and it is probably the most widely accepted
view. I was brought up on it through all my school years, and I have rarely
seen any objections to it. Given the fact that oil is buried under many layers
of sedimentary rock, it would appear that slow processes over many millions of
years are the cause.
The
main alternative view is that oil (and coal) formed as the result of a
catastrophic event, which formed the deposits very quickly. I think this view
is worth considering because the same evidence which is used to support the
millions-of-years point of view is also applicable to the rapid deposit view.
The
millions-of-years view is based on several assumptions. One of these
assumptions is that vast amounts of plants and animals - of which oil is
comprised - were buried slowly and gradually covered by sediment - a process
which apparently is not going on today.
Neither
oil nor coal are forming anywhere in the world in the enormous amounts in which
we find it. The assumption that the process was slow and gradual is rather
self-defeating because the captured oil would have been lost through leakage if
the process was slow (Millions of years). If, on the other hand, the process
was rapid, we have the problem of quantity. When we see the enormous lakes of
oil under the ground, this implies a vast amount of animal and vegetable matter
gathered quickly before decomposition could occur, and 'capped' to prevent its
escape by numerous layers of hardening sediment. Today we do not see vast
amounts of animal and vegetable matter gathering together in anticipation of a
quick burial, which is why the catastrophic view tends to make more sense of
the evidence.
Another
assumption is that oil takes millions of years for oil to form. Even this view
is contradicted regularly by home-gardeners. A pile of poorly-ventilated
compost can change into sticky, black oil (under suitable conditions) within a
few weeks. You may find this example laughable, but the following one is more
in line with this discussion:
I
noticed in the news recently that a Western Australian firm is setting up a
business which makes oil from sewage sludge. The sludge is heated without
oxygen to 450 degrees C in one reactor, then in the
second reactor, the resultant vapours are allowed to
contact the 'char' residue from the first. This speeds up their breakdown into
a diesel grade fuel oil.
No
outside substances are added throughout the process, which thus involves heating
without oxygen. The plant, which will run on its own product, will produce a
net surplus of fuel.
The
technology, described as one that "mimics nature" produces oil
"in much the same way that nature produces oil . . . (but) it is completed
in around 30 minutes instead of millions of years."
(From
the Australian Stock Exchange Release, Environmental Solutions International
Ltd. Osborne Park, Western Australia, Oct. 25th 1996)
As
you said in your article, natural oil is also believed to be formed from heating
of hydrocarbons. Organic matter buried deep within the ground, in the absence
of oxygen, is often exposed to elevated temperatures. This simple heating
technology reaffirms that millions of years are totally unnecessary, given the
right conditions. A catastrophe could produce oil (and coal) in a matter of
years, given the right conditions.
Oil
is called a fossil fuel because it comprises matter which was once alive but
was, at some point in time, buried and 'sealed' from the normal process of
decomposition. Built into the word 'fossil' is the word 'ancient', but this is
an assumption.
Carbon-dating
of fossils and of contemporary items has produced so much variation as to
negate the reliability of the dating method. (I can give you numerous examples
of this if required), and what commonly happens is that a circular argument
arises, in which the fossils are dated according to the assumption that the
rocks in which they appear are 'x' number of millions of years old . . . and
the rocks are dated according to the assumption that the fossils which they
contain are 'x' number of millions of years old.
A
closed circle of reasoning arises, in which there is no room for the
alternative view that fossils may be much younger than we think. Having
excluded this alternative view, people follow the assumptions along and also
exclude the possibility that fossils, fossil fuels and present-day
rock-formation may be the result of a catastrophe, rather than a
millions-of-years process. This single-eyed world view is both unscientific and
prejudiced, since the same evidence which both views deal with can be
interpreted in at least two different ways.
The
fact that oil deposits may be evidence for a young, rather than an ancient
earth, contradicts most people's view of the world, but consider these points :
1.
If oil deposits are as old as some say, is it not a wonder that they are still
there? Leaking, over millions of years, should have reduced the deposits
substantially, but the sedimentary cover is still intact.
2. The
size of oil deposits implies a vast amount of original material, which, under
present conditions, would have decomposed too rapidly before effective burial
to occur.
3.
The presence of whole trees (often standing vertically through the seams) in coal
deposits implies massive, and rapid burial, rather than a gradual accumulation
of dead or decaying wood. Present-day forests are not forming coal, so it would
seem that a great amount of wood had to be buried and covered rapidly before
normal decomposition occurred - some time in the past.
4.
The sedimentary layers under which oil is found are common over the whole
planet. Other kinds of fossil are also found in these layers, such as
limestone, which comprises enormous amounts of calciferous marine creatures,
(The White Cliffs of Dover), and 'fossil graveyards' in which millions of
creatures are found jumbled chaotically together.
The
presence of these general sedimentary layers implies that, at some stage, a
vast amount of water and sediment was moving over the surface of the planet - a
view which supports the possibility of a catastrophe rather than
millions-of-years. (For example the formation of the Grand Canyon, 100,000
square miles, with sedimentary layers running horizontally across the whole
width of the canyon, shows that the whole area must have been laid down
rapidly.*)
Throughout
this letter I have tried to avoid dogmatism, so please forgive me if I have
'sounded' as if I know all the answers. I am simply trying to sort out the
facts from the assumptions. The main purpose of my writing to you was to
present to you some alternative views, which other people, better qualified and
probably better informed, may like to consider.
Thank
you for bearing with me.
Yours
sincerely,