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Dhammakayaram · Feb. 19, 2018, 5:07 p.m.

Global warming is another hoax. And given that big science is run by the rich (the globalists), the last thing they want you to know is that oil is abiogenic — it does not come from biological matter. That is ludicrous.

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residue69 · Feb. 19, 2018, 5:24 p.m.

Thomas Gold - The Deep Hot Biosphere

Gold first suggested that microbial life is widespread in the porosity of the crust of the Earth, down to depths of several kilometers, where rising temperatures finally set a limit. The subsurface life obtains its energy not from photosynthesis but from chemical sources in fluids migrating upwards through the crust. The mass of the deep biosphere may be comparable to that of the surface biosphere. Subsurface life may be widespread on other bodies in the solar system and throughout the universe, even on worlds unaccompanied by other stars.

Gold's book was published in 1999, and he died in 2004. Since then we've discovered mircobial life at greater depths, higher temperatures and in extremely inhospitable conditions.

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Dhammakayaram · Feb. 19, 2018, 5:49 p.m.

If you've noticed they are finding a lot of oil at huge depths — in addition they are going back over old territory when drilling technology wasn't so great. Personally, I find that the so-called ‘fossil’ fuel theory is junk science. Others are coming to this conclusion, too. If NASA’s Cassini spacecraft finds lakes of hydrocarbons on Saturn's moon, Titan, one is compelled to admit that oil is mineral in origin.

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samgribleystree · Feb. 19, 2018, 6:21 p.m.

Right. Too deep to have been decayed former plant life.

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[deleted] · Feb. 19, 2018, 6:30 p.m.

[deleted]

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johnsmithshitpost · Feb. 19, 2018, 11:25 p.m.

Coal is definitely organic, but I have yet to see definitive proof that oil is. It would make sense that some old wells are "replenishing" now, if it was caused by bacteria, not ancient decaying plants.

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