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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 19 (1935)

Issue: 6. (June)

First Page: 900

Last Page: 902

Title: Extraterrestrial Hydrocarbons and Petroleum Genesis

Author(s): F. M. Van Tuyl (2), Ben H. Parker (3)

Abstract:

Recent spectroscopic examinations of the atmospheres of the major planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, by Adel and Slipher, have revealed the fact that methane is the major constituent. Furthermore, they state that "the unanchored motion of Jupiter's Great Red Spot suggests that it is an island of solid hydrocarbon or ammonia floating in a vast hydrocarbon ocean as extensive as the planet's surface itself." No definite data are available relative to the composition of the supposed hydrocarbon ocean.

By reasoning from analogy, it is suggested that hydrocarbons may have been present in the primordial earth, though it is admitted that convincing evidence has not yet been presented to prove that commercial accumulations of petroleum and natural gas have originated from such a source.

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