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Message Subject ++I AM A EXTRA TERRESTRIAL++ ASK ME A QUESTION AND I WILL RESPOND++
Poster Handle Canundrum
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Greetings: Canundrum: User ID: 501151

I just looked up what methane looks like and it has a yellowish hue to it....

**It Does ????

**Here Is A Wikipedia Entry On Methane !!

[link to en.wikipedia.org]

**By Itself ... "Methane Gas" Is Colorless/Odorless !! ... Though In Combination With Other Chemicals/Elements ... It Can Take On Various Properties !! ... "Natural Gas" Is Simply A Label ... Methane Is Actually The Main Makeup Of This !! ... Though Of "Natural Gas" ... A Chemical(s)
Is Added ... To Be Able To Smell/Detect This ... Otherwise In A "Gas Leak" ... One Could Be Overcome By The Gas ... Without Knowing What Happened !!

**The "Yellow Bubbles" ... The Flash That Came To Us ... Was Of The Element Sulfur ... Of & Associated With Volcanoes !! ... Of Which Sulfur Too ... Can Take On Various Properties When Mixed/Blended With Other Things !! ... While In It's Native Look ... It Is A Yellow Crystal ... It Can Also Change To An Orange Look ... And Even Reddish In Appearance !!

Canundrum

Farewell For Now !!

ST In BG
 Quoting: ST In BG 1060349


I'm sorry ST, I should have said "methane hydrates" have a yellowish color:

----------------
Methane Hydrates: A Primer

[link to www.hnei.hawaii.edu]

Beginning in the early 1990s, interest in methane hydrates began to revive. While offering tremendous opportunities as a future energy resource, sedimental marine hydrate deposits also emerged as an immediate and formidable nuisance to offshore oil and gas operations, compromising sea floor stability and imperiling drilling activities. The hydrate problem has become more critical as oil and gas exploration and recovery move into increasingly deeper waters where hydrates abound. From a military perspective, it was recognized that characterizing the geo-acoustic properties of hydrate sediments was important to a number of naval operations, such as surveillance and mine detection.

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Although, I have found many other articles that said it looks like a white snowball underwater, and others that indicate hydrates look like a honeycomb clear bluish ice structure. Perhaps it depends on "where"?

Canundrum
 
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