• @[email protected]
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    1511 hours ago

    I mean… if we’re being honest, the long-term effects of global thermonuclear war would be (very eventual) carbon sequestration in tens to hundreds of millions of years, and then we’ll renew our oil reserves! We of course won’t be around to use them, seeing as we’ll have been sequestered into the oil.

    • @Eheran
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      710 hours ago

      Can we get new oil actually? I thought we now have organisms that can break down every organic matter and thus it can not really accumulate anymore?

      • Tar_Alcaran
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        79 hours ago

        Oil actually comes from aquatic life (mostly plankton) that sinks to the sea floor and gets buried, squeezed and heated. Oil still forms today, but it’s a process of millions of years.

        Coal is formed from plants, and that does indeed require something doesn’t eat it first. Swamps, for example, help a lot, letting the fallen trees sink down where most stuff can’t eat it. Peat can also form into coal. Coal forms even slower than oil though, and it’s much rarer, but it also doesn’t require an ocean, so it’s often more accessible for us land-living humans

        • @Eheran
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          36 hours ago

          Coal is much rarer than oil? I have to look that up, I always thought there is far more coal.

          Nope, there is about 3x more coal than oil.