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Clarence Page has been watching too many episodes of the X Files:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...an18,1,3078959. column?coll=chi-news-col Of course, even if this were true, then so what? If we can make money and create jobs while exploring the universe, then so much the better. -- Mark R. Whittington http://curmudgeons.blogspot.com Co-author of Nocturne, a Novel of Suspense http://www.xlibris.com/nocturne.html Author of Children of Apollo http://www.xlibris.com/childrenofapollo.html |
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January 19, 2004
"Mark R. Whittington" wrote: Of course, even if this were true, then so what? If we can make money and create jobs while exploring the universe, then so much the better. And then we can justify totally trashing the home planet in the name of profits! Thomas Lee Elifritz http://elifritz.members.atlantic.net |
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![]() See title above Jobs, not exploitation. "Mark R. Whittington" wrote in message link.net... Clarence Page has been watching too many episodes of the X Files: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...an18,1,3078959. column?coll=chi-news-col Of course, even if this were true, then so what? If we can make money and create jobs while exploring the universe, then so much the better. -- Mark R. Whittington http://curmudgeons.blogspot.com Co-author of Nocturne, a Novel of Suspense http://www.xlibris.com/nocturne.html Author of Children of Apollo http://www.xlibris.com/childrenofapollo.html |
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On Mon, 19 Jan 2004 12:20:53 GMT, "Mark R. Whittington"
wrote: Clarence Page has been watching too many episodes of the X Files: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...an18,1,3078959. column?coll=chi-news-col Of course, even if this were true, then so what? If we can make money and create jobs while exploring the universe, then so much the better. Actually, there really is oil in space. There is oil on some asteriods that comes very close to Pennsylvania crude in composition. Do a google on "Oil in Space!" and you can get the details. And I suppose, since there is oil on asteriods, and asteriods crash into the Moon, there's probably a chance there is oil on the Moon. TA |
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On Mon, 19 Jan 2004 12:20:53 GMT, "Mark R. Whittington"
wrote: Clarence Page has been watching too many episodes of the X Files: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...an18,1,3078959. column?coll=chi-news-col Of course, even if this were true, then so what? If we can make money and create jobs while exploring the universe, then so much the better. Actually, there really is oil in space. There is oil on some asteriods that comes very close to Pennsylvania crude in composition. Do a google on "Oil in Space!" and you can get the details. And I suppose, since there is oil on asteriods, and asteriods crash into the Moon, there's probably a chance there is oil on the Moon. TA Later. Don't waste your time doing a google search. I just tried it and came up with nothing. I know I posted this information more than once on sci.space.policy but I haven't been able to find it yet. TA |
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"Tom Abbott" wrote in message
... On Mon, 19 Jan 2004 12:20:53 GMT, "Mark R. Whittington" wrote: Actually, there really is oil in space. There is oil on some asteriods that comes very close to Pennsylvania crude in composition. Do a google on "Oil in Space!" and you can get the details. And I suppose, since there is oil on asteriods, and asteriods crash into the Moon, there's probably a chance there is oil on the Moon. TA Later. Don't waste your time doing a google search. I just tried it and came up with nothing. I know I posted this information more than once on sci.space.policy but I haven't been able to find it yet. Tom, try www.webcrawler - it checks google, altavista, yahoo etc ad infinitum. I've suggested webcrawler in the past on sci.space and people have had excellent results (no, I don't work for them). |
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On Mon, 19 Jan 2004 12:20:53 GMT, "Mark R. Whittington"
wrote: Clarence Page has been watching too many episodes of the X Files: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/c...an18,1,3078959. column?coll=chi-news-col Of course, even if this were true, then so what? If we can make money and create jobs while exploring the universe, then so much the better. Actually, there really is oil in space. There is oil on some asteriods that comes very close to Pennsylvania crude in composition. Do a google on "Oil in Space!" and you can get the details. And I suppose, since there is oil on asteriods, and asteriods crash into the Moon, there's probably a chance there is oil on the Moon. TA Later. Don't waste your time doing a google search. I just tried it and came up with nothing. I know I posted this information more than once on sci.space.policy but I haven't been able to find it yet. TA Even later! Well, I finally found what I was looking for. It was posted back in April 1996, under the title, High Frontier: Here's an interesting item from Space Studies Institute"s "Update,Jan/Feb 1995, p. 3: Organic Element Composition of Celestial and Terrestrial Sources (from J. Lewis, "Resources of Near-Earth Space," p552). The composition of (astroidal) meteorites is remarkably similar to fossil fuel sources on Earth. The resources available to humanity in non-planetary space are enormous compared to our knowledge base at the beginning of the space age. COMPOSITION BY WEIGHT (Percent) C1 Meteorite: carbon= 74, hydrogen= 5, oxygen=10, Nitrogen= 2, sulphur= 7. C2 Meteorite: carbon= 78, hydrogen= 3, oxygen=13, nitrogen= 2, sulphur= 4. Oil Shale, KY: carbon= 82 hydrogen= 7, oxygen= 6, nitrogen= 2, sulphur= 2. Bituminous,PA: carbon= 82, hydrogen= 6, oxygen= 9, nitrogen= 2, sulphur=1. Anthracite: carbon= 89, hydrogen= 4, oxygen= 5, nitrogen= 1, sulphur= 1. Petroleum: carbon= 85, hydrogen= 11, oxygen= 1, nitrogen= 1, sulphur= 3. TA |
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