I read the faded sign as we pulled into town: “Welcome
to Hudson’s Hope - Land of Dinosaurs and Dams.” Stencilled beside a happy waterfall were two green brontosauri that appeared to be shooting lazer beams made of oil out of their eyes. Past and future,
with this rusting hamlet as epicenter. “Land of Shit,” Shevko corrected. “Don’t blink or you’ll miss it.”
It took me a while to draw the connection between dinosaur fossils and their oil by-products. My first thought was about extinction, exploiting our planet’s natural resources past the point of no return. Like the Delorean Time Machine in Back to the Future III, the train bridge up ahead is incomplete and we’re praying technology will save us all, before we hit that fateful precipice and magically teleport elsewhere, or tumble down into a canyon fireball. I was thinking about dinosaurs roaming these very hills, each terrible lizard a cog in the Wheel of Life. Did those reptilian heathens summon their own demise at the forefront of a life-ending comet by merely surviving? Do we not deserve an even worse finish for our deliberate consumer greed and unsustainable habits? But here in the Backyard, it’s no place for theoretical debate. We’re here to make money, exploiting that sweet, sweet dinosaur juice that simmers somewhere beneath our heavy winter work-boots.
![]() |
| (Jurassic Park ™ Flowchart) |
The mainstream theory of
oil formation (biogenic/ fossil fuels) holds that oil originated millions of
years ago in shallow seas as vast quantities of organic matter that died and
sank into the mud to decompose. Over time as the source rock was buried deeper,
overburden pressure raised temperatures into the “oil window” (80-100°C)
enabling crude oil to form, become fluid, and migrate upward through the rock
strata in a process called “oil expulsion”. The oil was eventually trapped in
underground reservoirs where it was to remain, patiently awaiting Mankind’s
Crazy-Straw to slurp it up, give it purpose and fulfill its destiny.
The other side supports
the abiogenic hypothesis (developed before palaeontology), which argues that
petroleum was formed from deep carbon deposits, perhaps dating way back to the
formation of the Earth, and suggests that there exists a great deal more
petroleum than commonly thought. The evidence for naturally occurring
petroleum, slim as it may be, flies in the face of Peak Oil proponents,
suggesting that oil is actually regenerative. I smell a Nerd Fight!
Years of production left in the ground with the current
proved reserves (according to mainstream biogenic theory):
·
Coal:
148 years
·
Oil:
43 years
·
Natural
gas: 61 years
Lifespan of our favourite
extinct dinosaurs (according to mainstream palaeontology):
·
Velociraptor:
20 years
·
Triceratops:
100 years
·
Brachiosaurus:
300 years
Here on-site, glancing at
the surrounding pipe-maze, I feel myself getting old. And I imagine the natural
gas and oil being separated beneath my feet and sent off through the woods to
be processed. On an average day, this lease that I'm monitoring produces
about $30,000 worth of petroleum. I wonder what the equivalent is in pounds of
dinosaur bones. How many Stegosaurus constitute a barrel? And what will become
of the skeletons of mankind in three hundred million years? Will an advanced
reptilian humanoid population employ their lot of part-time criminal, full-time
rednecks to pump our remaining essence into a fuel source, full circle?
I guess only time will tell.
I guess only time will tell.

Nice mix of fact and fun. I'll read on yes....
ReplyDeleteguess what.....
ReplyDeletechicken butt