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Doodlebugs and Dowsers: A History of Unusual Ways to Search for Oil
by Dan Plazak
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Paperback
$27.95
penetrate even an inch into the soil, so for centuries, fortune-seekers have
tried every way imaginable to see below the surface. Whether searching for
mineral veins, groundwater, or buried treasure, people have looked for ways to
avoid the plodding and backbreaking process of digging. They have followed
dreams, seers, dowsing rods, and advice from the spirit world. When petroleum
became an item of commerce, oil-hunters took to all these methods. Many built homemade
inventions called doodlebugs, which they said could detect underground oil. It took a while, but science finally came up with its own
toolbox of oil-finding methods in the early twentieth century. Finding oil is
still expensive and risky, however. The old ways? They are mostly gone, but a
few oil-dowsers still stride across fields with rod or pendulum, and no doubt
people still consult dreams and psychics. And don't pretend that you yourself
haven't wondered if that dowser might be onto something, or if that famous
psychic can really tell where there is oil, or if that inventor stumbled onto a
better way to detect underground oil. Of course you have. History is written by the victors, and scientists won over
the oil industry--rightly so. But their accounts give short shrift to the rich
history of less traditional ways to find oil. Although ignored, the records of
nonscientific methods and their contributions to the oil business are well
worthy of study. Lacking in science, they are rich in humanity. Return with us now to
those thrilling days of yesteryear . . . wait, scratch that . . .
these things are still going on. Join us in a visit to a place where dreams,
seers, and spooks are taken seriously, where forked twigs dip toward oil pools
and homemade oil-finding gizmos blink or beep with the promise of riches tucked
just below the surface of the known world.
penetrate even an inch into the soil, so for centuries, fortune-seekers have
tried every way imaginable to see below the surface. Whether searching for
mineral veins, groundwater, or buried treasure, people have looked for ways to
avoid the plodding and backbreaking process of digging. They have followed
dreams, seers, dowsing rods, and advice from the spirit world. When petroleum
became an item of commerce, oil-hunters took to all these methods. Many built homemade
inventions called doodlebugs, which they said could detect underground oil. It took a while, but science finally came up with its own
toolbox of oil-finding methods in the early twentieth century. Finding oil is
still expensive and risky, however. The old ways? They are mostly gone, but a
few oil-dowsers still stride across fields with rod or pendulum, and no doubt
people still consult dreams and psychics. And don't pretend that you yourself
haven't wondered if that dowser might be onto something, or if that famous
psychic can really tell where there is oil, or if that inventor stumbled onto a
better way to detect underground oil. Of course you have. History is written by the victors, and scientists won over
the oil industry--rightly so. But their accounts give short shrift to the rich
history of less traditional ways to find oil. Although ignored, the records of
nonscientific methods and their contributions to the oil business are well
worthy of study. Lacking in science, they are rich in humanity. Return with us now to
those thrilling days of yesteryear . . . wait, scratch that . . .
these things are still going on. Join us in a visit to a place where dreams,
seers, and spooks are taken seriously, where forked twigs dip toward oil pools
and homemade oil-finding gizmos blink or beep with the promise of riches tucked
just below the surface of the known world.
Paperback
$27.95