Untapped
gas
reserves
deep
in
the
Earth?
Posted
Sept.
13,
2004
Courtesy
The
Carnegie
Institution
and
World
Science
Staff
In an era of rising oil and gas prices, the possibility that there are untapped reserves is enticing. Since the first U.S. oil well hit pay dirt in 1859, commercially viable wells of oil and gas commonly have been drilled no deeper than 3 to 5 miles into Earth's crust.
But
new
experiments
point to the possibility
that
chemicals
related
to
oil
and
gas,
and
which
could
have
the
same
uses,
exist
12
to
37
miles
below
the
Earth's
surface,
researchers
say.
The
discovery
could
have
"huge implications for the ecology and economy of our planet as well as for the chemistry of other
planets,"
said
Princeton
University
researcher
Freeman
Dyson,
who
wasn't
involved
in
the
new
studies.
The
scientists
found
that
deep
below
the
Earth,
there
could
exist
hydrocarbons
--
the
class
of
chemicals
that
include
petroleum
and
natural
gas.
They
are
called
hydrocarbons
because
they
mainly
contain
hydrogen
and
carbon.
Unlike
traditional
oil
and
gas,
though,
it
appears
these
chemicals
do
not
come
from
the
decay
of
dead
animals
and
plants.
Instead,
they
come
from
simple
chemical
reactions
between
water
and
rock
at
the
crushing
pressures
and
high
temperatures
typical
of
the
deep
Earth.
The
scientists
ran
experiments
designed
to
mimic
thse
conditions,
using
materials
common
at
the
Earth's
surace,
and
found
that
simple
hydrocarbons
such
as
methane
were
produced.
They
published
the
findings
in
the
online
Sept.
13-17
edition
of
the
research
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
The
main
author
was
Russell
Hemley
of
the
Carnegie
Institution,
Washington,
D.C.
As depth increases in the Earth, the pressures can become so crushing that molecules are squeezed into new forms and the temperature conditions are like an inferno making matter behave much differently.