Friday, November 07, 2008

Common Rocks Can Absord Greenhouse Gases; Noted Rockhead Algore Unavailable for Comment


A solution so simple and we've been sitting on top of it all this time.
A ROCK found mostly in Oman can be harnessed to soak up the main greenhouse gas carbon dioxide at a rate that could help slow global warming, scientists say.

When carbon dioxide comes in contact with the rock, peridotite, the gas is converted into solid minerals such as calcite.

Geologist Peter Kelemen and geochemist Juerg Matter said the naturally occurring process can be supercharged one million times to grow underground minerals that can permanently store two billion or more of the 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide emitted by human activity every year.

Their study will appear in the November 11 edition of the Proceedings of the Natural Academy of Sciences.

Peridotite is the most common rock found in the Earth's mantle, or the layer directly below the crust. It also appears on the surface, particularly in Oman, which is conveniently close to a region that produces substantial amounts of carbon dioxide in the production of fossil fuels.

"To be near all that oil and gas infrastructure is not a bad thing," Mr Matter said.
Maybe as a practical matter. when people start lecturing us on the perils of global warming we can hurl some rocks their way.

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