Tuesday, November 07, 2006

Oil is thicker than water

Oil is thicker than water and gas… when oil is taken out and replaced with water or gas, the earths surface will heat up quicker. That oil, a type of thick insulation acts as natures way to keep heat exchange down.

Example… a few years back, Alaska didn’t have enough snow fall to help protect the surface layer from freezing… temps dropped, the water lines and sewer systems froze. Even the main city lines and septic tanks. Now consider using that in reverse. Always think in opposites. Reverse technology works… yin/yang. Always think of the opposite reasoning to think of a balancing measure.

Removing the oil which is thicker than water and gas… you remove the right amount of viscosity (is that the right word?). Yeah, a heated liquid that is viscous. No refrigeration needed to keep that thickness. Ok, remove that heavy thick liquid and it will causes the “wobble" of the earth and tilting of the poles. Ok, ok, a laughable thought, so, joking aside... no more warm blanket of thick oil, earth's inner core temps rise to the surface and melting of glaciers happen, upon other things. A ricochet effect that attributes to total meltdown. This then can possibly be another factor when evaluating reasons for the earth's surface heating up.

Simple science that I often wondered about.

Maybe I'm wrong on some things but, eh... I'm just me... I was a simple housewife, former (North) slope widow, who is now in transition to a new beginning and am happy to be alive.




M. Cheri Bordelon
7-2006
Written while still in Alaska

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