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1 posted on 02/22/2012 4:01:57 AM PST by LibWhacker
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To: SunkenCiv

Ping.


2 posted on 02/22/2012 4:04:34 AM PST by FrogMom (There is no such thing as an honest democrat!)
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To: LibWhacker

Surely there are actual photos and not just an artist’s rendering.?

Fascinating stuff though!


3 posted on 02/22/2012 4:18:58 AM PST by Outlaw Woman (When does the shooting start?)
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To: LibWhacker
Noeggerathiales

Henceforth to be called African-Anericanathiales

4 posted on 02/22/2012 4:22:48 AM PST by 1raider1
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To: LibWhacker

“...the manner in which it was preserved bared a striking resemblance to the famous Roman namesake event.”

Really?

Is that anything like “BORE a striking resemblance...”?


5 posted on 02/22/2012 4:28:58 AM PST by SMARTY ("The man who has no inner-life is a slave to his surroundings. "Henri Frederic Amiel)
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To: LibWhacker

They discovered a four square mile ancient forest in Illinois while coal mining. I believe the fossil site in Illinois was dated to the Upper Carboniferous. You never know what awaits down in a mine, in horror films there are monsters but for science geeks what they actually find is even more interesting.


11 posted on 02/22/2012 5:52:59 AM PST by dog breath
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To: LibWhacker
Related to this:
Another global observation of similar significance is the vertical stacking of hydrocarbons deposits, Kudryavtsev's Rule: "Any region in which hydrocarbons are found at one level will be seen to have hydrocarbons in large or small quantities, but at all levels down to and into the basement rock." The most common sequence is to find gas at the deepest levels, oil above, sometimes more gas above the oil, and coal at the shallowest. If one examines gas, oil and coal maps of different parts of the globe, one finds this rule repeated very frequently. It holds in most of the Middle East: many oil wells in Iran have penetrated through large coal deposits. Deep underneath the oil of the Gulf States, large gas fields have been discovered. Almost all the oil wells of Java and Sumatra have drilled through coal, and even the deep gas of Oklahoma is often underneath coal. What we are seeing is principally a succession of hydrocarbons with diminishing hydrogen content as one goes from the deepest to the shallowest. One presumes that bacterial action, which attacks the hydrogen rich hydrocarbons first, has been largely responsible for the progressive hydrogen depletion of upwelling hydrocarbons. For coal, the situation is more complex because biology can be involved in another way also. In a hydrocarbon outgassing area, the ground water is held strongly anoxic because hydrocarbon oxidizing bacteria are abundant there, and quickly remove atmospheric oxygen carried in that water. The result is that the normal processes of fermentation of plant material, which would turn the carbon back to the atmospheric CO2, will be interrupted. Hydrocarbon outgassing areas tend to become swamps filled with the insoluble carbon of plant material. What plant fossils there are in bituminous coal (frequently there are none) are often themselves filled with the same homogeneous coal as that which surrounds them, suggesting a carbon source different from the fossilized plant material itself. It would not seem possible that plant material was converted into the homogeneous coal, and yet that a fraction survived as fossils with a precise maintenance of detail; and that this was then filled by the homogeneous coal derived from similar material.

12 posted on 02/22/2012 5:57:00 AM PST by aruanan
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To: LibWhacker; SunkenCiv

The forest is probably the reason for the coal. I mean everyone knows that fossil fuels comes from old buried dinosaurs. Haven’t we all seen the old Sinclair Oil signs with their distinctive Dino logo? Well, there you are.

I bet there are lots of fossilized dino bones in that forest where they were peacefully sleeping in dinosaur hammocks. (er...I made that up)


31 posted on 02/25/2012 10:33:08 AM PST by wildbill (You're just jealous because the Voices talk only to me.)
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