The reason we have oil is because there was nothing that could eat early plants
| bull headed church building stock car | 01/06/26 | | crawly knife | 01/06/26 | | Wild new version puppy | 01/06/26 | | crawly knife | 01/06/26 | | Wild new version puppy | 01/06/26 | | crawly knife | 01/06/26 | | bull headed church building stock car | 01/06/26 | | crawly knife | 01/06/26 | | bull headed church building stock car | 01/06/26 | | Wonderful french chef | 01/07/26 | | bateful stage selfie | 01/06/26 | | doobsian stain | 01/06/26 | | Wild new version puppy | 01/06/26 | | excitant silver meetinghouse goal in life | 01/06/26 | | Wild new version puppy | 01/06/26 | | orange adventurous station sandwich | 01/06/26 | | light senate brethren | 01/06/26 | | Heady locale idea he suggested | 01/06/26 |
Poast new message in this thread
 |
Date: January 6th, 2026 11:29 PM Author: crawly knife
again, i could be dead wrong but i think your claim is wrong. bacteria could decompose plants when plants first arose.
what bacteria could not originally do is decompose lignin created by trees but that was much later in time. that's how we got coal.
the leading theory about oil, on the other hand, was that it was organic material that failed to decompose because it happened to die in low oxygen environments.
am i wrong?
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5818203&forum_id=2).#49568134) |
|
|