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Is Oil an Advanced Lubricant Engineered by Planetary Builders?

A giant stone figure pours black liquid as oil pumps work under a large full moon in a dusty, orange-hued landscape.

Planetary Builders

Oil has long been labeled a fossil fuel, a designation so ingrained that the underlying theory is rarely, if ever, challenged. The theory of oil’s origin has become fact. Nothing has changed behind the known science of oil. Many of the ingredients in oil are ignored and the term fossil fuel has been cemented further. The truth of oil’s known ingredients points to profound paradigm shifting questions.  What if oil is something entirely different than melted dinosaurs or ocean plankton and plants?  What if the evidence suggested that oil is not a natural byproduct of fossils at all, but rather an ancient, man-made substance—engineered as part of Earth’s intentional design?


Is Earth intentionally designed? According to the Seti Institute (2020), “it’s estimated there could be as many as 300 million potentially habitable planets in our galaxy.” The debate over whether exoplanets like ours arise through natural happenstance or reflect intelligent, even divine, design remains an enduring point of discussion among philosophers, scientists, and atheists a like. One of the arguments for intelligent design is the exact distance that a planet must be from its star to sustain life. Yet, there are estimated to be 300 million and counting exoplanets that could hold life, so wouldn’t this speak to the randomness of the universe? 


Another key consideration is the precise positioning of a moon like ours, one whose presence plays a critical role in sustaining nearly all life on Earth. Together, these two points serve as compelling evidence in favor of intelligent design, if not outright divine design. The precise and finely tuned nature of science appears too exacting to be mere coincidence, suggesting the hand of intelligent design.


For future explorations and deeper inquiries, it’s worth noting that many cultures across the world preserve traditions of a time before the Moon existed. This naturally raises a profound question: if the Moon were artificial or deliberately placed into orbit, would it not point toward intelligent, or perhaps even divine design? Does it also mean that the planet, well placed to its star, still needed further tweaking or refining? Once the planet was completed, could the moon have possibly been moved, built and/or placed to shape what would be our home today?


The science behind the elements of oil leads to the following speculation:. breaking from the very 3-D way we see fossil fuels requires a paradigm shifting prybar for your mind. What about a third possibility? Is it possible—whether by natural processes, intelligent design, or divine intention—that humanity, or an even more advanced race, emerged in the distant past?


Could it be that this race, human or otherwise, either arrived in our solar system or evolved here to such an advanced state that it possessed the capability to place a moon in orbit, along with undertaking other feats of galactic engineering? Could this society also shape 3000-ton megalithic blocks for buildings and work with lay-lines? This society had attained such profound knowledge of the cosmos, extending down to the intricacies of quantum mechanics, that they could engineer the very internal and celestial functions of the planet itself.  


Just like a sail in the wind, perhaps at one point, the planet was a random creation among hundreds of millions of life sustaining planets. Then a random higher life form of humans or others evolved from it. This society may have come from the solar system… or from further away. Whether they arrived or evolved, this ancient society didn’t make the planet from scratch. But could they have tweaked this existing “natural” planet? Or built it into the life sustaining beast that it is?


 Is it possible the intelligent design theory of the Earth is found in the evidence of oil?  The natural theory suggests that over time, organic life including plants and animals died. Through radiation and heating processes within the Earth, the cocktail for oil was perfected. Those deposits of oil, all over the Earth, are almost identically available to us now. We extract billions of barrels by the day all around the world with a dwindling supply. This is a western world theory.


There is evidence to suggest oil use will greatly harm the earth’s atmosphere and organic life with carbon polluting. This carbon addition to the atmosphere could contribute to global warming, making organic life impossible over time.  The insistence on framing oil as a fossil fuel serves more than just the interests of alternative energy advocates; by promoting the notion that oil is a finite resource, its price can be driven by projections of scarcity.


There is a big problem with the question of oil for atheists and pragmatists to scientists east and west. The deepest fossil found to date was discovered 16,000 feet into the earth. Every other fossil found has been above that depth. The deepest oil ever extracted has come from wells reaching depths of up to 30,000 feet. This is twice the distance between all theories of known life on the planet. That needs its own conversation. In this case, the depth at which oil is found is often attributed to plate tectonics and the Earth’s continual recycling of its upper layers. Essentially, oil found at depths beyond 30,000 feet is thought to result from geological forces that push new rock upward while driving older surface soil and rock layers deep into the Earth.  


Over hundreds of millions, or even billions, of years, petroleum may have formed closer to the surface, only to be driven more than six miles underground by massive crustal displacements. The presence of petroleum at such extreme depths remains a geological curiosity.


There are examples all over the Earth of petroleum fields refilling. Instead of decreasing an estimated finite supply, they are continuing to produce. One theory is that oil from below the Earth’s crust is “leaking” into taped fields and replenishing the reserve. This brings us back to the problem of how oil is so deep within the Earth, miles below any epoch of organic life to make petroleum.


What about the presence of helium in petroleum? Helium is found in significant quantities within some petroleum deposits, yet it is not chemically bonded to any biological material. In nature, nothing directly binds to or produces helium in this way—its occurrence in petroleum cannot be explained as a straightforward “natural” byproduct.


Enter the galactic Earth builders, bringing intelligent and/or divine design, or all the above. There are inventive theories attempting to explain how helium might have ended up in petroleum by coincidence, yet helium is hardly the only anomaly found in oil. Petroleum also contains branched alkanes such as pristane and phytane—members of the isoprenoid class—that are not considered natural in origin. While spores and other organic matter may have leached into petroleum over time, the full chemical profile of petroleum varies significantly from one region of the world to another.


We have a substantial amount of oil deep within the Earth. So deep in fact, that it is below the crust. Does petroleum work as a lubricant for the crust of the Earth? Does oil self-replicate to maintain a planetary system that was indefinite in design? Self-replicating petroleum to hydraulically support the crustal plates of the Earth would be critical. If this is a finite supply, are the Earthquakes and other tremors we experience from our extractions of petroleum? Does petroleum replenish itself at a rate slower than the speed at which we are extracting it? If petroleum was crafted by planetary architects, then who were they—and where are they now?


As we examine petroleum with the same depth of inquiry we bring to megalithic structures, could we start to uncover evidence of intelligent design embedded within the planet itself?

 

References:

NASA. (2020, November 5). About half of Sun-like stars could host rocky, potentially habitable planets. NASA.

Ragheb, M. (2019, February 23). Chapter 4: Biogenic and abiogenic petroleum [PDF].

SETI Institute. (2020, November 6). How many habitable planets are out there? SETI Institute.


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