I have no problems with comet oil, on the contrary, I was the one who brought up hydrocarbons found in meteorites, in the first place.Starbiter asked:
What is your problem with comet oil?
And I already responded to one of your comments, explaining that comet oil would be possible, but that the oil deposits in the Middle East are not consistent with comet oil because the deposits are too large & concentrated (19 cubic miles of oil pumped from Ghawar so far) and there are fracture zones in the basement (bedrock) directly under the Ghawar oil field in Saudi Arabia which provide scientific evidence for where the oil emanates from, as there are fracture zones in the basement under the other Middle Eastern oil fields.
I'm confused by starbiter's statements.
On the one hand,
However, Starbiter's comments, when all is said and done, strongly suggest he does, indeed, accept word for word Velikovsky.Starbiter stated:
I never suggested word for word acceptance of Dr. V. Skepticism is healthy.
Seemingly, on the other hand, this is starbiter's actual position:
I'm having a hard time reconciling, "Skepticism is healthy", and, "This fits Worlds in Collision like a glove", particlularly when the scientific evidence for the source of large Middle Eastern oil fields doesn't fit "like a glove" for comet oil. It seems that Starbiter is determined to fit a square peg in a round hole to protect his belief system.This fits Worlds in Collision like a glove.
There are significant evidentiary contradictions that Starbiter seems unwilling to be cognizant of, or acknowledge.
I presented Stanley B. Keith's statement:
For example, petroleum resources in the largest hydrothermal mineral deposit [Abiotic Oil] in the world, the Ghawar field of Saudi Arabia (Cantrell et al., 2002), may be related to deposition of‚ regional-scale hydrothermal dolomites in a north-northeast-trending dextral slip zone that is 175 miles long and 30 miles wide. This zone is but one element of the previously mentioned north-south segments in the global fracture system.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_o ... 182d55f23fStarbiter responded:
This comment from your post got my attention. Please notice the dolomite reference above. The reference to "hydrothermal dolomite" is interesting. The link below discusses the problem with hydrothermal dolomite. The link below could be bull shit, but it seems reasonable.
The above abstract is a good discussion of Dolomite. As are the two other links Starbiter provided on Dolomite.
What these links point out is how little science knows about dolomite's physical behaviors. The "sciencedirect" abstract points out that definitions need to be tightened up. This seems entirely reasonable. I've read the New Scientist article on Dolomite before it went behind a paywall. The article states 80% of North American oil is found in association with Dolomite. The article also discusses the history of dolomite and relates just how little is known about this mineral in terms of how it acts in the geological environment. The Dolomites are a mountain range in Italy made up of Dolomite, yet geology doesn't have a mountain building process that would account for the formation of the Dolomites from the mineral Dolomite. In fact, even sedimentary processes aren't understood well, as geologic sedimentary build-up of Dolomite in sea water is commonly asserted, but no sedimentary build-up of Dolomite in sea water has been documented to happen, today, in the field.
Dolomite has a very high melting point and many deposits of Dolomite appear to have been deposited by flowing magma -- yet, this has never been observed & measured in the field.
There are many questions about Dolomite that need to be answered, which the links to a good job to point out and discuss, but the links provided report nothing to suggest that dolomite isn't either a reactant or catalylist for Abiotic Oil formation.
On the contrary, the scientific evidence does point to oil formation and Dolomite being closely associated.
This is a conclusionary statement with no supporting rational or evidence for why oil sands would actually be comet oil as a result of an Earth / Venus encounter.Starbiter states:
A large portion of the oil on the planet is inside of sand deposits. This works with comet oil during an Earth Venus encounter.
Actually, the best evidence is that oil sands are also the result of internal Abiotic Oil formation. The oil sands deposits in Venezuela are situated over a fault network where two tectonic plates come into contact and there are rare Earth minerals (valandium) in the oil that is rare in the crust but common at depth in the deep crust/shallow mantle.
As far as the Canadian oil sands are concerned, it could be comet oil, but then again, the huge amounts would tend to weigh against that conclusion.
No, this is what I stated:Starbiter wrote:
Concerning your comment on the acceptance of Worlds in Collision by the EU insiders, I think you have it wrong. I've spoken with many insiders. The majority I have spoken with are comfortable with the observations in "Worlds in Collision".
The 'Electric Universe' leaders don't follow Velikovsky "word for word".In regards to the issues raised by Velikovsky in his book, let me say, I don't follow Velikovsky word for word and as I understand it, neither do the leaders of Electric Universe. Velikovsky is a jumping off point and his work is valuble for starting the discussion and has stood the test of time for being a pioneering voice.
Being comfortable with observations in "Worlds in Collision" is not the same as following Velikovsky "word for word".
Yet, Starbiter offers more which suggests he does follow Velikovsky "word for word":
As I stated before, Velikovsky was a pioneer and rocks do have a story to tell, but the evidence has to be considered and while comet oil is entirely possible, likely infact, the deposits of oil in question, whether Middle Eastern or heavy oil sands in Canada and Venezuela are not consistent with "comet oil".Starbiter: ...I re-read WiC [Worlds in Collision] and the rocks fit the stories to a T.