Who is King Hubbert and what is his connection to peak oil?

 

Billion Dollar Questions @ BillDoll.com – The Billion Dollar Site

 

 

BillDoll.com – The Billion Dollar Site

 

 

 

Billion Dollar Questions – answers to the most important questions in:

Arts

Business

Computers

Education

Entertainment

Politics

Health

News

Recreation

Reference

Regional

Culture

Science

Family 

 

Billion Dollar People – World of Billionaires

 

Billion Dollar Ideas

 

Billion Dollar Blog

 

Reference Section

 

 

More from eSource & Sourcing

 

GeoDig – Get Local!

 

Mobinomy – For the Mobile Economy (Directory)

 

The Anti Search Engine

 

Syn.in – Simply Yummy & New Updates

 

Research ‘n Do @ RnD.in  (Directory)

 

Serkai – The Web Cooperative

 

Quali5 – Own a Keyword for Life

 

IT & Software (Directory, Jobs)

 

Textiles & Apparel  (Directory)

 

Biodiesel Encyclopedia

 

Oilgae (Energy Portal, New in Energy)

 

Chemicals

 

Crops (Directory)

 

Diamond Source

 

Dumb List

 

Gems & Jewelry

 

Plant Oils

 

Castor Oil

 

Oil & Petroleum (Dir)

 

AML

 

Mainframes

 

Engineering (Dir)

 

Hide & Leather

 

Auto (Directory)

 

Cashew

 

Dumb List

 

 

 

 

 

Who is King Hubbert and what is his connection to peak oil?

 

 

..

 

..

 

The main question for this topic @ Billion Dollar Questions: How Long will Oil Last?

 

See a list of all the topics under the question here.

 

Content derived from Wikipedia article on M. King Hubbert

 

Marion King Hubbert (October 5, 1903 – October 11, 1989) was a geophysicist who worked at the Shell research lab in Houston, Texas. He made several important contributions to geology and geophysics, most notably the Hubbert curve and Hubbert peak theory (or peak oil), with important political ramifications. He was often referred to as "M. King Hubbert" or "King Hubbert".

 

Contents

 

1 Biography

2 Research

3 Accolades

4 Citation

5 References

6 See also

7 External links

 

Biography

 

M. King Hubbert (outlined in blue) and other prominent leaders of the technocratic movementHubbert was born in San Saba, Texas, in 1903. He attended the University of Chicago, where he received his B.S. in 1926, his M.S. in 1928, and his Ph.D in 1937, studying geology, mathematics, and physics. He worked as an assistant geologist for the Amerada Petroleum Company for two years while pursuing his Ph.D. He joined the Shell Oil Company in 1943, retiring from that firm in 1964. After he retired from Shell, he became a senior research geophysicist for the United States Geological Survey until his retirement in 1976. He also held positions as a professor of geology and geophysics at Stanford University from 1963 to 1968, and as a professor at UC Berkeley from 1973 to 1976.

 

Hubbert was also an avid technocrat. He co-founded Technocracy Inc. and contributed significantly to the Technocracy Study Guide.

 

Research

 

Hubbert made several contributions to geophysics, including a mathematical demonstration that rock in the Earth's crust, because it is under immense pressure in large areas, should exhibit plasticity, similar to clay. This demonstration explained the observed results that the Earth' s crust deforms over time. He also studied the flow of underground fluids.

 

Hubbert is most well-known for his studies on the capacities of oil fields and natural gas reserves. He predicted that the petroleum production of a reserve over time would resemble a bell curve. At the 1956 meeting of the American Petroleum Institute in San Antonio, Texas, Hubbert made the prediction that overall petroleum production would peak in the United States in the late 1960s to the early 1970s. He became famous when this prediction came true in 1970. The curve he used in his analysis is known as the Hubbert curve, and the peak of the curve is known as the Hubbert peak.

 

Between October 17, 1973, and March 1974, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) ceased shipments of petroleum to the United States, causing what has been called the 1973 energy crisis. In 1975, with the United States still suffering from high petroleum prices, the National Academy of Sciences confirmed their acceptance of Hubbert's calculations on oil and natural gas depletion, and acknowledged that their earlier, more optimistic estimates had been incorrect. This gathered great media attention for Hubbert.

 

Originally convinced that solar power was too diffuse to be used, by 1988 at age 85 Hubbert had reversed his position and believed that solar power would be a practical renewable energy replacement for fossil fuels.

 

Accolades

 

Hubbert was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was long affiliated with the Geological Society of America, receiving their Arthur L. Day Medal in 1954, being elected President of the Society in 1962, and receiving the Society's Penrose Medal in 1973. He received the Vetlesen Prize from the G. Unger Vetlesen foundation and Columbia University in 1981.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M._King_Hubbert

 

 

 

 

..

 

..

 

 

Related Topics & Questions

 

When was the modern oil industry born?

 

How much oil does the world consume per day?

 

How much oil does the United States consumer per day?

 

What percent of oil can be recovered from a newly discovered oil hole?

 

By what % is the demand for oil increasing annually?

 

How much investments would be required increase oil production to meet future demand?

 

What is OPEC's influence on oil prices?

 

How was oil formed?

 

What is Peak Oil and when will oil peak?

 

Which are the largest oil fields in the world? And how much oil reserves do they have?

 

Which are the largest oil producing countries?

 

How is oil prospecting done? Oil prospecting techniques?

 

Why is oil present in some regions of the world and not in other regions?

 

How is oil extracted from the earth?

 

How much does oil contribute to the economies of the major oil producing and exporting countries?

 

How has the price of oil changed over the years?

 

Who is King Hubbert and why does everyone talk about him when peak oil is mentioned?

 

Which are the major oil companies in the world?

 

How is oil produced from coal? What kind of oil is it?

 

What are tar sands?

 

What is heavy oil?

 

What is oil shale?

 

How does one determine how much oil reserves a country has?

 

..

 

..

 

 

Main Sections @ The Billion Dollar Site

 

 

Credits & Copyright: This page is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the ||Wikipedia article $$$|| 

 

 

 

 

BillDoll.com – The Billion Dollar Site