by nth » Mon 11 Jul 2005, 12:37:50
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sunspot', 'I') read somewhere, from one of the oil experts (Deffeyes maybe?) that because of repeated glaciation, the land under all that ice has been hammered so much that, if there was any oil, it would have been pushed down too far and the land would have ruptured to such an extent that any containment would be impossible.
Unfortunately, oil was only formed in certain areas of the world under specific geological and biological circumstances. And most of it got destroyed long before we came along. There is only the possibility of oil in certain places, and most of the planet is simply ruled out. Including under most of the ocean. We have a great deal of knowledge about the planet now, and despite the advances in that knowledge over the last 40 years, the fact remains for all to see that the discovery of oil on the planet peaked in 1964.
Oil discovery peaked in 1964?
I thought it peaked a lot earlier than that.
Any how, there is no such thing as oil being too deep to be drilled. If you look at current technology and the amount of improvements made to drilling deep into the Earth, you will see that there has not been any oil fields that are too deep to get, since this decade.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Also, it's impossible to drill through all that ice and keep your hole for long: the ice flows at a different rate at different depths, so a hole drilled straight down would soon distort sideways and rip apart any pipe you put down there!!
That is simply incorrect.
There are oil wells in the artic that are drilled over ice sheets.
There are drilling in antarctica that have placed pipes and drilling equipments for more than one year at a time and they are able to overcome all issues as of last year.