UnSubRocky wrote on Feb 8
th, 2023 at 3:56pm:
Jasin wrote on Feb 8
th, 2023 at 3:16pm:
UnSubRocky wrote on Feb 8
th, 2023 at 3:12pm:
Tectonic plates are moving because of the molten rock. Oil does sweet f.a. in regards to tectonic plate movement.
I guess Oil has just been sitting there doing nothing and waiting for Soviets and Arabs to suck it up, all along eh?
The oil has been sitting there for millions of years, barely being touched by humans until they found a use for it. The oil is not lubricating tectonic plates making them move about more smoothly.
Whenever there is a volcanic explosion, it is usually preempted by an earthquake in the region. Tectonic plates make variating movements in response causing more earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. The oil is sitting well above the mantle and below the Earth's surface. If an eruption of lava mixed with the oil, my guess would be that the oil would be volatile in that it would boil and evaporate.
There is not enough oil in the world that could do anything close to floating a continent about on its tectonic plates. It is molten rock that does that.
I think you need to some geological research.
I'm not saying its 'absolute', but it 'may' be a contributing factor. Considering Oil (Decomposed life) has been accumulating since the dawn of life which, as you might know - is a very very very very long time ago (Apes and Humans are just a blink of an eye in the time frame).
The world itself has always been in a constant state of Evolution - even geologically.
Do you even know why India moved so fast from the connection with the southern Gondwanic lands to crash into Asia?
When dramatic changes happen like the extraction of hundreds of millions of years of accumulated oil where parts of the crust are suddenly drained dry and empty - there is ALWAYS side effects and repercussions.
You know, there can always be more than one right answer and contributing factor. Only a moron (like Smith) would think there is only one always.
Only a fool would dismiss such a possibility of cause and effect. Personally, I really wouldn't be surprised in the least.
Oil has been around since the Archean age through the Ediacaran and on. Even if Humans have been extracting just 20% so far to make monoxide into the atmosphere. I'm sure it does have an 'effect' somewhere, sometime.