OIL, UNCLEAN WATER, AND END OF LIFE
Top Kill Day - the Damage Done So Far (6/20/2010)
On the matrix above the axis term is END OF THE LIFE at skip 33964. It is shown at its 6th lowest ELS on a wrapped matrix where the computer made more than one pass through the 304,805 letters of Torah. The first a priori term sought was IN THE END OF DAYS. This term required 285 letters to display with the axis term. With the movie Soylent Green in mind (a 97-minute ecological horror film that depicts what would happen if the oceans were to die), the next term sought was oil. At skip +1 (open text) we find FOR OIL and at skip 33964 we see THE OIL running through and sharing a letter with IN WATER AND BE UNCLEAN in the open text. Where is the action based here? We find GULF at skip 16983 touching THE OIL. Finally, I cannot say that this horror was an act of terrorism, but it certainly was an act of the men involved deliberately bypassing required safety operations. The word DELIBERATE is at skip -50944 touching END OF THE LIFE, IN THE EARTH at skip +1, and IN WATER AND BE UNCLEAN.
How much water could be contaminated by the oil rig disaster that occurred on April 20, 2010? Here are a few facts:
1. One gallon of motor oil can contaminate one million gallons of water.
2. The estimated spill rate was rated this week (ending on June 19, 2010) at 35,000 barrels to 60,000 per day for most of the first month of the spill. In a barrel of oil there are 42 U.S. gallons. 35,000 barrels per day = 1,470,000 gallons per day. 60,000 barrels = 2,520,000 gallons per day. This would equate to between 1,47 trillion and 2.52 trillion gallons of water polluted per day – not counting the effects of the toxic dispersant used by BP. As of June 19, 60 days of pollution at this rate equate to 88.2 to 151.2 trillion gallons of water polluted. Note: There was an estimate on Fox News on June 20, 2010 that the spill could be up to 100,000 barrels per day.
3. How much area could such a spill contaminate? One quart of motor oil can create a slick two acres in size. There are 4 quarts in a gallon. So one gallon can create a slick 8 acres in size. How does an acre compare to a square mile? Eight acres = 0.0125 square miles (0.032374 square kilometers) so a gallon of oil contaminates 0.0125 square miles. At this rate, 1,102,500 to 1,890,000 square miles could be contaminated. This figure does not factor in (1) depth of the release, (2) contamination due to dispersants (3) rate of consumption of the oil by bacteria or (4) oxygen depletion in the water by bacteria feeding on the oil.
How does 1.89 million square miles compare to major bodies of water on Earth? As you can see from the chart below, it is over three times the area of the Gulf of Mexico.
Area | Square miles | |
ALL EARTH | 139,397,000 | |
Pacific Ocean | 60,045,000 | |
Atlantic Ocean | 29,630,000 | |
Indian Ocean | 26,463,000 | |
Arctic Ocean | 5,426,000 | |
Southern Ocean | Southern Ocean | 7,846,000 |
Gulf of Mexico | 600,000 |