Anyway, there probably hasn't been as much damage to the planet caused by any other substance as crude by a long shot.
As much as taking a million years of sunlight and bombarding the planet with it over 100 years.If you want to make a case, start with photosynthesis. The plant basically captures the carbon in the atmosphere. It stores it, even after death, until we dig it up in the form of oil and release it back into the atmosphere..
In short, putting back into the atmosphere what has been captured millions of years ago..
Because the layers of sediment build up over years under ground we are basically taking a million of years of built up carbon captured through photosynthesis and releasing it back into the atmosphere in a time span 1/10,000 of the time period ...
Sound logical, or total BS L Gilbert ????
Photosynthesis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ohhhh I can. No problem. What would you like to know about water's destructive behaviors?You can't. I see.
Just one million?As much as taking a million years of sunlight and bombarding the planet with it over 100 years.
Go for it.Ohhhh I can. No problem. What would you like to know about water's destructive behaviors?
As much as taking a million years of sunlight and bombarding the planet with it over 100 years.
It was Boomer's number.Just one million?
I never missed it.now you got it.. ;-)
Just one million?
I never missed it.
and did he actually damage anything? Or did he just move dirt around?Is that the guy who dug the Grand Canyon?
You make the claim, you prove it.It would have killed oodles of life. Nothing has killed more life than water.
https://www.google.ca/search?rlz=1C....,cf.osb&fp=30427757ebafe35d&biw=1400&bih=911
Just wondering if you can back up your comment.You need proof?
perhaps, but I'm still way more than you can handdle.You're dumber than a bag of hammers.
Nope.Are you related to Omnicron, MHz and Cabbagefarts?
Logical fallacy. Same idea would be as if I suggested you explain how petroleum isn't.Explain how water ISN'T the most destructive substance on the planet.