Tag Archives: oil generation window

The brutality of Surtsey’s laboratory

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram

I recently came across a local newspaper article describing a new volcanic island, rising from its own ashes above the sea floor, off the coast of Tonga.  The subtlety of memory returned me to 1963, and an announcement over our morning radio, of the birth… of a volcanic island off the coast of Iceland. Images, arriving a couple of days later (this was 1963 after all), gave witness to a natural brutality I had not seen before; the sea in boiling turmoil, torn by erupting columns of rock and steam. Beautiful, in an awe-filled way.

It has been fifty years since the cessation of volcanic activity. Surtsey has become home to plants and birds, a laboratory for the adaptable, the dispersible, and the colonial.  The only sounds that resonate now are noisy gulls and pounding North Atlantic waves. Continue reading

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram
Facebooktwitterlinkedin

The Oil Kitchen Rules

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram

Folded limestone and sandtone in the Front Ranges, Alberta

Oil is a Part of the Rock

As a kid growing up in NZ, my only contact with ‘O&G’ was watching my Dad filling the family car with (at that time leaded) gasoline, and Jed Clampett watching black gold oozing from his backyard.  Jed and his family had to forgo the possums, grits and cat’s paws for the rarefied atmosphere, with a twist of lemon, of Beverly Hills.  They had made their fortune on Texas Tea like countless others have done since. Continue reading

Facebooktwitterlinkedininstagram
Facebooktwitterlinkedin