Re: BP, its a nightmare!
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BP, its a nightmare!
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
The audio on this is not good enough that I can understand much of it, but there is what claims to be a transcript of this talk at http://susiemadrak.com/?p=3577. Those of you on blood pressure medication should take an extra dose before reading this transcript.Most folks are good; a few aren't.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Thanks Wriggley, very illuminating.
But the earlier report from Kessler has an anomaly:
1. Of the spilling material, 40% by weight is natural gas.
2. The main chemical component of this natural gas is methane.
3. Methane is a very potent greenhouse gas and the seafloor worldwide
stores massive amounts of methane.
4. This spill is too small to influence the methane content in the
atmosphere and thus will not influence modern climate.
5. Massive eruptions of natural gas from the seafloor have occurred in
the geological past and this spill simulates one of those eruptions.
Thus we can study this spill to understand if these previous (natural)
massive eruptions in the past influenced climate and how they might
behave in the future.
If this spill simulates one of those eruptions, then this spill might go on to simulate one of the previous Methane Driven oceanic eruptions and:
"The consequences of a methane-driven oceanic eruption for marine and terrestrial life are likely to be catastrophic" Gregory Ryskin, Geology, September 2003, p 742.
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Re: Methane in Large Quantities. . .
Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View Post
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by Chris Coles View PostIf this spill simulates one of those eruptions, then this spill might go on to simulate one of the previous Methane Driven oceanic eruptions and:
"The consequences of a methane-driven oceanic eruption for marine and terrestrial life are likely to be catastrophic" Gregory Ryskin, Geology, September 2003, p 742.Most folks are good; a few aren't.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by Chomsky View Postgnk, respectfully: don't bother with SS. There's just no point. It's like talking to drying paint.Last edited by Starving Steve; June 26, 2010, 02:14 PM.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by reggie View PostWho is funding this chick?
After Al Gore's and the ICC's global warming effort ran into a couple of potholes, the gulf oil spill is Plan B to further strengthen the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and to light a fire under a global carbon tax. The carbon tax or some other global tax is one essential leg of a global reserve currency. The ESA and such are useful mechanisms to continue to tightly control the exploration and production of oil.
Chapman's speculation (as I related it here, hopefully accurately) sounds quite plausible to me; but then I am usually more open to various, sometimes conflicting, conspiracy theories than most people.
P.S. -- It seems that the Kindra Arnesen video you linked to has been "removed by user." Here's another video of her:
Most folks are good; a few aren't.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View PostBob Chapman's speculation, if I can relate it accurately, is that BP and the global carbon tax crowd are allowing and supporting this lady. She isn't consciously a paid shill of them or any such. But BP did allow her remarkable access to what was going on behind the scenes and has not called out their security goons to shut her down.
Sounds as if Starving Steve is confronting the same drill in BC, where they're using front NGO's as victim groups in order to create conflict between people and bird/salmon habitats.
I never met a high level DC NGO exec who wasn't shilling for an insider. The only variable was how well it was disguised. Of course, PBS Newshour only shows the public the public-facing dupe.The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge ~D Boorstin
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View PostMy hope is that even if they manage to concentrate enough methane in the waters of that area of the Gulf of Mexico go cause a methane eruption, this spill won't release enough methane to fuel such an eruption on a global scale. If I'm wrong ... nice knowing ya.Last edited by Starving Steve; June 26, 2010, 06:54 PM.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by Starving Steve View PostSince methane, or to be more precise, methyl-hydrate ice deposits are known to exist naturally on planet Earth at the bottom of Earth's seas, even the Gulf of Mexico, why do we have to worry about methane in the atmosphere exploding or causing climate change? ...
So, as usual, I am missing something ...
Gregory Ryskin speculated in a paper http://pangea.stanford.edu/research/...aneGeology.pdf in 2003 that this could have been the cause of the mass extinction of the Permian-Triassic boundary, 251 million years ago, in which up to 96 percent of all marine species and 70 percent of terrestrial vertebrate species becoming extinct.
A marker to watch for as one reasonably well defined stage toward such as catastrophe would be very large "dead" (no oxygen) zones in the water.
See further comments and an informative video, posted a week ago here on iTulip at Paging GR55 (Post #14).
The concern, by the way, is with methane (CH4), not with methyl-hydrate ice deposits, though they are related in that methyl hydrates are one possible source of methane.Most folks are good; a few aren't.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by touchring View PostIn such a scenario, wouldn't it be better for a hurricane to stir up the water?
Though hurricanes don't have much affect on deeper water, so far as I know. Methane can be absorbed in much higher concentrations in very deep water, due to the higher pressure. If that water were to circulate up to shallower depths, the methane could come out of solution abruptly.Most folks are good; a few aren't.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by ThePythonicCow View PostYou mean along the lines of "the solution to pollution is dilution" ? Quite possibly.
Though hurricanes don't have much affect on deeper water, so far as I know. Methane can be absorbed in much higher concentrations in very deep water, due to the higher pressure. If that water were to circulate up to shallower depths, the methane could come out of solution abruptly.
The amount and the pressure of methane gas coming out of the pipe makes me wonder if any kind of drilling infrastructure today that is approved by the MMS can withstand the blowout.
And what is the use of having the MMS if the BOPs they regulate don't work? Since BOPs don't work, I guess all the BOPs in the gulf need to be replaced?Last edited by touchring; June 27, 2010, 10:27 AM.
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Re: BP, its a nightmare!
Originally posted by reggie View PostI've actually already started to identify the impact of the science, by highlighting the source of some of the reactions here to date. But rather than elicit further inquiry, this identification elicits further resistance, which is typical.
Yes, that's correct, except for the double-speak part.
If you are so open to "Truth" (as you call it), then how can I provoke resistance? That's illogical.
There are no "unwashed", no heathens, no lost souls, and no goyem. No issues are "settled" and off of the table from re-examination.
This is why I find some of the posts here so odd. Apparently, many here do not understand what science and the scientific tradition of questioning, checking, and re-checking are all about. (Teachers, this is a teachable moment in this discussion.)
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