On Fracking

 

This post represents two milestones for WUWT.

1. It is the first post where a detailed examination of fracking has been offered to the readers.

2. It is the first post I’ve authored from an airplane cruising about 35,000 feet enroute from Atlanta to Phoenix. I’m connected to Southwest’s new inflight WiFI service. Mr. McClenney sent me this post just as I was about to board and I emailed back that I wouldn’t be able to get to it for hours. And then I discovered this new miracle of technology. Here’s my view just before posting:

bloginflight

Guest post by William F. McClenney

I had occasion recently to watch several presentations on environmental aspects of hydraulic fracturing at the world’s largest oil and gas industry conference. To this day I remain dumbfounded as to why the argument I am about to present here has never been mentioned before (at least to my knowledge).

It is fundamental to all arguments which attempt to deal with the effects of oil and gas development to consider the initial discoveries of petroleum: seeps. Seeps are natural leaks from traps where migration of hydrocarbons have accumulated predominantly in reservoir rocks in the subsurface. These seeps represent leakage of these trapped hydrocarbons along predominantly fractures and faults, and to a lesser extent other pathways (such as unconformities etc.). (For a basic video see: http://wn.com/oil_trap)

Until the past decade or so, the search for these traps has been the focus of the O&G industry since its inception. Reservoir rocks are those rocks which have facilitated this migration through the provision of porosity and permeability necessary to allow the movement of fluids and gases derived primarily from the maturation of hydrocarbons most commonly derived from source rocks such as shales and mudstones which lie beneath them stratigraphically. Perhaps the most common reservoirs are sandstones.

Let me repeat that, the source rocks almost always lie beneath the reservoir rocks.

The other necessity for a reservoir rock to be a reservoir rock is a top seal or rock of low to minimal porosity and permeability (often also shales), sometimes in association with a structural discontinuity, such as a fault or anticline, which prevent the majority of the migrated hydrocarbons to keep migrating towards the surface. Stratigraphic traps, which also require a top seal rock, are also targets, such as conversion of limestone to dolomite through the addition of magnesium rich fluids which ideally can result in creation of up to 11% porosity in the dolostone. Where the updip limit of this conversion occurs defines the limits of the stratigraphic traps.

image

http://www.geo.wvu.edu/~jtoro/petroleum/Review%202.html

So traps, however they were formed, are the key to comprehending not only how economic accumulations of hydrocarbons occur, but also the how and why you literally cannot get here from there with hydraulic fracturing.

image

http://www.geo.wvu.edu/~jtoro/petroleum/Review%202.html

image

http://www.geo.wvu.edu/~jtoro/petroleum/Review%202.html

Let’s start with hydraulic fracturing itself. This only recently impinged on the popular consciousness and is therefore “new”. To the petroleum or gas geologist, these arewere new techniques to increase porosity and permeability beginning in the 1960s, with their initial use in the reservoir rocks in mostly vertical wells. Read reservoir rocks, not top seal or much lower source rocks. “New” must therefore encompass the massive use of this technique for over half a century in strata which overlie the source rocks, and in just about every known oil or gas field in the world.

Combine source, reservoir and top seal and you have what we call a “petroleum system”.

image

http://www.geo.wvu.edu/~jtoro/petroleum/Review%202.html7

 

Oddly, use of hydraulic fracturing for the last half-century in the reservoir rocks has not caused a groundwater problem anywhere I am aware of. Those of you that can provide examples of where this half-century of intense reservoir hydraulic fracturing has caused drinking water aquifer impacts please chime in.

But the game changed ever so slowly with the development and evolution of directional drilling into steerable horizontal drilling now all the rage. The horizontal evolution spanning mostly just the last decade or so.

What this means is that for the most part, we are now targeting for the first time the source rocks themselves. What that means is we are now going after the much lower, stratigraphically, tight organic source shales etc. This could be the end game for petroleum and gas exploration, for once we have exhausted the source rocks……………..

So here is what has been missing entirely (from what I can tell) from the present “hot” discussion on fracking. So think “source rock”. Lying beneath the reservoir rocks, where fracking has been going on extensively for decades. Now add in horizontal drilling, sometimes for miles away from the drillpad in several directions. As they are “fracked”, enormous lift, on the order of maybe millimeters to maybe inches or possibly a few feet occurs to open up pathways for migration of the hydrocarbon load towards the horizontal well(s).

Do you realize what this means? It means that there is a definite possibility that such radical lifting and fracturing of the source rocks has a very slight possibility of increasing what for tens to hundreds of millions of years was already the natural seeping of hydrocarbons from the source rocks into the reservoir rocks!

Do you realize what that means? That means that meager induced releases of new hydrocarbons from the surfaces of the source rocks could actually “get on the freeway” of the reservoir rocks where they could mischievously, eventually, make their way into the structural and stratigraphic traps where they could literally be “stuck” under the top seals or structural seals, at least until removed by say existing oil field wells in the reservoir rocks, or egregiously eke their way through the labyrinthine natural plumbing of the natural seeps to say drinking water aquifers.

Imagine even a few feet lifting from hydraulic fracturing in the source rocks propagating all the way through the reservoir rocks, literally blasting past all the hydraulic fracturing maybe occurring there for decades before, and even more powerfully fracturing not only the top seal rocks but the miles of sediments and beds above. Very, very impressive, if we could only do it…….. A nuclear test might, repeat might, crack the entire stratigraphic section to1 the surface a mile or two above it, but not much else is likely to.

image

http://maps.unomaha.edu/maher/GEOL1010/lecture18/lecture18.html

For oil and gas, the migration process could be considered “fast” geologically, perhaps taking from tens of thousands to tens of millions of years to occur due to the density drive which allows crude and gas to “rapidly” migrate into the reservoirs above the formation water. You know, oil floats on water, and so on.

image

Seismic section image off the coast of California showing sedimentary layering, faults, and other geologic features. Some of the features, especially in the deeper and lower parts, are artifacts of the imaging technique, and it is helpful to be trained in the interpretation of seismic sections. This type of data is crucial and common in oil exploration. Note the vertical scale of depth. Image source: http://walrus.wr.usgs.gov/mapping/csmp/data_collection.html

But the fate of the myriad chemicals being employed in today’s hydro-fracturing

regimes is not so sublime. What would drive these chemicals even into the culminations of the structural or stratigraphic traps? Most are water based solutions, with water starting out with a slight density advantage to say salt water (most connate waters are salty, surface seawater today ~1.025 specific gravity), that is until you dissolve said myriad chemicals into them, when the density drive case gets rather murky at best for water-based chemical fracking fluids, if not strongly negative (specific gravities being greater than 1.0).

Shoot these out into the connate water parts of the oil/column/reservoir rocks and voila, there you have it! They might be denser than even the connate waters, but unlike oil, they will dissolve and disperse. Whereas we have natural oil seeps above many known oil finds, we don’t often find brine springs. Why? Well oil is generally lighter than water (gas dramatically lighter) so it floats. If fresh water can “float” atop the denser warm Gulf Stream waters of the Atlantic, and shut down its circulation (according to many), how is this denser, salty or chemically laden, probably denser formation and frack water supposed to rise up, undispersed, through the top seal and structural traps, cascading and being refracted along countless bedding planes and unconformities to arrive, and still be detectable in near-surface (say less than 1,000 foot deep, and that’s being generous) aquifers thousands of feet to miles higher in a geologic instant?

Such that the USEPA can claim that they have found its signature in 3 places, only to later recant that they bungled that badly in each case.

With one exception, the ONLY way to get these “dangerous chemicals” into an aquifer quicksmart is if they

  1. Possess a density less than crude oils yet greater than methane (assuming they remain water-based solutions and do not spontaneously become a gas at deep formation pressures (ludicrous just to cogitate)

  2. Have an yet unreported ability to jet through the labyrinth of bedding planes, other shales etc. in order to reach the surface often miles above in no time flat, where we can sample them.

The exception being transmission up the annulus of the exploratory boring/well itself. Now this can be a rather egregious problem as Macondo informs us. Are we not yet to learn the dirty details of Halliburton’s slipshod cementing of Macondo’s annulus? And this is an all too common problem for the O&G industry, driven as it is by economics, often offering bonuses to drilling contractors for completing the well ahead of schedule. Newly drilled wells are all too frequently subjected to anthropogenic pressures “before their time”, i.e. before the cement has been allowed to properly setup. Assuming it is proper cement in the first place.

This egregious problem can readily be addressed with some skillful regulations on concrete formulations (with allowances for evolution of these formulations by rigorous engineering standards which they must achieve), and a permit-specified curing time etc.? At least at the minimum.

That is literally about all it would take. This would not be egregiously expensive to the O&G industry, at least not when compared to blow-outs, extensive baseline groundwater monitoring ahead of and during drilling/production, cleanup costs etc. Environmental considerations, frankly, should be everyone’s first move these days. Would better up-front due diligence have prevented Macondo, Elgin or Frade? It’s just risk management, which Macondo informs us, can be a pretty big part of exploration management, and cost.

Just as “A stern chase after a lie is a long one” so is the trip for natural oil and gas seeps, which have had tens to hundreds of millions of years to do it, and a much more robust density drive than water based, and therefore easily further dissolved/dispersed chemical fracking solutions are likely to ever have. The “hole” in this theory is the exploration/production borehole itself, a relatively trivial and inexpensive problem to solve.

William F. McClenney

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April 30, 2012 10:04 am

Andy_in_Alberta says on April 30, 2012 at 9:42 am:

… How about someone from the industry write this sort of thing rather than an obvious neophyte….

Andy,
When can we expect to see your byline on an article? (Being ‘on stage’ is not as easy as it looks; much easier to accompany us out here in the peanut gallery than actually being up there ‘on stage’ catching slings and arrows from all directions and all quarters … )
.

Catcracking
April 30, 2012 10:07 am

Today Mr Armandariz of “crucify them ” fame resigned.
Lisa Jackson should follow his example and let us get on with improving the economy.
“Mr. Armendariz, whose oil-rich region includes Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas, made the comments at a Texas town hall meeting two years ago. The “crucify” quip went virtually unnoticed until Wednesday afternoon, when Sen. James M. Inhofe, Oklahoma Republican, quoted Mr. Armendariz during a half-hour speech on the Senate floor.”

April 30, 2012 10:08 am

Andy_in_Alberta says:
April 30, 2012 at 9:42 am
Of course you aren’t lifting thousands of feet of rock, that was the whole point. The exaggeration of “several feet” should have been obvious. That should have been an obvious impossibility.
The point of the piece was not to dissect every last little detail of hydraulic fracturing but to provide a general overview sufficient to make the point that getting fracking fluids to near surface aquifers is rather difficult.
Please keep in mind that not all readers here are as well versed in this highly technical area as perhaps you are. This was an introduction.

the1pag
April 30, 2012 11:00 am

Thanks Kforestcat for that interesting and most illuminating posting about cementing — I copied it for possible future reference. I was particularly intrigued by your novel use of tampons for an exotic plugging job when nothing else seemed to work! Wouldn’t it be wonderful if that scheme could be applied also to plugging the prolific maw our EPA uses to flood all industries with new regulations?
However, I have a question regarding the ability of a cement slurry to adhere to the casing (after it hardens) in a certain special situation. If the casing is driven down to the target petroleum formation, but while going down it must pass through some oily rock strata, can this leave a thin oily stain on the outside surface of the casing?
Can such oily staining inhibit the secure attachment of the concrete sealant to the steel? Is there any possible concrete formulation that can cope with such a potential problem?

Bill Parsons
April 30, 2012 11:24 am

Compared to purging and cleaning up an aquifer, cleaning up a mining site after it is used would look like child’s play – that didn’t stop gold and silver miners from abandoning mines when they had finished with them here in Colorado. I live downriver from one such site – an area where dozens of mines were blasted, used up and then abandoned when the trouble to extract metals exceeded their prices on the open market (a process not unlike what is occurring now with natural gas). They call such mines “orphan” sites because no “responsible adult” is willing to take charge of them – only the government. The government calls this one a “superfund” site. No one wants to see “orphan wells” either. Mr. McClenney, your challenge to “chime in” with an example of a single incident of water pollution from mining is an intersting one. It took me one minute to find one, which I won’t bother to post. What you really mean is, find an example of a spill that an oil company hasn’t denied responsibility for. I would suggest that any oil company that is not willing to be responsible for a well they drill shouldn’t be drilling one in the first place.
Drillers might mollify a lot of concerns if they agreed to a few simple precautions before they drill: 1) Presample all groundwater and aquifers in the area likely to be affected by drilling 2) Submit samples of the fracking fluid used to determine exact composition and hazards to health, and 3) Post a surety commensurate with the potential dangers – whatever amount is required to do a clean-up in the event of a worst-case scenario, such as the Macondo event.
If companies refuse to submit samples of fluids for “proprietary reasons”, I would suggest that they allow a suitable, inert substance, harmless in drinking water, be substituted, which would allow their drilling fluids to be “fingerprinted” by a chemical analysis. Such a compound would not hurt their drilling, but allow EPA (or whatever agency willing to be the “adult”) to identify the source without question.
I respect the dangerous, dirty, highly technical, (and actually, quite interesting) work the oil and gas companies do. I drive a car and heat my home. I just don’t think your arguments that pollution will never happen hold a lot of water.

April 30, 2012 11:44 am

Bill Parsons says:
April 30, 2012 at 11:24 am
Bill, I had a hard time following you. What challenge about mining sites? The challenge was to see if someone could come up with some good examples of where hydraulic fracturing in reservoir rocks had contaminated a drinking water aquifer. Who ever said pollution will never happen? Please rethink what you meant to say and re-post it.
Thanks,

Tom G(ologist)
April 30, 2012 12:16 pm

Richard 111
My research was in NATURAL hydraulic fracturing of aprecambrian rock DURING the paleozoic. In other words, seismic pumping during the Devonian, of a gas-rich fluid along a reactivated PreCambrian fault resulted in teh hydraulic fracturing of the rock, transport of a a fluid-gas slurry into an expanding halo of micro-fractures which expanded and filled with the crystallizing fluid which supported brecciated fragments of the host rock. this was/is a natural phenomenon, not conducted by O&G operators. It’s relevance is in the understanding of the stresses induced by increased pore pressures and the orientations and distributions of the resultant fractures and on potential induced seismicity.

SidViscous
April 30, 2012 12:28 pm

Mac the Knife re: water
Your right. At times water has been so plentiful that I’ve actually seen it fall out of the sky and squandered running down the road.
In my 43 years I have yet to see it rain hydrocarbons.

mbur
April 30, 2012 1:40 pm

Maybe OT ,but.Here’s my co2 and oil connection equation:
more CO2=more biomass
biomass+natural disaster+heat+pressure+time=oil
I think it’s better if we use the oil(burning for heat,fuel,plastics,etc.)(semi-controlled).
Than to let some volcano burn it (un-controlled).
I don’t know if that’s exactly true,I am not a scientist,but it seems logical to me

Goldie
April 30, 2012 5:32 pm

One thing that seems to be missing here is the formation integrity test that occurs immediately after casing and cementing. The idea is that, once the casing is in place and cemented, the Blow Out Preventers are set and the hole is pressurised until there is a slight loss – this gives the maximum pressure that the formation/cement can stand before loss occurs. When drilling forward from this point it is imperative that formation over pressure never exceeds this point. The problem with fracking is that in order to fracture the formation you actually have to exceed that point and I assume that’s the reason that they use wireline to determine the integrity of the cement. I suppose the question then becomes – how much fluid is actually used (lost to formation) in achieving fracking?
In Australia, fracking has gained a really bad name becuase some of the coal seam gas holes in Queensland are shallow and appear to have been fractured without an adequate confining layer over the top. However, this has nothing to do will oilfield fracking, which should occur at much greater depths.

April 30, 2012 7:20 pm

Slide 13 of this http://www.awexplore.com/irm/Company/ShowPage.aspx/PDFs/2512-48707204/AWEsMay2012Presentation gives a good picture of actual practice rather than imagined practice.

April 30, 2012 8:32 pm

SidViscous says:
April 30, 2012 at 12:28 pm
Mac the Knife re: water
Your right.

*Cringe*
You can write it that way, I suppose, it is you’re right [sic] to do so …
.

A. Scott
May 1, 2012 12:35 am

Miss Grundy says:
April 30, 2012 at 8:23 am
Does anyone here have any info about the claims that fracking causes earthquakes, or at least tremors? The article above refers to “lifting and fracturing of source rocks”, and I am wondering whether that would be enough to cause quakes or tremors capable of being felt, let alone causing stresses or even damage to structures. I’m a layman, so this is entirely a naive question on my part.

Simplistically speaking, frac’ing as has been noted occurs at depths far below (deeper than) groundwater resources. But it also occurs generally well above the typical depths of any significant earthquake activity.
Almost all tremors with any suspected link to mining activity are minor – registering 1’s and 2’s mostly – almost entirely indiscernible to humans.
Further – the limited anecdotal evidence seems to indicate as I read it there is some thought the tremors that may be associated with frac’ing are largely the result of safely pumping flowback into injection wells – old wells no longer producing.
I have seen it speculated that the lubrication of the flowback may release small scale pressure in what are normally not fault zones. I have also seen speculation that IF the use of these injections wells does cause a meaningful issue that there is a good likelihood it could be beneficial. If it allows release of built up pressures at a lower magnitude the theory would be it may prevent a larger magnitude event later.
The above is simple recollection from memory of various reading and research and may be wrong 😉
A couple links:
earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsus
http://www.triplepundit.com/2012/04/new-usgs-report-links-fracking-earthquakes/
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=ohio-earthquake-likely-caused-by-fracking

phlogiston
May 1, 2012 2:45 am

The opposition to fracking is pure Luddite-ism.
Sad and pathetic but a political reality. It will serve as a test of the reach of environmentalist cultural self-loathing and self-destruction.
In the USA the new gas production from fracking and resultant cheap energy plus avoided expensive import will save their economy from bankruptcy.
Europe, rejecting fracking in environmentalist self-flagellation, will sink to intractable bankruptcy and economic irrelevance.
BTW the Chinese are trying hard to get in on the act but their shales are too soft, unfortunately for them (unlike the drier and brittle US marine shales).

Richard111
May 1, 2012 4:50 am

Tom G(ologist) April 30, 2012 at 12:16 pm
Thank you for the explanation. I take it you aren’t looking for O&G. 🙂
I am curious to find what sort of creatures lived in such abundance
in the far past to provide all the current O&G fossil fuels.

t3eak
May 1, 2012 6:36 am

—-
Bill Parsons says:
April 30, 2012 at 11:24 am
Drillers might mollify a lot of concerns if they agreed to a few simple precautions before they drill: 1) Presample all groundwater and aquifers in the area likely to be affected by drilling 2) Submit samples of the fracking fluid used to determine exact composition and hazards to health, and 3) Post a surety commensurate with the potential dangers – whatever amount is required to do a clean-up in the event of a worst-case scenario, such as the Macondo event.
— I’ll assume you mean “Operators” who called for the drill rig, and later for the service company to frac. It’s not uncommon for operators (sorry, I mean O&G companies like Shell, BP, EnCana) to “trace” a zone with lightly radioactive powder. When flowback/production occurs, measuring the amount of each isotope recovered can help determine where production originated. To repeat in a simpler way, putting isotope A, B, and C in zones 1, 10 and 20 respectively helps determine production along the lateral, where running a flowtest tool is nigh-impossible (Due to downhole tools such as sleeves and the need to pump a tool sideways against production.
— I believe North Dakota has a state-wide policy that requires a pressure-relief system to be present on every hydraulic fracture job; This helps ensure that if, for some reason, pressure exerted by the service company’s pumps exceed a certain level, a mechanical valve opens to relieve that pressure into a nearby vessel. There are also electronic controls that allow a computer to kill a pump’s power if excessive pressure is read.
If companies refuse to submit samples of fluids for “proprietary reasons”, I would suggest that they allow a suitable, inert substance, harmless in drinking water, be substituted, which would allow their drilling fluids to be “fingerprinted” by a chemical analysis. Such a compound would not hurt their drilling, but allow EPA (or whatever agency willing to be the “adult”) to identify the source without question.
—Again, confusing drilling with hydraulic fracturing, but hey. Service companies that use proprietary fluid systems (primarily, in my experience, plant fiber derivatives and metallic “crosslink agents”) spend a lot of R&D to make a fluid that will:
1. Carry high sand concentrations (anywhere from 0.5 ppg to 8+ ppg) downhole and *sideways* through casing, then *into formation* *through fractures* (high shear!) to place the sand as far down those cracks as is feasible.
2. “Break” once it has placed sand in formation (and not before!), and allow fluid to flow through the sand (er, “proppant”, soz) so that oil/gas can migrate back through the high-conductivity sand-packed frac they made.
3. Be resilient to varying water quality. Water is typically supplied by the operator by third party “water haulers”, who probably use local water sources to supply the operator’s needs. Typically, a service company tests for 5 to 8 types of contaminants, including salt, iron and bicarbonates. This can be done on-the-fly during a job or between zones, or just at the start, depending on their QA/QC policy.
4. Be reasonably cheap (*cough* “Cost-effective”), decently safe to handle on surface (Can’t have everyone on location in a Tyvek suit and respirator, after all) and be easily obtainable.
— Several service companies *are* submitting data to a third-party database. Check out fracfocus.org . Some companies even have started disclosing the proprietary chemicals used, but will omit exactly which component of their fluid system it’s present in (to help protect it’s purpose, etc). I have no idea if the general public has access to this, however.
I respect the dangerous, dirty, highly technical, (and actually, quite interesting) work the oil and gas companies do. I drive a car and heat my home. I just don’t think your arguments that pollution will never happen hold a lot of water.
— Thanks! We need to do a better job of showing people how well we are actually doing in the industry.

bob alou
May 1, 2012 11:16 am

As a petroleum engineer who was involved in the first 18 or so Barnett Shale wells while working for Mitchell Energy back in the early 80’s I find this article a very basic overview and somewhat helpful to lay readers. The process of development of the Barnett started out with attempts to complete the wells by simply perforating the casing (just a puff of gas production), to a nitrogen frac (yes we did not use the k until the media bastardized the word and we also used fracing because we knew what we were talking about), followed by CO2 (OMG not that poisonous stuff), foamed CO2, foamed CO2 and water, to a small sand/water frac, then up to a 2 million pound sand/water frac (the total sand was the 2 million mixed at various concentrations). It was a very expensive science project that took a lot of foresight, perseverance, and money that was provided by Mr. George Mitchell. This was done in conventional vertically drilled wells.
I find it funny to read most media releases about fracing. You can immediately tell the slant you are to get as soon as you read their description of a frac job – “a process where drillers complete the well by blasting large volumes of chemicals, water, and sand to fracture the formation…”. How dramatic is that. Oooohhh, “Blasting” and “Chemicals”, I’m so scared, OH NOES, EVERYBODY PANIC.
Here is a link that gives a simple explanation of most frac fluids http://www.energyindepth.org/frac-fluid.pdf in an easy to follow graphic layout.
A rule of thumb for fracs is that <3000 ft. they are horizontal and deeper than 3000 ft. they transition to vertical, even those in horizontally drilled wells.
Fracing is not part of the drilling process as pointed out above. It is part of the completion phase. You can break the process into drilling/casing, completion, production (including reworking the well), and plugging/abandoning. Drillers almost never have anything to do w/the completion of normal wells let alone the massive frac jobs. They are long gone.
There is so much more on this but I must go, lunch is over.

Tom Jones
May 1, 2012 12:55 pm

What is the increase in production quantity due to each ingredient?

Bill Parsons
May 1, 2012 2:53 pm

t3eak says:
May 1, 2012 at 6:36 am
Thanks for the comments and your explanations.
William McClenney
Thanks for the write-up.

Kforestcat
May 1, 2012 4:02 pm

the1pag says: April 30, 2012 at 11:00 am
Dear thelpag
With regard your question about cementing techniques. This subject is a bit too complex for this forum. If your interested in the basics of cementing I would suggest the site:
gekengineering.com
Look down the list of free downloads. I’d start with the PDF entitled “cementing” to get the overall picture and then move on the PDF entitled “Cementing Chapter 3”.
The remaining articles should provide good starting point on any questions you might have regarding a variety of drilling issues.
Regards,
Kforestcat

Brian H
May 2, 2012 1:29 am

Jeff L says:
April 29, 2012 at 5:33 pm

The risk vs benefit analysis is a no-brainer as the benefits so far out way the risks.

That’s “out-weigh”.
But it’s only true if you value things like prosperity and employment. If you consider those to be blights on Big Momma Gaia, then …
😉

Brian H
May 2, 2012 2:28 am

tonyb says:
April 30, 2012 at 12:20 am
Anthony
The trouble with pushing the boundaries with these two milestones is that we here at WUWT will expect ever greater efforts in future. So, when will you be authoring your first article from the space station-or the depths of the sea- anywhere else will seem pretty tame 🙂
tonyb

Give him a break! He checked and posted it. It was really “authored” by the Guest Author, one William M., if you consider creating the content to be an essential part of “authoring”, outside of blog lingo. 😉
That said, I guess the Muse and inspiration could strike anywhere … maybe Genesis III?

Brian H
May 2, 2012 3:32 am

Richard111 says:
May 1, 2012 at 4:50 am
Tom G(ologist) April 30, 2012 at 12:16 pm
Thank you for the explanation. I take it you aren’t looking for O&G. 🙂
I am curious to find what sort of creatures lived in such abundance
in the far past to provide all the current O&G fossil fuels.

Assuming it is indeed biotic oil, the same ones as make up the great bulk of living matter now. Germs. Bacteria. Viruses. Algae. Anaerobes. Archaea. Phytoplankton. Etc.
You get the idea.

May 2, 2012 9:17 pm

Why do I care where you authored this story?