Given this revelation, I expect someone to argue soon that this climate monitoring station in Tremonton, Utah is in a natural environment. 😉
From the University of California, Santa Barbara
Scientists discover underwater asphalt volcanoes
Impressive landmarks hidden for 40,000 years rise from sea-floor.
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(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– About 10 miles off the Santa Barbara coast, at the bottom of the Santa Barbara Channel, a series of impressive landmarks rise from the sea floor. They’ve been there for about 40,000 years, but they’ve remained hidden in the murky depths of the Pacific Ocean –– until now
UC Santa Barbara scientists, working with colleagues from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), UC Davis, University of Sydney, and University of Rhode Island, say that they have identified a series of asphalt volcanoes on the floor of the Santa Barbara Channel. The largest of these undersea Ice Age domes is at a depth of 700 feet (220 meters) –– much too deep for scuba diving –– which explains why the volcanoes have never been spotted by humans.
“It’s larger than a football field long and as tall as a six-story building,” said David Valentine, professor of earth science at UCSB and the lead author of a National Science Foundation-funded study published online this week in the journal Nature Geoscience. “It’s a massive feature, completely made out of asphalt.”
Chris Reddy, director of the Coastal Ocean Institute at WHOI and a co-author of the study, has studied oil spills his whole career. “These volcanoes are an astonishing display of nature,” Reddy said. “And they underscore one little-known fact: Half of the oil that enters the coastal environment is from natural oil seeps like the ones off the coast of California.”
Valentine, Reddy, and their colleagues first viewed the volcanoes during a 2007 dive on the research submarine Alvin, though Valentine credits Ed Keller, professor of earth science at UCSB, with guiding them to the site. “Ed had looked at some bathymetry (sea floor topography) studies conducted in the 1990’s and noted some very unusual features,” Valentine said.
Based on Keller’s research, Valentine and other scientists took Alvin into the area in 2007 and located the mystery features. Using the sub’s robotic arm, the researchers broke off samples and brought them to labs at UCSB and WHOI for testing. In 2009, Valentine and colleagues made two more dives to the area in Alvin and also did a detailed survey of the area using an autonomous underwater vehicle, Sentry, which takes photos as it glides about nine feet above the ocean floor.
“When you fly Sentry over the sea floor, you can see all of the cracking of the asphalt and flow features,” Valentine said. “You can see all of the textures of a flowing liquid that solidified in place. That’s one of the reasons we’re calling them volcanoes, because they have so many features that are indicative of a lava flow.”
But tests showed that these aren’t your typical lava volcanoes found in Hawaii and elsewhere around the Pacific Rim. Using a mass spectrometer, carbon dating, microscopic fossils, and comprehensive, two-dimensional gas chromatography, the scientists determined that these are asphalt and were formed when petroleum was flowing from the floor of the channel about 30,000-40,000 years ago.
The researchers also determined that the volcanoes were at one time a prolific source of methane, a greenhouse gas. The two largest volcanoes are about a kilometer apart and have pits or depressions surrounding them. These pits, according to Valentine, are signs of “methane gas bubbling from the subsurface.” That’s not surprising, Valentine said, considering how much petroleum was flowing. “They were spewing out a lot of petroleum, but also lots of natural gas,” he said, “which you tend to get when you have petroleum seepage in this area.”
The discovery that vast amounts of methane once emanated from the volcanoes caused the scientists to wonder if there might have been an environmental impact on the area during the Ice Age. Valentine found two high-profile studies, one in the journal Science and the other in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which examined events from that time, including a period in which water in the channel became anoxic. “It became a dead zone,” Valentine said. “We’re hypothesizing that these features may have been a major contributor to those events.”
While the volcanoes have been dormant for thousands of years, the 2009 Alvin dive revealed a few spots where gas was still bubbling. “We think it’s residual gas,” said Valentine, who added that the amount of gas is so small that it is harmless because it never reaches the surface.
Other co-authors of this study are Christopher Farwell, Sarah C. Bagby, Brian A. Clark, and Morgan Soloway, all from UCSB; Robert K. Nelson, Dana Yoerger, and Richard Camilli, from WHOI; Tessa M. Hill, UC Davis; Oscar Pizarro, University of Sydney; and Christopher N. Roman, University of Rhode Island.
Credit: Dana Yoerger
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They found oil and gas!
Drill baby drill!
Mine the asphalt for their roads, no?
Else they will just become tar heels….
EJ
Off the Atlantic coast of Spain or Portugal there are also huge tar seeps… Out from the Bay of Biscay.
They are in several thousand meters of water though… I saw it on a documentary not long ago. Very interesting.
Abiotic Oil. It’s not just for breakfast anymore.
http://www.rightsidenews.com/201002238787/energy-and-environment/abiotic-oil-and-gas-a-theory-that-refuses-to-vanish.html
Oil and gas have been generated out of sedimentary basins and have been leaking out onto ancient sea floors since the Archaean epoch (i.e. older than 2,700,000,000 years). Oil and gas seeps have been naturally forming for most of the Earth’s geological history. They are a product of the cooking up of algal and microbial plant matter in subsurface settings and then the migration of the generated hydrocarbons.
So we now know asphalt and humans are natural.
Seems the only things unnatural are the warmists decrying human usage of the earth’s plentiful gifts.
Don Shaw-” it is claimed that the oil reserves of the Alberta tar sands is on the order of Saudi Arabia” – not even close Don, Saudi Arabia allegedly has reserves of about 250 billion barrels ; the tar sands contain somewhere between 2.5 and 3 trillion barrels – 10 to 12 times as much. if only fifty per cent is recoverable, it’s 5 to 6 times more than Saudi Arabia. it does cost more to produce but Canada is closer and a more reliable ally than Saudi Arabia.
Asphalt that’s like microbial soup that has stopped decomposing due to the troll gene and gone eeek and wwas turned into stone, not like evil tar which is decomposed algae soup which has come back to haunt the greenies as tar zombie blobs….dam dam daaa.
Makes one wonder whose “ass” is at “fault”! (Ba-da-bing! (Rimshot sound effect))
“”While the volcanoes have been dormant for thousands of years, the 2009 Alvin dive revealed a few spots where gas was still bubbling. “We think it’s residual gas,” said Valentine, who added that the amount of gas is so small that it is harmless because it never reaches the surface.””
For such an important point, this does not get any attention.
re: near La Brea.
About 20 years ago when they were building subways in Los Angeles there were some scares about the boring machines hitting pockets of methane.
I’m not sure how that all worked out. Maybe it set CA afire. From AZ I often see red clouds in that direction at sunset.
They also had some problems with too much ground water getting into the tunnels.
All of these petroleum products found in the crust, where there is also found heat, pressure, sometimes steam…
Have we found natural polymers of high molecular weight, aka plastics? It’s not that I expect to find a polystyrene volcano somewhere, but I would think the basic conditions exist for cooking up some really long molecular chains. It would be in the interest of science to search for such and analyze their structure.
Also the concept of Mother Earth herself making plastics is certain to cause some green heads to explode. But that’s just a happy coincidental side-effect.
DesertYote (18:07:46) :
Of course Asphalt is natural. In the Bible its called brimstone.
Isn’t brimstone sulphur (sulfur) as in “Fire and Brimstone”.
None the less I think that the ancient Mesopotamians used naturally occurring crude oil to water proof mud bricks.
“It’s larger than a football field long and as tall as a six-story building,” said David Valentine, professor of earth science at UCSB”
Since when did we introduce these new ‘scientific’ units of measure?
“Dumbing Down” is quite the new thing over here in England, home of Newton and many other giants.
bubbagyro (17:09:59) :
Bill Sticker (16:26:46) :
Of course it does. You don’t think the earth’s mantle is hermetically sealed like Tupperware, do you?
————————-
All politicians and many engineering zombies in Europe do think that “the earth’s mantle is hermetically sealed like Tupperware”, because they are spending billions on trials for “carbon capture and storage” projects.
If you go for post-combustion capture you finish up with liquid CO2 at 200 bar (or 3,000 psi – to take care of pressure drop down the pipeline).
see: http://tinyurl.com/yecg6k6
This liquid CO2 is then moved by pipeline across country to a sea shore facility which pumps the liquid CO2 across the sea bed to a rig which then injects the liquid CO2 into the earth’s mantle, and hey presto, the planet is saved from this pollutant.
EUreferendum has more info, see: http://tinyurl.com/2v4y9xh
Here is a UK government press statement – “No new coal without CCS – Miliband”
Quote:- “This will apply to all new gas, oil, biomass, waste-to-energy and also coal power station applications on or above 300MW. The Government will only consider applications if they:
Confirm sufficient space available to retrofit CCS
Identify a suitable potential offshore area to store carbon dioxide
Map a feasible potential transport route from the power station to the storage area and
Do not have foreseeable barriers to retrofitting CCS.
Together, these criteria will prove a power station is ‘carbon capture ready’.”
see: http://tinyurl.com/d3mst4
We are ruled by lunatics.
The temperature sensor is has only three of the five features required for a Naturally sited sensor. It has asphalt, brink wall and AC exhaust, but it lacks either a burn barrel or a grill. Clearly temperatures readings from this site should be discarded
From the article:
“The discovery that vast amounts of methane once emanated from the volcanoes caused the scientists to wonder if there might have been an environmental impact on the area during the Ice Age.”
It occurs to me that since the sea level was far lower back then owing to the quantity of land ice, then there would have been significantly less surface pressure on the volcano’s release point.
That would have facilitated a greater release of the petroleum.
If you walk around the oil sands of west Colorado, you may change your opinion. Some is hard, and a whole lot is soft.
Gaia does Big Oil? Who knew? 😀
Cold Englishman (01:18:44) :
It’s commonly used over here to give people a chance to compare something novel to something within their experience. The recent dome building Mt St Helens eruption was compared to compared to filling a Seattle sports stadium multiple time, it was used in the 1960s to describe the amount of kerosene and LOX the Saturn V rocket pumped (8.9 seconds to drain a 110,000 liter swimming pool).
People still use the phrase “bigger than a bread box” even though I haven’t seen a bread box since the 1970s.
Don’t sweat it, there are bigger issues to worry about.
Shub Niggurath (17:09:47) :
Asphalt under the sea?
Maybe Cthulhu is sleeping there
The great Lovecraft was thinking about the Dark prophet, the other god, the hideous Fatty and Oily Al and his repulsive philosophy, intended to alienate human beigns and take them to the underworld to feed the Asphalt King, the Beast himself…..
Fantasies apart, there is no bigger stupidity than the rejection by greeny idiots of all “chemicals”, as unnatural. Everything is NATURAL: Did any of these chemicals come from other planet?. NO. It is sad for me to say it, but even the most hideous creature on earth, Al the Gore, is also “chemical”, as IT is composed of natural chemicals, however in strangely associated molecules of the most repulsive and heavy elements.
The picture of the asphalt chunk reminds me of the old Archie comic wherein they find four chunks of stone/concrete at an excavation site with the word fragments:
KING ZO NO PAR NE
After they leave to contact an archeologist the little kid watching puts it together the right way:
NO
PARKING
ZONE
The confusion seems a little like the warmistas interpretations of normal climate activity.
Steve in SC (17:07:00) :
La Brea Tar Pits Submerged
Did you know that La Brea means The Tar and refers to a place in northern Peru where tar surfaced in the desert, called La Brea y Pariñas. After that it was found it was exploited by the Standard Oil of New Jersey, for many years. It was the first foregin oil field drilled after the ones drilled in the US.
Most oil fields are found by following seeps back to their source. The fancy testing equipment is then used to find where the oil is within that field.
Yes, the oil reservoirs in the Earth’s crust are not hermetically sealed. The oil is found in rocks where it didn’t manage to leak out, and often the edges of those same rocks are indeed leaking.
Interesting blog – thanks.
What I like is the MAGNIFICENT map that those three kids are standing in front of for the picture. I want one like that!!!
Malcolm
Brownedoff (02:26:58) :
…This liquid CO2 is then moved by pipeline across country to a sea shore facility which pumps the liquid CO2 across the sea bed to a rig which then injects the liquid CO2 into the earth’s mantle, and hey presto, the planet is saved from this pollutant. …
_______________________________________________________________________________
We can all become rich by setting up “sealed” green houses for them to pumps the liquid CO2 into.
No need to “pollute” the sea with costly CO2 sequestering. Use Joe Snakeoilman’s new patented organic method for getting rid of that unwanted dangerous CO2. Just pay Joe $1000 a gallon and he will turn you CO2 into life giving Oxygen and veggies. Just remember folks Joe Snakeoilman’s patented method is not only enviromentally friendly, its organic too!