dorsal/arxiv
View SchemaEnhanced Prognosis for Abiotic Natural Gas and Petroleum Resources
| Authors | J. Marvin Herndon |
|---|---|
| Categories | |
| ArXiv ID | physics/0603220 |
| URL | https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0603220 |
Abstract
The prognosis for potential resources of abiotic natural gas and petroleum depends critically upon the nature and circumstances of Earth formation. Until recently, that prognosis has been considered solely within the framework of the so-called "standard model of solar system formation", which is incorrect and leads to the contradiction of terrestrial planets having insufficiently massive cores. By contrast, that prognosis is considerably enhanced (i) by the new vision I have disclosed of Earth formation as a Jupiter-like gas giant; (ii) by core formation contemporaneous with raining out from within a giant gaseous protoplanet rather than through subsequent whole-Earth re-melting after loss of gases; (iii) by the consequences of whole-Earth decompression dynamics, which obviates the unfounded assumption of mantle convection, and; (iv) by the process of mantle decompression thermal-tsunami. The latter, in addition to accounting for much of the heat leaving the Earth's surface, for the geothermal gradient observed in the crust, for substantial volcanism, and possibly for earthquake generation as well, also might enhance the prognosis for future abiotic energy supplies by pressurizing and heating the base of the crust, a potential collection point for abiotic mantle methane or other mantle-derived carbon-containing matter.
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"abstract": "The prognosis for potential resources of abiotic natural gas and petroleum\ndepends critically upon the nature and circumstances of Earth formation. Until\nrecently, that prognosis has been considered solely within the framework of the\nso-called \"standard model of solar system formation\", which is incorrect and\nleads to the contradiction of terrestrial planets having insufficiently massive\ncores. By contrast, that prognosis is considerably enhanced (i) by the new\nvision I have disclosed of Earth formation as a Jupiter-like gas giant; (ii) by\ncore formation contemporaneous with raining out from within a giant gaseous\nprotoplanet rather than through subsequent whole-Earth re-melting after loss of\ngases; (iii) by the consequences of whole-Earth decompression dynamics, which\nobviates the unfounded assumption of mantle convection, and; (iv) by the\nprocess of mantle decompression thermal-tsunami. The latter, in addition to\naccounting for much of the heat leaving the Earth\u0027s surface, for the geothermal\ngradient observed in the crust, for substantial volcanism, and possibly for\nearthquake generation as well, also might enhance the prognosis for future\nabiotic energy supplies by pressurizing and heating the base of the crust, a\npotential collection point for abiotic mantle methane or other mantle-derived\ncarbon-containing matter.",
"arxiv_id": "physics/0603220",
"authors": [
"J. Marvin Herndon"
],
"categories": [
"physics.gen-ph",
"physics.geo-ph"
],
"title": "Enhanced Prognosis for Abiotic Natural Gas and Petroleum Resources",
"url": "https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0603220"
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