Oil is found that deep but also found shallower. Some notable because oil came up and stood in pools above ground or on surface of lakes. Coalinga as shallow as ~500 feet -
That doesn't refute the point that oil is found significantly deeper than the deepest fossils. OP didn't say oil is ONLY found that deep, just that it is found that deep, routinely. Of course it can be pushed up higher, but the fact it exists so deep debunks the fossil fuel theory.
Oil is found that deep but also found shallower. Some notable because oil came up and stood in pools above ground or on surface of lakes. Coalinga as shallow as ~500 feet -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coalinga_Oil_Field#Geology_and_operations
Same conditions found in PA, OK, TX, etc.
That doesn't refute the point that oil is found significantly deeper than the deepest fossils. OP didn't say oil is ONLY found that deep, just that it is found that deep, routinely. Of course it can be pushed up higher, but the fact it exists so deep debunks the fossil fuel theory.
Did you miss this part?
Can it also be pushed lower?
Didn't miss it, wanted to emphasize the main point.
Given pressure differentials, unlikely that oil, less dense than everything around it including water, would be pushed lower.